RewriteCond %{REMOTE_ADDR} ^10\.0\.10\.10$
RewriteRule ^uploads/(.*)$ /wp-content/uploads/$1
RewriteRule (.*) http://deadorange.com/blog$1 [L,R=301]It turns out that RewriteCond directives only apply to the following RewriteRule. So my rewrite directives above were equivalent to:
If the request came from 10.0.10.10, rewrite /uploads/.* to /wp-content/uploads/.* .
Next, redirect everyone to http://deadorange.com/blog$1 .
Unfortunately, the only solution is to repeat the condition:
RewriteCond %{REMOTE_ADDR} ^10\.0\.10\.10$
RewriteRule ^uploads/(.*)$ /wp-content/uploads/$1
RewriteCond %{REMOTE_ADDR} ^10\.0\.10\.10$
RewriteRule (.*) http://deadorange.com/blog$1 [L,R=301]That isn't very DRY, but if it's the only way, we have to live with it!
2 comments:
Actually, you can. Add the [C] flag to the first rule to chain it to the second one. If the first rule does not match (maybe due to its precondition) then all the chained rules are skipped.
Yeah, the [C] flag can help in certain situations. However, I needed the second RewriteRule to fire regardless of whether or not the first one matched.
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