I have a .htaccess file with the following content;
My .htaccess file:
<IfModule mod_rewrite.c>
RewriteEngine On
RewriteBase /
RewriteRule ^/?$ https://meervoormamas.nl [R=301,L]
RewriteRule ^/dossiers/autisme/?$ https://meervoormamas.nl/kind/ontwikkeling/ R=301,L]
RewriteRule ^/schoolkind/opvoeding/7\-tips\-om\-uw\-kinderen\-te\-begeleiden\-op\-sociale\-netwerken/?$ https://meervoormamas.nl/kind/opvoeding/7-tips-om-uw-kinderen-te-begeleiden-op-sociale-netwerken/ R=301,L]
</IfModule>
Where the first RewriteRule does work, if I type in https://mamalove.nl it redirects to https://meervoormamas.nl But with the second RewriteRule(a category in WP) gives an Internal server error, and also with the third RewriteRule (a post).
What am I doing wrong?
CodePudding user response:
As well as the missing opening [
that delimits the flags (3rd) argument on the RewriteRule
directive, as mentioned in comments, in a directory (.htaccess
) context the URL-path matched by the RewriteRule
pattern does not start with a slash, so these rules will never match.
Other minor issues:
- You are missing the trailing slash after the domain in the first rule's substitution string.
- No need to backslash-escape literal hyphens when used outside of a regex character class (3rd rule).
- The
RewriteBase
directive is not being used here. - The
<IfModule>
wrapper is not required.
Try the following instead:
RewriteEngine On
RewriteRule ^$ https://meervoormamas.nl/ [R=301,L]
RewriteRule ^dossiers/autisme/?$ https://meervoormamas.nl/kind/ontwikkeling/ [R=301,L]
RewriteRule ^schoolkind/opvoeding/7-tips-om-uw-kinderen-te-begeleiden-op-sociale-netwerken/?$ https://meervoormamas.nl/kind/opvoeding/7-tips-om-uw-kinderen-te-begeleiden-op-sociale-netwerken/ [R=301,L]
Since you appear to be redirecting to a similar URL-path in the 3rd rule, this can be "simplified" by avoiding repetition. For example:
RewriteRule ^school(kind/opvoeding/7-tips-om-uw-kinderen-te-begeleiden-op-sociale-netwerken)/?$ https://meervoormamas.nl/$1/ [R=301,L]
$1
is a backreference that contains everything in the captured group in the preceding pattern. It basically just removes the "school" prefix and ensures the redirected URL ends in a trailing slash.
If these rules are being used on an existing WordPress site then these directives must go at the top of the .htaccess
file, before the # BEGIN WordPress
section.