Rewrites Map
If you've used mod_rewrite
with Apache web server, you may be familiar with its Rewrite Map functionality, which allows you to create dynamic rewrites based on a text file of mappings. We have a similar feature built on Undertow's Server Rules that mimics Apache's feature.
Note, when in Mult-Site mode, each site has its own rewrite maps, even if they share the same name. There is no overlap between sites!
Declare a Rewrite Map
There is a rewrite-map()
handler which declares a named map file. It accepts an absolute path to the rewrite file, and case sensitivity flag.
The file format matches that of Apache's rewrite map functionality.
Lines starting with
#
are a commentempty lines are ignored
First space-delimited token becomes the key
All remaining tokens become the value
Lines with a single token default the value to an empty string
Here is an example file:
Watch disk for changes
If the date modified on the rewrite map file changes on disk, the data will be automatically re-loaded into memory.
Using the Rewrite Map
There are two handler/predicates you can use to interact with the rewrite map. Make sure these are in your list of Server Rules AFTER the map definition.
Check if a key exists
There is a rewrite-map-exists()
predicate which will tell you if a given key exists in the map (Apache doesn't have this)
You can pair this predicate to only use the rewrite map if there is a match.
Get the value for a key from the map
There is a new %{map:name-name:mapKey|defaultValue}
exchange attribute which mostly follows Apache's syntax. The only limitation is nested exchange attributes must use [] instead of {} due to an Undertow parsing issue).
In the example above, we're using a regex predicate to extract the text after /foo/
in the URL and then we reference that capture group as $[1]
which we pass in as the key to the map. If there is no key in the map for that value, we default to 99
.
So, given our example rule map file above, the url
would be rewritten to