Apache HTTP Server Version 2.4

| Description: | Provides a rule-based rewriting engine to rewrite requested URLs on the fly | 
|---|---|
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module Identifier: | rewrite_module | 
| Source File: | mod_rewrite.c | 
The mod_rewrite module uses a rule-based rewriting
      engine, based on a PCRE regular-expression parser, to rewrite requested URLs on
      the fly. By default, mod_rewrite maps a URL to a filesystem
      path. However, it can also be used to redirect one URL to another URL, or
      to invoke an internal proxy fetch.
mod_rewrite provides a flexible and powerful way to
      manipulate URLs using an unlimited number of rules. Each rule can have an
      unlimited number of attached rule conditions, to allow you to rewrite URL
      based on server variables, environment variables, HTTP headers, or time
      stamps.
mod_rewrite operates on the full URL path, including the
      path-info section. A rewrite rule can be invoked in
      httpd.conf or in .htaccess. The path generated
      by a rewrite rule can include a query string, or can lead to internal
      sub-processing, external request redirection, or internal proxy
      throughput.
Further details, discussion, and examples, are provided in the detailed mod_rewrite documentation.
mod_rewrite offers detailed logging of its actions
    at the trace1 to trace8 log levels. The
    log level can be set specifically for mod_rewrite
    using the LogLevel directive: Up to
    level debug, no actions are logged, while trace8
    means that practically all actions are logged.
mod_rewrite
      will slow down your Apache HTTP Server dramatically! Use a log
      level higher than trace2 only for debugging!
    LogLevel alert rewrite:trace3
Those familiar with earlier versions of
      mod_rewrite will no doubt be looking for the
      RewriteLog and RewriteLogLevel
      directives. This functionality has been completely replaced by the
      new per-module logging configuration mentioned above.
      
To get just the mod_rewrite-specific log
      messages, pipe the log file through grep:
    tail -f error_log|fgrep '[rewrite:'
    
| Description: | Sets the base URL for per-directory rewrites | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | RewriteBase URL-path | 
| Default: | None | 
| Context: | directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | FileInfo | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_rewrite | 
The RewriteBase directive specifies the
      URL prefix to be used for per-directory (htaccess)
      RewriteRule directives that
      substitute a relative path.
This directive is required when you use a relative path in a substitution in per-directory (htaccess) context unless any of the following conditions are true:
DocumentRoot
               (as opposed to reachable by other means, such as
               Alias).RewriteRule,
               suffixed by the relative
               substitution is also valid as a URL path on the server
               (this is rare).Alias
                or mod_userdir. In the example below, RewriteBase is necessary
    to avoid rewriting to http://example.com/opt/myapp-1.2.3/welcome.html
    since the resource was not relative to the document root.  This
    misconfiguration would normally cause the server to look for an "opt"
    directory under the document root.
DocumentRoot "/var/www/example.com"
AliasMatch "^/myapp" "/opt/myapp-1.2.3"
<Directory "/opt/myapp-1.2.3">
    RewriteEngine On
    RewriteBase "/myapp/"
    RewriteRule "^index\.html$"  "welcome.html"
</Directory>
| Description: | Defines a condition under which rewriting will take place | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: |  RewriteCond
      TestString CondPattern [flags] | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | FileInfo | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_rewrite | 
The RewriteCond directive defines a
      rule condition. One or more RewriteCond
      can precede a RewriteRule
      directive. The following rule is then only used if both
      the current state of the URI matches its pattern, and if these conditions are met.
TestString is a string which can contain the following expanded constructs in addition to plain text:
$N
          (0 <= N <= 9). $1 to $9 provide access to the grouped
          parts (in parentheses) of the pattern, from the
          RewriteRule which is subject to the current
          set of RewriteCond conditions. $0 provides
          access to the whole string matched by that pattern.
        %N
          (0 <= N <= 9). %1 to %9 provide access to the grouped
          parts (again, in parentheses) of the pattern, from the last matched
          RewriteCond in the current set
          of conditions. %0 provides access to the whole string matched by
          that pattern.
        ${mapname:key|default}.
          See the documentation for
          RewriteMap for more details.
        %{ NAME_OF_VARIABLE
            }
          where NAME_OF_VARIABLE can be a string taken
          from the following list:
          | HTTP headers: | connection & request: | |
|---|---|---|
| HTTP_ACCEPT HTTP_COOKIE HTTP_FORWARDED HTTP_HOST HTTP_PROXY_CONNECTION HTTP_REFERER HTTP_USER_AGENT | AUTH_TYPE CONN_REMOTE_ADDR CONTEXT_PREFIX CONTEXT_DOCUMENT_ROOT IPV6 PATH_INFO QUERY_STRING REMOTE_ADDR REMOTE_HOST REMOTE_IDENT REMOTE_PORT REMOTE_USER REQUEST_METHOD SCRIPT_FILENAME | |
| server internals: | date and time: | specials: | 
| DOCUMENT_ROOT SCRIPT_GROUP SCRIPT_USER SERVER_ADDR SERVER_ADMIN SERVER_NAME SERVER_PORT SERVER_PROTOCOL SERVER_SOFTWARE | TIME_YEAR TIME_MON TIME_DAY TIME_HOUR TIME_MIN TIME_SEC TIME_WDAY TIME | API_VERSION CONN_REMOTE_ADDR HTTPS IS_SUBREQ REMOTE_ADDR REQUEST_FILENAME REQUEST_SCHEME REQUEST_URI THE_REQUEST | 
These variables all
                correspond to the similarly named HTTP
                MIME-headers, C variables of the Apache HTTP Server or
                struct tm fields of the Unix system.
                Most are documented here
                or elsewhere in the Manual or in the CGI specification.
SERVER_NAME and SERVER_PORT depend on the values of
                UseCanonicalName and
                UseCanonicalPhysicalPort
                respectively.
Those that are special to mod_rewrite include those below.
API_VERSIONCONN_REMOTE_ADDRmod_remoteip module).HTTPSmod_ssl is loaded).IS_SUBREQREMOTE_ADDRmod_remoteip module).REQUEST_FILENAMEREQUEST_FILENAME is referenced. Otherwise,
                  such as when used in virtual host context, the same
                  value as REQUEST_URI.  Depending on the value of
                  AcceptPathInfo, the
                  server may have only used some leading components of the
                  REQUEST_URI to map the request to a file.
                  REQUEST_SCHEMEServerName.REQUEST_URIQUERY_STRING.THE_REQUESTGET
                  /index.html HTTP/1.1"). This does not
                  include any additional headers sent by the
                  browser.  This value has not been unescaped
                  (decoded), unlike most other variables below.If the TestString has the special value expr,
      the CondPattern will be treated as an
      ap_expr. HTTP headers referenced in the
      expression will be added to the Vary header if the novary
      flag is not given.
Other things you should be aware of:
The variables SCRIPT_FILENAME and REQUEST_FILENAME
        contain the same value - the value of the
        filename field of the internal
        request_rec structure of the Apache HTTP Server.
        The first name is the commonly known CGI variable name
        while the second is the appropriate counterpart of
        REQUEST_URI (which contains the value of the
        uri field of request_rec).
If a substitution occurred and the rewriting continues, the value of both variables will be updated accordingly.
If used in per-server context (i.e., before the
        request is mapped to the filesystem) SCRIPT_FILENAME and
        REQUEST_FILENAME cannot contain the full local filesystem
        path since the path is unknown at this stage of processing.
        Both variables will initially contain the value of REQUEST_URI
        in that case. In order to obtain the full local filesystem
        path of the request in per-server context, use an URL-based
        look-ahead %{LA-U:REQUEST_FILENAME} to determine
        the final value of REQUEST_FILENAME.
%{ENV:variable}, where variable can be
        any environment variable, is also available.
        This is looked-up via internal
        Apache httpd structures and (if not found there) via
        getenv() from the Apache httpd server process.%{SSL:variable}, where variable is the
        name of an SSL environment
        variable, can be used whether or not
        mod_ssl is loaded, but will always expand to
        the empty string if it is not.  Example:
        %{SSL:SSL_CIPHER_USEKEYSIZE} may expand to
        128. These variables are available even without
        setting the StdEnvVars option of the
        SSLOptions directive.%{HTTP:header}, where header can be
        any HTTP MIME-header name, can always be used to obtain the
        value of a header sent in the HTTP request.
        Example: %{HTTP:Proxy-Connection} is
        the value of the HTTP header
        ``Proxy-Connection:''.
        If a HTTP header is used in a condition this header is added to the Vary header of the response in case the condition evaluates to true for the request. It is not added if the condition evaluates to false for the request. Adding the HTTP header to the Vary header of the response is needed for proper caching.
It has to be kept in mind that conditions follow a short circuit
        logic in the case of the 'ornext|OR' flag
        so that certain conditions might not be evaluated at all.
%{LA-U:variable}
        can be used for look-aheads which perform
        an internal (URL-based) sub-request to determine the final
        value of variable. This can be used to access
        variable for rewriting which is not available at the current
        stage, but will be set in a later phase.
        For instance, to rewrite according to the
        REMOTE_USER variable from within the
        per-server context (httpd.conf file) you must
        use %{LA-U:REMOTE_USER} - this
        variable is set by the authorization phases, which come
        after the URL translation phase (during which mod_rewrite
        operates).
On the other hand, because mod_rewrite implements
        its per-directory context (.htaccess file) via
        the Fixup phase of the API and because the authorization
        phases come before this phase, you just can use
        %{REMOTE_USER} in that context.
%{LA-F:variable} can be used to perform an internal
        (filename-based) sub-request, to determine the final value
        of variable. Most of the time, this is the same as
        LA-U above.CondPattern is the condition pattern, a regular expression which is applied to the current instance of the TestString. TestString is first evaluated, before being matched against CondPattern.
CondPattern is usually a perl compatible regular expression, but there is additional syntax available to perform other useful tests against the Teststring:
!' character (exclamation mark) to negate the result
        of the condition, no matter what kind of CondPattern is used.
        "" (two quotation marks) this
            compares TestString to the empty string.!-eq.Is existing URL, via subrequest.
            Checks whether or not TestString is a valid URL,
            accessible via all the server's currently-configured
            access controls for that path. This uses an internal
            subrequest to do the check, so use it with care -
            it can impact your server's performance!
This flag only returns information about things like access control, authentication, and authorization. This flag does not return information about the status code the configured handler (static file, CGI, proxy, etc.) would have returned.
RewriteCond /var/www/%{REQUEST_URI} !-f
RewriteRule ^(.+) /other/archive/$1 [R]
        If the TestString has the special value expr, the
           CondPattern will be treated as an
           ap_expr.
            In the below example, -strmatch is used to
            compare the REFERER against the site hostname,
            to block unwanted hotlinking.
           
RewriteCond expr "! %{HTTP_REFERER} -strmatch '*://%{HTTP_HOST}/*'"
RewriteRule "^/images" "-" [F]
        You can also set special flags for CondPattern by appending
        [flags]
      as the third argument to the RewriteCond
      directive, where flags is a comma-separated list of any of the
      following flags:
nocase|NC'
        (no case)ornext|OR'
          (or next condition)RewriteCond "%{REMOTE_HOST}"  "^host1"  [OR]
RewriteCond "%{REMOTE_HOST}"  "^host2"  [OR]
RewriteCond "%{REMOTE_HOST}"  "^host3"
RewriteRule ...some special stuff for any of these hosts...
          Without this flag you would have to write the condition/rule
          pair three times.
        novary|NV'
        (no vary)Example:
To rewrite the Homepage of a site according to the
        ``User-Agent:'' header of the request, you can
        use the following: 
RewriteCond  "%{HTTP_USER_AGENT}"  "(iPhone|Blackberry|Android)"
RewriteRule  "^/$"                 "/homepage.mobile.html"  [L]
RewriteRule  "^/$"                 "/homepage.std.html"     [L]
        Explanation: If you use a browser which identifies itself as a mobile browser (note that the example is incomplete, as there are many other mobile platforms), the mobile version of the homepage is served. Otherwise, the standard page is served.
| Description: | Enables or disables runtime rewriting engine | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | RewriteEngine on|off | 
| Default: | RewriteEngine off | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | FileInfo | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_rewrite | 
The RewriteEngine directive enables or
      disables the runtime rewriting engine. If it is set to
      off this module does no runtime processing at
      all. It does not even update the SCRIPT_URx
      environment variables.
Use this directive to disable rules in a particular context,
      rather than commenting out all the RewriteRule directives.
Note that rewrite configurations are not
      inherited by virtual hosts. This means that you need to have a
      RewriteEngine on directive for each virtual host
      in which you wish to use rewrite rules.
RewriteMap directives
      of the type prg
      are not started during server initialization if they're defined in a
      context that does not have RewriteEngine set to
      on
| Description: | Defines a mapping function for key-lookup | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | RewriteMap MapName MapType:MapSource
 | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_rewrite | 
The RewriteMap directive defines a
      Rewriting Map which can be used inside rule
      substitution strings by the mapping-functions to
      insert/substitute fields through a key lookup. The source of
      this lookup can be of various types.
The MapName is the name of the map and will be used to specify a mapping-function for the substitution strings of a rewriting rule via one of the following constructs:
        ${ MapName :
        LookupKey }
         ${ MapName :
        LookupKey | DefaultValue
        }
      
When such a construct occurs, the map MapName is consulted and the key LookupKey is looked-up. If the key is found, the map-function construct is substituted by SubstValue. If the key is not found then it is substituted by DefaultValue or by the empty string if no DefaultValue was specified. Empty values behave as if the key was absent, therefore it is not possible to distinguish between empty-valued keys and absent keys.
For example, you might define a
      RewriteMap as:
RewriteMap examplemap "txt:/path/to/file/map.txt"
You would then be able to use this map in a
      RewriteRule as follows:
RewriteRule "^/ex/(.*)" "${examplemap:$1}"
      The following combinations for MapType and MapSource can be used:
httxt2dbm
        utility.  (Details ...)RewriteMap: toupper, tolower, escape or
        unescape. (Details ...)Further details, and numerous examples, may be found in the RewriteMap HowTo
| Description: | Sets some special options for the rewrite engine | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | RewriteOptions Options | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | FileInfo | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_rewrite | 
The RewriteOptions directive sets some
      special options for the current per-server or per-directory
      configuration. The Option string can currently
      only be one of the following:
InheritThis forces the current configuration to inherit the
      configuration of the parent. In per-virtual-server context,
      this means that the maps, conditions and rules of the main
      server are inherited. In per-directory context this means
      that conditions and rules of the parent directory's
      .htaccess configuration or
      <Directory>
      sections are inherited. The inherited rules are virtually copied
      to the section where this directive is being used. If used in
      combination with local rules, the inherited rules are copied behind
      the local rules. The position of this directive - below or above
      of local rules - has no influence on this behavior. If local
      rules forced the rewriting to stop, the inherited rules won't
      be processed.
InheritBefore Like Inherit above, but the rules from the parent scope
      are applied before rules specified in the child scope.
      Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.3.10 and later.
InheritDownIf this option is enabled, all child configurations will inherit
      the configuration of the current configuration. It is equivalent to
      specifying RewriteOptions Inherit in all child
      configurations. See the Inherit option for more details
      on how the parent-child relationships are handled.
      Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.4.8 and later.
InheritDownBeforeLike InheritDown above, but the rules from the current
      scope are applied before rules specified in any child's
      scope.
      Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.4.8 and later.
IgnoreInheritThis option forces the current and child configurations to ignore
      all rules that would be inherited from a parent specifying
      InheritDown or InheritDownBefore.
      Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.4.8 and later.
AllowNoSlashBy default, mod_rewrite will ignore URLs that map to a
      directory on disk but lack a trailing slash, in the expectation that
      the mod_dir module will issue the client with a redirect to
      the canonical URL with a trailing slash.
When the DirectorySlash directive
      is set to off, the AllowNoSlash option can be enabled to ensure
      that rewrite rules are no longer ignored. This option makes it possible to
      apply rewrite rules within .htaccess files that match the directory without
      a trailing slash, if so desired.
      Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.4.0 and later.
AllowAnyURIWhen RewriteRule
      is used in VirtualHost or server context with
      version 2.2.22 or later of httpd, mod_rewrite
      will only process the rewrite rules if the request URI is a URL-path.  This avoids
      some security issues where particular rules could allow
      "surprising" pattern expansions (see CVE-2011-3368
      and CVE-2011-4317).
      To lift the restriction on matching a URL-path, the
      AllowAnyURI option can be enabled, and
      mod_rewrite will apply the rule set to any
      request URI string, regardless of whether that string matches
      the URL-path grammar required by the HTTP specification.
      Available in Apache HTTP Server 2.4.3 and later.
Enabling this option will make the server vulnerable to
      security issues if used with rewrite rules which are not
      carefully authored.  It is strongly recommended
      that this option is not used.  In particular, beware of input
      strings containing the '@' character which could
      change the interpretation of the transformed URI, as per the
      above CVE names.
MergeBaseWith this option, the value of RewriteBase is copied from where it's explicitly defined
      into any sub-directory or sub-location that doesn't define its own
      RewriteBase. This was the
      default behavior in 2.4.0 through 2.4.3, and the flag to restore it is
      available Apache HTTP Server 2.4.4 and later.
IgnoreContextInfoWhen a relative substitution is made
         in directory (htaccess) context and RewriteBase has not been set, this module uses some
         extended URL and filesystem context information to change the
         relative substitution back into a URL. Modules such as
         mod_userdir and mod_alias
         supply this extended context info.  Available in 2.4.16 and later.
| Description: | Defines rules for the rewriting engine | 
|---|---|
| Syntax: | RewriteRule
      Pattern Substitution [flags] | 
| Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess | 
| Override: | FileInfo | 
| Status: | Extension | 
| Module: | mod_rewrite | 
The RewriteRule directive is the real
      rewriting workhorse. The directive can occur more than once,
      with each instance defining a single rewrite rule. The
      order in which these rules are defined is important - this is the order
      in which they will be applied at run-time.
Pattern is
      a perl compatible regular
      expression.  What this pattern is compared against varies depending
      on where the RewriteRule directive is defined. 
In VirtualHost context,
      The Pattern will initially be matched against the part of the
      URL after the hostname and port, and before the query string (e.g. "/app1/index.html").
      This is the (%-decoded) URL-path.
In per-directory context (Directory and .htaccess),
      the Pattern is matched against only a partial path, for example a request
      of "/app1/index.html" may result in comparison against "app1/index.html" 
      or "index.html" depending on where the RewriteRule is 
      defined.
The directory path where the rule is defined is stripped from the currently mapped filesystem path before comparison (up to and including a trailing slash). The net result of this per-directory prefix stripping is that rules in this context only match against the portion of the currently mapped filesystem path "below" where the rule is defined.
Directives such as DocumentRoot and Alias, or even the 
      result of previous RewriteRule substitutions, determine
      the currently mapped filesystem path.  
      
If you wish to match against the hostname, port, or query string, use a
      RewriteCond with the
      %{HTTP_HOST}, %{SERVER_PORT}, or
      %{QUERY_STRING} variables respectively.
<Directory> sections, with some additional
complexity.RewriteEngine On" and
"Options FollowSymLinks" must be enabled. If your
administrator has disabled override of FollowSymLinks for
a user's directory, then you cannot use the rewrite engine. This
restriction is required for security reasons.RewriteBase
directive for more information regarding what prefix will be added back to
relative substitutions.%{REQUEST_URI} variable in
a RewriteCond.^/ never
matches in per-directory context.<Location> and <Files> sections
(including their regular expression counterparts), this
should never be necessary and is unsupported. A likely feature
to break in these contexts is relative substitutions.For some hints on regular expressions, see the mod_rewrite Introduction.
In mod_rewrite, the NOT character
      ('!') is also available as a possible pattern
      prefix. This enables you to negate a pattern; to say, for instance:
      ``if the current URL does NOT match this
      pattern''. This can be used for exceptional cases, where
      it is easier to match the negative pattern, or as a last
      default rule.
$N in the substitution string!
The Substitution of a rewrite rule is the string that replaces the original URL-path that was matched by Pattern. The Substitution may be a:
DocumentRoot-relative path to the
        resource to be served. Note that mod_rewrite
        tries to guess whether you have specified a file-system path
        or a URL-path by checking to see if the first segment of the
        path exists at the root of the file-system. For example, if
        you specify a Substitution string of
        /www/file.html, then this will be treated as a
        URL-path unless a directory named www
        exists at the root or your file-system (or, in the case of
        using rewrites in a .htaccess file, relative to
        your document root), in which case it will
        be treated as a file-system path. If you wish other
        URL-mapping directives (such as Alias) to be applied to the
        resulting URL-path, use the [PT] flag as
        described below.mod_rewrite checks to see whether the
        hostname matches the current host. If it does, the scheme and
        hostname are stripped out and the resulting path is treated as
        a URL-path. Otherwise, an external redirect is performed for
        the given URL. To force an external redirect back to the
        current host, see the [R] flag below.- (dash)In addition to plain text, the Substitution string can include
$N) to the RewriteRule
        pattern%N) to the last matched
        RewriteCond pattern%{VARNAME})${mapname:key|default})Back-references are identifiers of the form
      $N
      (N=0..9), which will be replaced
      by the contents of the Nth group of the
      matched Pattern. The server-variables are the same
      as for the TestString of a
      RewriteCond
      directive. The mapping-functions come from the
      RewriteMap
      directive and are explained there.
      These three types of variables are expanded in the order above.
Rewrite rules are applied to the results of previous rewrite
      rules, in the order in which they are defined
      in the config file. The URL-path or file-system path (see "What is matched?", above) is completely
      replaced by the Substitution and the
      rewriting process continues until all rules have been applied,
      or it is explicitly terminated by an
      L flag,
      or other flag which implies immediate termination, such as
      END or
      F.
By default, the query string is passed through unchanged. You
      can, however, create URLs in the substitution string containing
      a query string part. Simply use a question mark inside the
      substitution string to indicate that the following text should
      be re-injected into the query string. When you want to erase an
      existing query string, end the substitution string with just a
      question mark. To combine new and old query strings, use the
      [QSA] flag.
Additionally you can set special actions to be performed by
      appending [flags]
      as the third argument to the RewriteRule
      directive. Flags is a comma-separated list, surround by square
      brackets, of any of the flags in the following table. More
      details, and examples, for each flag, are available in the Rewrite Flags document.
| Flag and syntax | Function | 
|---|---|
| B | Escape non-alphanumeric characters in backreferences before applying the transformation. details ... | 
| backrefnoplus|BNP | If backreferences are being escaped, spaces should be escaped to %20 instead of +. Useful when the backreference will be used in the path component rather than the query string.details ... | 
| chain|C | Rule is chained to the following rule. If the rule fails, the rule(s) chained to it will be skipped. details ... | 
| cookie|CO=NAME:VAL | Sets a cookie in the client browser. Full syntax is: CO=NAME:VAL:domain[:lifetime[:path[:secure[:httponly]]]] details ... | 
| discardpath|DPI | Causes the PATH_INFO portion of the rewritten URI to be discarded. details ... | 
| END | Stop the rewriting process immediately and don't apply any more rules. Also prevents further execution of rewrite rules in per-directory and .htaccess context. (Available in 2.3.9 and later) details ... | 
| env|E=[!]VAR[:VAL] | Causes an environment variable VAR to be set (to the value VAL if provided). The form !VAR causes the environment variable VAR to be unset. details ... | 
| forbidden|F | Returns a 403 FORBIDDEN response to the client browser. details ... | 
| gone|G | Returns a 410 GONE response to the client browser. details ... | 
| Handler|H=Content-handler | Causes the resulting URI to be sent to the specified Content-handler for processing. details ... | 
| last|L | Stop the rewriting process immediately and don't apply any more rules. Especially note caveats for per-directory and .htaccess context (see also the END flag). details ... | 
| next|N | Re-run the rewriting process, starting again with the first rule, using the result of the ruleset so far as a starting point. details ... | 
| nocase|NC | Makes the pattern comparison case-insensitive. details ... | 
| noescape|NE | Prevent mod_rewrite from applying hexcode escaping of special characters in the result of the rewrite. details ... | 
| nosubreq|NS | Causes a rule to be skipped if the current request is an internal sub-request. details ... | 
| proxy|P | Force the substitution URL to be internally sent as a proxy request. details ... | 
| passthrough|PT | Forces the resulting URI to be passed back to the URL
        mapping engine for processing of other URI-to-filename
        translators, such as AliasorRedirect. details ... | 
| qsappend|QSA | Appends any query string from the original request URL to any query string created in the rewrite target.details ... | 
| qsdiscard|QSD | Discard any query string attached to the incoming URI. details ... | 
| qslast|QSL | Interpret the last (right-most) question mark as the query string delimiter, instead of the first (left-most) as normally used. Available in 2.4.19 and later. details ... | 
| redirect|R[=code] | Forces an external redirect, optionally with the specified HTTP status code. details ... | 
| skip|S=num | Tells the rewriting engine to skip the next num rules if the current rule matches. details ... | 
| type|T=MIME-type | Force the MIME-type of the target file to be the specified type. details ... | 
 When the substitution string begins with a string
resembling "/~user" (via explicit text or backreferences), mod_rewrite performs
home directory expansion independent of the presence or configuration
of mod_userdir.
 This expansion does not occur when the PT
flag is used on the RewriteRule
directive.
Here are all possible substitution combinations and their meanings:
Inside per-server configuration
      (httpd.conf)
       for request ``GET
      /somepath/pathinfo'':
      
| Given Rule | Resulting Substitution | 
|---|---|
| ^/somepath(.*) otherpath$1 | invalid, not supported | 
| ^/somepath(.*) otherpath$1 [R] | invalid, not supported | 
| ^/somepath(.*) otherpath$1 [P] | invalid, not supported | 
| ^/somepath(.*) /otherpath$1 | /otherpath/pathinfo | 
| ^/somepath(.*) /otherpath$1 [R] | http://thishost/otherpath/pathinfo via external redirection | 
| ^/somepath(.*) /otherpath$1 [P] | doesn't make sense, not supported | 
| ^/somepath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 | /otherpath/pathinfo | 
| ^/somepath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 [R] | http://thishost/otherpath/pathinfo via external redirection | 
| ^/somepath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 [P] | doesn't make sense, not supported | 
| ^/somepath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 | http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo via external redirection | 
| ^/somepath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 [R] | http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo via external redirection (the [R] flag is redundant) | 
| ^/somepath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 [P] | http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo via internal proxy | 
Inside per-directory configuration for
      /somepath
       (/physical/path/to/somepath/.htaccess, with
      RewriteBase "/somepath")
       for request ``GET
      /somepath/localpath/pathinfo'':
     
| Given Rule | Resulting Substitution | 
|---|---|
| ^localpath(.*) otherpath$1 | /somepath/otherpath/pathinfo | 
| ^localpath(.*) otherpath$1 [R] | http://thishost/somepath/otherpath/pathinfo via external redirection | 
| ^localpath(.*) otherpath$1 [P] | doesn't make sense, not supported | 
| ^localpath(.*) /otherpath$1 | /otherpath/pathinfo | 
| ^localpath(.*) /otherpath$1 [R] | http://thishost/otherpath/pathinfo via external redirection | 
| ^localpath(.*) /otherpath$1 [P] | doesn't make sense, not supported | 
| ^localpath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 | /otherpath/pathinfo | 
| ^localpath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 [R] | http://thishost/otherpath/pathinfo via external redirection | 
| ^localpath(.*) http://thishost/otherpath$1 [P] | doesn't make sense, not supported | 
| ^localpath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 | http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo via external redirection | 
| ^localpath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 [R] | http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo via external redirection (the [R] flag is redundant) | 
| ^localpath(.*) http://otherhost/otherpath$1 [P] | http://otherhost/otherpath/pathinfo via internal proxy |