i have tried it all!
this:
RewriteCond 开发者_如何学JAVA%{HTTP_HOST} ^www\.(.*)
RewriteRule ^.*$ https://%1/$1 [R=301,L]
works only if i don't put the http at the beggining
how do make that to work: if there is http redirect to https if there is www redirect to non-www and ofcourse both on the same time
http://www.domain.com -> https://domain.com
www.domain.com --> https://domain.com
http://domain.com --> https://domain.com
with every subfolders after and query!
I assume you also want
https://www.domain.com -> https://domain.com
Did you ever get this working? I'm having trouble getting a test https site going to double-check this.
In the meantime, I do see a couple things, so try this instead (this assumes isapi_rewrite v3, which it looks like you're using):
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^www\.(.*)
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ https://%1$1 [NC,R=301]
This adds parentheses to the RewriteRule to capture the url for the $1.
Then the slash between the %1$1 isn't needed, since there's one at the start of the $1 capture.
I like to use NC for not case-sensitive, and the R rule is a final rule, so you don't need the L for last.
EDIT
I revisited this answer, to update/clarify a couple of secondary issues in my original answer above. These don't change the main solution above, which was to add the parentheses to do the capture.
Original:
Then the slash between the %1$1 isn't needed, since there's one at the start of the $1 capture.
This actually depends where the rules are, and whether there's a RewriteBase
statement. Common shared-host configurations don't have the leading slash here in the rules, so the slash would be needed. If you're not sure, you can try with and without.
Original:
I like to use NC for not case-sensitive, and the R rule is a final rule, so you don't need the L for last.
It turns out it is useful to have L with R for performance, as [NC,R=301,L]
. I had actually asked this at Helicon Tech a year before this question, but had forgetten it:
http://www.helicontech.com/forum/14826-Does_Redirect_need_Last.html
From their response:
... the reason for us to use [L] in 301 redirect rules is that redirect occurs not that immediately. Even though the rule is matched futher rules will be proccessed (run through), unless you have [L]....
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