correosdelbosque / mongoose

Automatically exported from code.google.com/p/mongoose
MIT License
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301 Redirection #412

Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 8 years ago

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
What is the expected output? 

To be able to permanently redirect (301) the server's address to a different 
page on a different server.

What version of the product are you using? On what operating system?

Mongoose DEV 5.4.2 on Windows Server 2008 R2 Datacenter

Please provide any additional information below.

I would like to redirect the page to another page in a different server. I have 
purchased and installed Mongoose because of its very low footprint on the 
server. I am currently using the re_write option using the errors 403 and 404 
to temporarily move the page to the correct destination,since I have no data 
what so ever on the shared Web folder on the server that Mongoose is installed. 
But when Mongoose redirects it to the real website, it shows the parameters on 
the address bar, which is not the ideal solution whatsoever. The ideal solution 
would be a field to insert the address for a permanent 301 redirection.

Thank you very much for your help. 
Kind regards, 
Giovanni 

Original issue reported on code.google.com by gigio.sa...@gmail.com on 22 Oct 2014 at 2:35

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Giovanni, Thank you for your request. But its nature indicates that you may not 
understand the purpose of Mongoose. It is not meant to be a replacement for 
Apache, and is not meant to be a general-purpose Web server. If we added all 
useful Apache directives, Mongoose would no longer be tiny!

It is a tiny server meant to be part of a stand-alone application. In this 
usage, the data for the application is present on the same site. Redirection is 
not needed.

Even if data is in a different domain, it can be fetched through Mongoose (for 
example, using PHP, which is almost fully supported) without top-level 
redirection.

For example, suppose we want to put some Web pages on a CD, and hand them to 
customers. If we want the CD to serve those pages, as though it were a website, 
we can accomplish that by using Mongoose.

Unless you can give a use case (an example of usage) for the proposed feature, 
it is unlikely to be accepted.

Original comment by googl...@springtimesoftware.com on 22 Oct 2014 at 5:40