You should be able to do this in theory. The RewriteCond
command has a flag -f
which can be used to check for the existence of a file. You should be able to have a rule like this:
# If the file doesn't exist
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
# off to PHP we go
RewriteRule (.*) your-code.php [L,QSA]
The twist here is that I imagine you're naming files according to the parameters that come in -- so the example above might be thumbnails/this-is-the-image-name-200-100.gif
. If that is the case, you'll need to generate a filename to test on the fly, and check for that instead of the REQUEST_FILENAME
-- the details of this are really specific to your setup. If you can, I would recommend some sort of system that doesn't involve too much effort. For example, you could store your thumbnails to the filesystem in a directory structure like /width/height/filename
, which would be easier to check for in a rewrite rule than, modified-filename-width-height.gif
.
If you haven't checked it out, Apache's mod_rewrite guide has a bunch of decent examples.
UPDATE: so, you'll actually need to check for the dynamic filename from the looks of it. I think that the easiest way to do something like this will be to stick the filename you generate into an environment variable, like this (I've borrowed from your other question to flesh this out):
# generate potential thumbnail filename
RewriteCond %{SCRIPT_FILENAME}%{QUERY_STRING} /([a-zA-Z0-9-]+).(jpg|gif|png)w=([0-9]+)&h=([0-9]+)(&c=(true|false))
# store it in a variable
RewriteRule .* - [E=thumbnail:%1-%2-%3-%4-%6.jpg]
# check to see if it exists
RewriteCond %{DOCUMENT_ROOT}/path/%{ENV:thumbnail} !-f
# off to PHP we go
RewriteRule (.*) thumbnail.php?file_name=%1&type=%2&w=%3&h=%4&c=%6 [L,QSA]
This is completely untested, and subject to not working for sure. I would recommend a couple other things:
Also, one huge recommendation I have for you is that if possible, turn on logging and set RewriteLogLevel
to a high level. The log for rewrite rules can be pretty convoluted, but definitely gives you an idea of what is going on. You need server access to do this -- you can't put the logging config in an .htaccess file if I recall.
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