301 redirect rule
-
Hi there,
I have a website that has hundreds of links with a "question mark" at the end of URLs. For example:
http://www.domain.com/directory/page.html?
http://www.domain.com/directory/another-directory?
http://www.domain.com/directory/yet-another-directory/?I'm want to place a wildcard redirect on the .htaccess file but don't know what exactly to add. Ideally I want the URLs above to be:
http://www.domain.com/directory/page.html
http://www.domain.com/directory/another-directory/
http://www.domain.com/directory/yet-another-directory/Any help is most appreciated.
Thanks
Issa -
Hmmmm...you shouldn't need the RewriteCond. The regex for the rule itself merely needs to end in ?$, indicating that the ? must be the last character on the line.
And your rule looks to me like it will APPEND a question mark, not remove it!
I haven't tested this, but this should work as a blanket rule for all files and folders:
RewriteRule ^(.*)?$ /$1 [L,R=301]
-
Hi again,
Thank you for all this so far, however, it still doesn't help me very much. If i will need to follow the same system I will need to create a redirect line for each directory level and variation level I have on the website. Please not that in my initial question i said I have hundreds of cases of this issue.
I have discussed this issue with friends who came up with a solution that I thought i should share with you guys here. The redirect code should be:
RewriteCond %{THE_REQUEST} ^(GET|HEAD|POST)\ /[^\ ?]*?($|\ )
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ /$1? [L,R=301]
The first line ensures that the rule will only deal with question marks that appears at the end of the URL not the middle (as you kindly mentioned before). The second line then removes the question mark.
Plus, its just 2 lines, 1 rule which is a much shorter format
I hope this will be useful to someone else, it surely has saved me a lot of trouble, its now implemented and works perfectly.
Issa
-
Donford's correct. The "." matches any character; the "*" says 0 or more times; the $ means end of line.
-
the .*$ is the wildcard you can redirect on match keyword or directory.
Here is a good site that helps with this, special note the "Wildcard Redirect" section.
The question mark is usually an indication that the urls are dynamic if that is the case you may also want to review this helpful post on seOverflow.com about dynamic urls.
-
Not sure how the status of this question has changed to "Answered" but no thats not the right answer I'm afraid. What I was asking for is a wildcard redirect not redirect for the three examples i provided.
As mentioned i have hundreds of pages that require this change.
Issa
-
Donford's answer looks right to me, but I'd test it on your particular server as well.
My experience with .htaccess is that the various test tools don't always perform exactly the same as the server itself; also different webserver software (even different versions of Apache!) seem to have different results for the same patterns.
So...it's not always even sufficient to test on your development server.
-
This should work..
Test it out and see if we're on the right track.
RewriteEngine on
RedirectMatch 301 ^page.html?.$ http://www.domain.com/directory/page.html
RedirectMatch 301 ^/another-directory?.$ http://www.domain.com/directory/another-directory/
RedirectMatch 301 ^/yet-another-directory/?.*$ http://www.domain.com/directory/yet-another-directory/
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Redirect Chains
Hi There, I have had conducted a few migrations recently and have a common issue which is this: HTTP (old site) -> HTTPS (old site) -> (HTTPS) (new site) Which causes a redirect chain. How should you prevent this before migration or fix it after migration? Cheers.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | kayl870 -
Do I need to do a 301, as well as adding re-write rules on Apache
I'm sure this has probably been asked somewhere before... We're implementing a URL re-write rule to convert non dub pages to the www. subdomain and also removing all trailing slashes as part of a basic canonicalisation exercise. The question is, as well as doing the URL rewrites within htaccess, should I also 301 those duplicate pages or does the URL rewrite do the job on it's own? Thanks mozzers.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Ultramod0 -
301 issues
Hi, I have this site: www.berenjifamilylaw.com. We did a 301 from the old site: www.bestfamilylawattorney.com to the one above. It's been several weeks now and Google has indexed the new site, but still pulls the old one on search terms like: Los Angeles divorce lawyer. I'm curious, does anyone have experience with this? How long does it take for Google to remove the old site and start serving the new one as a search result? Any ideas or tips would be appreciated. Thanks.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | mrodriguez14400 -
301 Redirection
Hi there guys, I have a question about redirection. My boss has just bought a new domain name and he wants it to redirect to our current site when looking for specific products. www.example.com is our current website www.productname.com is the new domain So the new domain would be redirected to example.com. Would that be considered against Google Policies? Thanks
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | PremioOscar0 -
Tracking URLS and Redirects
We have a client with many archived newsletters links that contain tracking code at the end of the URL. These old URLs are pointing to pages that don't exist anymore. Is there a way to set up permanent redirects for these old URLs with tracking code? We have tried and it doesn't seem to work. Thank you!
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | BopDesign0 -
301 redirect
Hi there, I have some good links pointing to one of my web pages at the moment, however we are just about to launch a new design with new URL structure and I am clear that I need to do a 301 redirect on the URL to the new URL. However, do I keep the old URL live forever? or can I remove it after a while? Kind Regards
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Paul780 -
301 redirect Actinic HTML pages to ASP. Achievable?
Hi - I'm hoping someone can help me resolve an issue in relation to setting up 301 redirects. The client to whom I provide SEO services is being told by his developers that setting up 301 redirects is not achievable from old HTML pages to his new site running on a Windows server. My feeling is that it should be fine, and I have found documentation online that seems to support this, however I'm no developer, certainly no server admin, so I was wondering if anyone could advise me? Is it feasible to set up 301 redirects from Actinic sites (HTML pages) to a new site in NOP commerce running on a Windows server (ASP pages). Thank you for your help! Iain
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Wynyard0 -
302 redirect
Aloha, I do a small study of 302 redirects. I wonder if you have any examples of sites where the use of a 302 is made.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | android_lyon
For example, to ski resorts: where there is a summer version and a winter version. In this case, the field of 302 will return the version of the relevant season. ex: http://www.valmorel.com/ >> 302 >> http://www.valmorel.com/fr/hiver/accueil-hiver.html I wonder if the use of 302 is the right solution.
What do you think? D.0