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I understand there are a lot of questions that answer this. I'm familiar with .htaccess and nginx.conf methods, but I do not have access to such traditional configuration methods on heroku.

Simone Carletti gave this answer that leverages Rails 2.x Metals, but I'm using Rails 3 and this isn't compatible. Redirect non-www requests to www urls in Rails

Please note:

I'm not looking for a simple before_filter in my ApplicationController. I'd like to accomplish a rewrite similar to Simone's. I believe this is job for the webserver or middleware like Rack at the very least, so I'd like to leave this bit out of the actual app code.

Goal

redirect                to                  status
----------------------------------------------------
www.foo.com             foo.com             301
www.foo.com/whatever    foo.com/whatever    301

Only hosts matching /^www\./ should be redirect. All other requests should be ignored.


Adapted answer

lib/no_www.rb

class NoWww

  def initialize(app)
    @app = app
  end

  def call(env)

    request = Rack::Request.new(env)

    if request.host.start_with?("www.")
      [301, {"Location" => request.url.sub("//www.", "//")}, self]
    else
      @app.call(env)
    end
  end

  def each(&block)
  end

end

config/application.rb

config.autoload_paths += %W(#{config.root}/lib)

config.middleware.use "NoWww"
share|improve this question
Thanks a lot :) – Robin Nov 14 '11 at 14:53
I don't understand the need for the each method. My middlewares don't have it, and they work like a charm. – radiospiel Jun 1 at 12:46
Ah, now I see: self is returned as the response body in the redirection case, and the body must respond_to? :each. This is probably not the canonical way. I suggest just returning an empty string or [] as the response body instead. – radiospiel Jun 1 at 12:59

8 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

Take a look at this middleware, it should do precisely what you want:

http://github.com/iSabanin/www_ditcher

Let me know if that worked for you.

share|improve this answer
Ilya, I'm marking this as accepted but I came up with a slightly more elegant/robust solution. According to the Rack Spec, "The Body itself should not be an instance of String, as this will break in Ruby 1.9." So, I made an adjustment here. Also, I'm using Rack::Request object for handling the URL and making the code a little cleaner. – maček Oct 29 '10 at 8:59

There's a better approach if you're using Rails 3. Just take advantage of the routing awesomeness.

Foo::Application.routes.draw do
  constraints(:host => /^example.com/) do
    root :to => redirect("http://www.example.com")
    match '/*path', :to => redirect {|params| "http://www.example.com/#{params[:path]}"}
  end
end
share|improve this answer
I want to redirect without www when www is specified. Can you adapt your answer. I will mark it as accepted if it works. :) – maček Nov 1 '10 at 5:51
1  
is it also possible you could make it domain agnostic? E.g., something like "#{params[:protocol]}://#{params[:host]}/#{params[:path]}" ? – maček Nov 1 '10 at 5:53

I really like using the Rails Router for such things. Previous answers were good, but I wanted something general purpose I can use for any url that starts with "www".

I think this is a good solution:

constraints(:host => /^www\./) do
  match "(*x)" => redirect { |params, request|
    URI.parse(request.url).tap {|url| url.host.sub!('www.', '') }.to_s
  }
end
share|improve this answer

In Rails 3

#config/routes.rb
Example::Application.routes.draw do
  constraints(:host => "www.example.net") do
    match "(*x)" => redirect { |params, request|
      URI.parse(request.url).tap { |x| x.host = "example.net" }.to_s
    }
  end
  # .... 
  # .. more routes ..
  # ....
end

http://8raystech.com/2011/02/08/redirecting-www-url-requests-to-non-www-url-in-rails-3

share|improve this answer

A one-line version of Duke's solution. Just add to the top of routes.rb

match '(*any)' => redirect { |p, req| req.url.sub('www.', '') }, :constraints => { :host => /^www\./ }
share|improve this answer
Thanks! Could you also make another version to include redirect from onedomain.com to onedomain.net for example? If the both domains share the same name, could it be like req.url.sub('www.','').sub('net','com') ? – Daniel Dener Mar 5 at 18:55

If you want to redirect from the top-level domain (TLD) to the www subdomain, use this code:

constraints :subdomain => '' do
  match '(*any)' => redirect { |p, req| req.url.sub('//', '//www.') }
end

Note: This code the use of sub, not gsub, because sub replaces the first occurrence of the double-slashes where gsub would replace all double-slashes.

share|improve this answer
An answer to the reverse of this question, but very useful - thanks! – Troy Jul 23 '12 at 23:22

Nothing wrong with the approaches above, but there are also a couple of gems that provide Rack middleware to do this.

I like the way that they keep this behaviour separate from the app itself, but it's not a particularly strong argument either way. I also use middleware to do this when working with Sinatra, so prefer to use a technique that I can use on apps built from Rails and/or Sinatra (I often run Nesta embedded in Rails).

Anyway, here they are:

The first is simpler (and the one I've been using) while the second offers a couple more features (that I'm yet to need, but appreciate).

share|improve this answer

For Rails 4 the above solutions have to be appended with the Verb construction e.g. via: [:get, :post]. Duke's solution becomes:

  constraints(:host => /^www\./) do
    match "(*x)" => redirect { |params, request|
      URI.parse(request.url).tap {|url| url.host.sub!('www.', '') }.to_s
    }, via: [:get, :post]
  end
share|improve this answer

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