2009/5/12 Roman Medina-Heigl Hernandez <ro...@rs-labs.com>:
> My final solution is:
>
>                RewriteBase /stats
>                RewriteCond %{REMOTE_USER}/<>$1 !^([^<]+)<>\1
>                RewriteRule ^/clientes/(.*) /stats/%{REMOTE_USER}/stats/http/$1
>
>                RewriteCond $1 !^[^/]+/stats/http/
>                RewriteRule ^/clientes/(.*) hacking_attempt [F]
>
>
> The alternative (adding L) is:
>
>                RewriteBase /stats
>                RewriteCond %{REMOTE_USER}/<>$1 !^([^<]+)<>\1
>                RewriteRule ^/clientes/(.*)
> /stats/%{REMOTE_USER}/stats/http/$1 [L]
>
>                RewriteCond $1 !^[^/]+/stats/http/
>                RewriteRule ^/clientes/(.*) hacking_attempt [F,L]
>
> But I see no real difference between both solutions. Am I right?

L makes only sense to abort something below, i.e. if there's nothing,
there's nothing to abort (F implies L btw., the substitution will be
dropped as well). Your second rule (forbidden) comes never true, if
the first rule matched. So you could stop further (useless) processing
with the L flag at your first rule.

Bob

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