'HTTP headers for jpg files after mod_rewrite
I'm using Apache's mod_rewrite to route requests for JPG files to a directory outside my web root.
It generally has been fine, but there are a few images that do not display. I then realized that when I use PHP's get_headers() function on my image URLs, they are all returningContent-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 instead of the proper image/jpeg header types.
I have tried explicitly setting the Content-Type: image/jpeg header and still, none of my images return the correct headers - although most do display correctly, but I'm not sure why.
How can I assure a JPG file is sent with the correct header when redirecting via mod_rewrite?
Solution 1:[1]
This is what you could do. Create a PHP file that will get the right file and passes it through
<?php
$sImage = 'imagename.jpg';
header("Content-Type: image/jpeg");
header("Content-Length: " .(string)(filesize($sImage)) );
echo file_get_contents($sImage);
or
<?php
$sImage = 'imagename.jpg';
$rFP = fopen($sImage, 'rb');
header("Content-Type: image/jpeg");
header("Content-Length: " .(string)(filesize($sImage)) );
fpassthru($rFP);
exit;
or in your Apache vhost config or .htaccess file
RewriteRule … … [T=image/jpeg]
Solution 2:[2]
You can also set the Content-Type header field with mod_rewrite with the T flag:
RewriteRule … … [T=image/jpeg]
Solution 3:[3]
How about image which is not.jpg. Like .gif, ...
You'll need to use mime_content_type() (which is deprecated) or the fileinfo extension to determine which content-type to send.
Edit: I don't recommend this, but if you are working with a specific subset of file extensions, you could also create a small dictionary array of content-types and use the file extension to determine which one to send.
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
| Solution | Source |
|---|---|
| Solution 1 | |
| Solution 2 | Gumbo |
| Solution 3 | simshaun |
