I'm learning PHP on my computer with IIS7.5 as the web server and am having a problem completing a 301 redirect correctly.
The tutorials and forums all say to use the following:
Header('Location: ' . $url, true, 301);
OR
Header('Location: ' . $url);
In both cases, instead of actually redirecting, the browser (Chrome and Firefox) display this:
Object Moved
This document may be found here
Using the FireFox web developer toolbar, I retrieved the page headers, which were:
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
Server: Microsoft-IIS/7.5
X-Powered-By: PHP/5.3.5, ASP.NET
Date: Mon, 21 Mar 2011 18:47:35 GMT
Content-Length: 123
301 Moved Permanently
开发者_运维知识库
Why is the page not redirecting? Displaying that page is kind of redundant and annoying for users.
I figured it out. The Location header must be an absolute path to auto-redirect. If it's a relative path it doesn't redirect.
I had a similar issue but the path was already absolute. I solved it by specifically sending a 301 header before the location. PHP is supposed to detect redirects and do this automatically but wasn't doing.
header("HTTP/1.1 301 Moved Permanently");
header("location:http://www.mysite.com/mypage.php");
I had this problem using PHP on IIS7 using absolute URL. Bugged me for a little while. Ensure that you put exit(); after your header('Location: https://domain.tld/resource'); the header doesn't stop execution, and the function will otherwise return somewhere giving maybe unexpected results.
I figured out a easy hack to fix this. Use an Outbound Redirect rule to set the Content Length header in redirect responses to 0. Browsers will truncate the sent response body automatically based on the Content Length header.
Here is my redirect rule:
<rewrite>
<outboundRules>
<rule name="Remove Content from Redirect Requests" preCondition="Is30xStatus" enabled="true" patternSyntax="Wildcard">
<match serverVariable="RESPONSE_CONTENT_LENGTH" pattern="*" />
<action type="Rewrite" value="0" />
</rule>
<preConditions>
<preCondition name="Is30xStatus">
<add input="{RESPONSE_STATUS}" pattern="^30[1-8]$" />
</preCondition>
</preConditions>
</outboundRules>
</rewrite>
I would recommend using that as a reference to create a new outbound rewrite rule using the IIS Manager as editing web.config files directly can have unexpected results.
Update: Apparently there is a PHP directive that changes the format of the headers to help with this as well:
cgi.rfc2616_headers = 1
I have tested this on my server, and this seems to help the issue as well.
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