The
The meaning of the pattern can be modified by using any combination of these flags:
i
n
n
flag forces the pattern to be treated
as a fixed string.f
f
flag causes mod_substitute to flatten the
result of a substitution allowing for later substitutions to
take place on the boundary of this one. This is the default.q
q
flag causes mod_substitute to not
flatten the buckets after each substitution. This can
result in much faster response and a decrease in memory
utilization, but should only be used if there is no possibility
that the result of one substitution will ever match a pattern
or regex of a subsequent one.If either the pattern or the substitution contain a slash character then an alternative delimiter should be used:
Backreferences can be used in the comparison and in the substitution, when regular expressions are used, as illustrated in the following example:
A common use scenario for mod_substitute
is the
situation in which a front-end server proxies requests to a back-end
server which returns HTML with hard-coded embedded URLs that refer
to the back-end server. These URLs don't work for the end-user,
since the back-end server is unreachable.
In this case, mod_substutite
can be used to rewrite
those URLs into something that will work from the front end:
Location
(redirect) headers that are sent
by the back-end server, and, in this example,
Substitute
takes care of the rest of the problem by
fixing up the HTML response as well.