I care because I have to test again at the top of the rules for the rewritten 
URIs to say "ok their fine now, get out", or they get screwed up by the 
re-evluation of the same rules for some instances.  

I have read further that I need to place the rules inside a <VirtualHost> to 
prevent this, I used a <Directory.... to my discredit.

Unless, this is just a big waste of time, and I should leave it alone and just 
add my catch rules at the top.

I'm fairly new to rewrites so I want to be sure I'm doing it right before 
adding dozens of new rules.

________________________________________
From: Eric Covener [[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, February 08, 2013 9:28 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [users@httpd] internal redirects in httpd.conf

On Fri, Feb 8, 2013 at 9:23 PM, Coughlin, Michael J
<[email protected]> wrote:
> I had many rewrite rules in .htaccess.  I discovered they were being 
> reevaluated with an internal direct after a rewrite.  I also read that this 
> does not happen if you place the rules in the httpd.config file.
>
> So I did, I killed the .htaccess file to be sure, and sure enough, the 
> internal redirects are still happening.
>
> Was this a lie?  Or am I missing something again......

Every rewrite is an internal redirect in htaccess.  Other features of
the server also use internal redirects.  Why do you care?

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