I have a website, with a nice RewriteRule in its root, that redirects all the queries of this kind:
http://domain.com/foo/parameter
into
http://domain.com/index.php?args=parameter
Users can only see the clean URL and everyone is happy.
Now here is the problem: domain.com DNS have an A record for domain.com, pointing to a private server IP, and an A record for mail.domain.com, pointing to the exact same IP.
For some unknown reason, in the last couple of months, Google double indexed all the pages of my site (http://domain.com/foo/par1, http://domain.com/foo/par2 etc.) with another set with the mail subdomain (http://mail.domain.com/foo/par1, http://mail.domain.com/foo/par2 etc).
I thought I could get rid of all of them redirecting any request to mail.domain.com/$whatever to domain.com and eventually Google would understand that all those pages with the 'mail' subdomain redirects to the homepage and are therefore not necessary.
I tried this in .htaccess:
RewriteCond %{HTTP_HOST} ^mail.domain.com$ [NC]
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ http://domain.com [R=301,L]
But this redirects to a visible URL that looks like this: http://domain.com/index.php?args=parameter, while I just want a redirect to the homepage.
What's the correct form, and are there more elegant ways to achieve this, maybe adding something into robots.txt? (Please note that I can't just disallow a subfolder here)
.htaccessquestions are asked here all the time, so I think it's accepted. – nitro2k01 Apr 16 '11 at 19:25