On Mar 8, 9:50 pm, "Danilo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi there, > > is it possible to create a rewrite rule to send every server-request > to the directory /py? But only if the file does not exists on the > server. > > This is my mod_python section of the apache config-file. > > <Location "/py"> > SetHandler python-program > PythonHandler django.core.handlers.modpython > PythonPath "['/var/www/mydomain.com/htdocs/py'] + sys.path" > SetEnv DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE myapp.settings > PythonDebug Off > </Location>
For the more general case of where a HTTP 404 error would otherwise be returned, indicating that a resource could not be found, as opposed to an actual physical file, you can just use: ErrorDocument 404 /py This would be simpler than using mod_rewrite. I can't remember though whether the handler when triggered in this case can change the response status to something other than 404. You could use mod_rewrite if you really must, but not sure how it would interact with virtual resources managed by some handler where no actual file exists. To be practical you would probably want to restrict the scope of mod_rewrite to specific contexts. Quoting an example from very good book "The Definitive Guide to Apache mod_rewrite", you can do something similar to: RewriteEngine On # If its not here ... RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d # Look here instead ... RewriteRule ^/images/(.*) /pics/$1 [PT] In this case it is causing lookups for images to be made in two places, but your case wouldn't be much different. Graham -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list