Apache HTTP Server Version 2.4
This document supplements the mod_rewrite
reference documentation. It describes
how you can use mod_rewrite
to control access to
various resources, and other related techniques.
This includes many examples of common uses of mod_rewrite,
including detailed descriptions of how each works.
The following technique forbids the practice of other sites including your images inline in their pages. This practice is often referred to as "hotlinking", and results in your bandwidth being used to serve content for someone else's site.
This technique relies on the value of the
HTTP_REFERER
variable, which is optional. As
such, it's possible for some people to circumvent this
limitation. However, most users will experience the failed
request, which should, over time, result in the image being
removed from that other site.
There are several ways that you can handle this situation.
In this first example, we simply deny the request, if it didn't
initiate from a page on our site. For the purpose of this example,
we assume that our site is www.example.com
.
RewriteCond "%{HTTP_REFERER}" "!^$" RewriteCond "%{HTTP_REFERER}" "!www.example.com" [NC] RewriteRule "\.(gif|jpg|png)$" "-" [F,NC]
In this second example, instead of failing the request, we display an alternate image instead.
RewriteCond "%{HTTP_REFERER}" "!^$" RewriteCond "%{HTTP_REFERER}" "!www.example.com" [NC] RewriteRule "\.(gif|jpg|png)$" "/images/go-away.png" [R,NC]
In the third example, we redirect the request to an image on some other site.
RewriteCond "%{HTTP_REFERER}" "!^$" RewriteCond "%{HTTP_REFERER}" "!www.example.com" [NC] RewriteRule "\.(gif|jpg|png)$" "http://other.example.com/image.gif" [R,NC]
Of these techniques, the last two tend to be the most effective in getting people to stop hotlinking your images, because they will simply not see the image that they expected to see.
If all you wish to do is deny access to the resource, rather than redirecting that request elsewhere, this can be accomplished without the use of mod_rewrite:
SetEnvIf Referer "example\.com" localreferer <FilesMatch "\.(jpg|png|gif)$"> Require env localreferer </FilesMatch>
In this recipe, we discuss how to block persistent requests from a particular robot, or user agent.
The standard for robot exclusion defines a file,
/robots.txt
that specifies those portions of your
website where you wish to exclude robots. However, some robots
do not honor these files.
Note that there are methods of accomplishing this which do
not use mod_rewrite. Note also that any technique that relies on
the clients USER_AGENT
string can be circumvented
very easily, since that string can be changed.
We use a ruleset that specifies the directory to be
protected, and the client USER_AGENT
that
identifies the malicious or persistent robot.
In this example, we are blocking a robot called
NameOfBadRobot
from a location
/secret/files
. You may also specify an IP address
range, if you are trying to block that user agent only from the
particular source.
RewriteCond "%{HTTP_USER_AGENT}" "^NameOfBadRobot" RewriteCond "%{REMOTE_ADDR}" "=123\.45\.67\.[8-9]" RewriteRule "^/secret/files/" "-" [F]
Rather than using mod_rewrite for this, you can accomplish the same end using alternate means, as illustrated here:
SetEnvIfNoCase User-Agent "^NameOfBadRobot" goaway <Location "/secret/files"> <RequireAll> Require all granted Require not env goaway </RequireAll> </Location>
As noted above, this technique is trivial to circumvent, by simply
modifying the USER_AGENT
request header. If you
are experiencing a sustained attack, you should consider blocking
it at a higher level, such as at your firewall.
We wish to maintain a blacklist of hosts, rather like
hosts.deny
, and have those hosts blocked from
accessing our server.
RewriteEngine on RewriteMap hosts-deny "txt:/path/to/hosts.deny" RewriteCond "${hosts-deny:%{REMOTE_ADDR}|NOT-FOUND}" "!=NOT-FOUND" [OR] RewriteCond "${hosts-deny:%{REMOTE_HOST}|NOT-FOUND}" "!=NOT-FOUND" RewriteRule "^" "-" [F]
##
## hosts.deny
##
## ATTENTION! This is a map, not a list, even when we treat it as such.
## mod_rewrite parses it for key/value pairs, so at least a
## dummy value "-" must be present for each entry.
##
193.102.180.41 -
bsdti1.sdm.de -
192.76.162.40 -
The second RewriteCond assumes that you have HostNameLookups turned
on, so that client IP addresses will be resolved. If that's not the
case, you should drop the second RewriteCond, and drop the
[OR]
flag from the first RewriteCond.
Redirect requests based on the Referer from which the request came, with different targets per Referer.
The following ruleset uses a map file to associate each Referer with a redirection target.
RewriteMap deflector "txt:/path/to/deflector.map" RewriteCond "%{HTTP_REFERER}" !="" RewriteCond "${deflector:%{HTTP_REFERER}}" "=-" RewriteRule "^" "%{HTTP_REFERER}" [R,L] RewriteCond "%{HTTP_REFERER}" !="" RewriteCond "${deflector:%{HTTP_REFERER}|NOT-FOUND}" "!=NOT-FOUND" RewriteRule "^" "${deflector:%{HTTP_REFERER}}" [R,L]
The map file lists redirection targets for each referer, or, if we just wish to redirect back to where they came from, a "-" is placed in the map:
## ## deflector.map ## http://badguys.example.com/bad/index.html - http://badguys.example.com/bad/index2.html - http://badguys.example.com/bad/index3.html http://somewhere.example.com/