Overview
The Redirects interface allows you to send all of the visitors of a domain or particular page to a different URL. For example, if you create a page with a long URL, use the Redirects interface to add a redirect from a short URL to the long URL. Visitors can enter the short URL to access the content of the long URL.
You cannot edit a redirect. To modify a redirect, you must delete it, and then recreate it.
Add a redirect
To add a redirect, perform the following actions:
-
Select a redirect type from the Type menu.
- Permanent (301) — This setting notifies the visitor’s browser to update its records.
- Temporary (302) — This setting does not update the visitor’s bookmarks.
-
Select a domain name from the menu, or select **All Public Domains** to redirect all of the domains that your cPanel account controls.
-
In the next text box, enter the rest of the URL from which you wish for the server to redirect visitors. For example, if you wish to redirect
http://example.com/directory.file.html
to another URL, enterdirectory/file.html
in this text box. -
In the Redirects to text box, enter the URL to which you wish to redirect users.
Important:You must specify a protocol in this text box. For example,
http://
,https://
, orftp://
. -
Select one of the following settings:
- Only redirect with www. — This setting only redirects visitors who enter the www. prefix before the domain name part of the URL.
- Redirect with or without www. — This setting redirects all users, regardless of whether the visitor enters the www. prefix before the domain name part of the URL.
- Do Not Redirect www. — This setting does not redirect users who enter the www. prefix before the the domain name part of the URL.
Note:
The interface disables the www. redirection setting if you select **All Public Domains.**.
-
Select the Wild Card Redirect setting if you wish to redirect all files within a directory to the same filename in the new directory. For example, if you enable the Wild Card Redirect setting and
example1.com
redirects toexample.com
, then a visitor who tries to access thehttp://example1.com/pic.jpg
URL redirects to thehttp://example.com/pic.jpg
URL. -
Click Add.
-
To test the redirect, click the link under Directory in the Current Redirects table. If you properly configured the redirect, the system directs you to the original domain.
Redirects via third-party applications
When you add a redirect with cPanel interface, the system places redirect rules at the bottom of the .htaccess
file. Some third-party applications will ignore your rule because those applications only read rules and configurations that their section of the .htaccess
file contains.
If you use a third-party application or content management system to add a redirect, such as WordPress®, the redirect may not function properly.
The following example displays the configuration that you must add to the top of the .htaccess
file to add a redirect for the Drupal content management system. In this example:
drupal.user.example.com
represents the URL to redirect.http://cpanel.net/
represents the URL to which to redirect.
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The Current Redirects table
The Current Redirects table lists the redirections that currently exist on your account. To search for a redirection, enter the search criteria in the Search text box and click Go.
The table lists the following information about redirects:
Label | Description |
---|---|
Domain | The domain to redirect. ALL represents all of the account’s publicly-available domains. |
Directory | The directory to redirect. Click the link to test the redirection. |
Regular Expression | The system will redirect any URL that matches the regular expression in this column. |
Redirect URL | The URL to which you wish to redirect users. |
HTTP Status Code | The numerical HTTP Status Code of the redirect. |
Type |
|
Match www. | Only redirect visitors who enter the www. prefix before the domain name part of the URL. |
Wildcard | Redirect all files within a directory to the same filename in the new directory. For example, if you enable the Wild Card Redirect setting and example1.com redirects to example.com , then a visitor who tries to access the http://example1.com/pic.jpg URL redirects to the http://example.com/pic.jpg URL. |
Actions | Available actions for the redirection:
Important:
Most web browsers add redirections to a cache. Visitors may need to clear their web browser cache to remove the redirection from their web browsers
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