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URL rewrite

Azure Front Door provides support for URL rewrite, enabling you to modify the request path that is being routed to your origin. This powerful feature allows you to define conditions that determine when the URL or specified headers should be rewritten. These conditions are based on the information present in the request and response.

By using URL rewrite, you have the ability to redirect your end users to different origins based on factors such as their device type or the type of file they're requesting. The URL rewrite action can be easily configured within the rule set, providing you with fine-grained control over your routing behavior.

Screenshot of URL rewrite action in a rule set configuration.

Source pattern

The source pattern represents the URL path in the initial request that you wish to replace. Currently, the source pattern utilizes a prefix-based matching approach. To match all URL paths, you can specify a forward slash (/) as the value for the source pattern.

In the context of a URL rewrite action, only the path after the patterns to match in the route configuration is taken into consideration for the source pattern. For instance, the rule set considers only /source-pattern as the source pattern to be rewritten if you have an incoming URL format of contoso.com/pattern-to-match/source-pattern. After the URL rewrite is applied, the outgoing URL format will be contoso.com/pattern-to-match/destination.

In cases where you need to remove the /pattern-to-match segment of the URL, you can set the origin path for the origin group in the route configuration to /.

Destination

The destination path represents the path that replaces the source pattern. For instance, if the request URL path is contoso.com/foo/1.jpg, and the source pattern is /foo/, specifying the destination as /bar/ results in the content being served from contoso.com/bar/1.jpg from the origin.

Preserve unmatched path

Preserve unmatched path allows you to control how the remaining path after the source pattern is handled. By setting preserve unmatched path to Yes, the remaining path is appended to the new path. On the other hand, setting it to No (default) will remove the remaining path after the source pattern.

Here's an example showcasing the behavior of preserve unmatched path:

Preserve unmatched path Source pattern Destination Incoming request Content served from origin
Yes / /foo/ contoso.com/sub/1.jpg /foo/sub/1.jpg
Yes /sub/ /foo/ contoso.com/sub/image/1.jpg /foo/image/1.jpg
No /sub/ /foo/2.jpg contoso.com/sub/image/1.jpg /foo/2.jpg

Important

Azure Front Door (classic) will be retired on March 31, 2027. To avoid any service disruption, it is important that you migrate your Azure Front Door (classic) profiles to Azure Front Door Standard or Premium tier by March 2027. For more information, see Azure Front Door (classic) retirement.

Azure Front Door (classic) provides support for URL rewrite by configuring a Custom forwarding path when setting up the forward routing type rule. By default, if only a forward slash (/*) is defined, Front Door replicates the incoming URL path in the forwarded request. The host header used in the forwarded request is based on the configuration of the selected backend. For more detailed information, see the Backend host header documentation.

The key aspect of URL rewrite lies in the ability to copy any matching part of the incoming path to the forwarded path when using a custom forwarding path with a wildcard match. The following table illustrates an example of an incoming request and the corresponding forwarded path when utilizing a custom forwarding path of /fwd/. The section denoted as a/b/c represents the portion that replaces the wildcard match.

Incoming URL path Match path Custom forwarding path Forwarded path
/foo/a/b/c /foo/* /fwd/ /fwd/a/b/c

URL rewrite example

Consider a routing rule with the following combination of frontend hosts and paths are configured:

Hosts Paths
www.contoso.com /*
/foo
/foo/*
/foo/bar/*

The following table illustrates examples of incoming requests and their corresponding most-specific matching routes. It also provides examples of custom forwarding paths and the resulting forwarded paths.

For instance, consider the second row of the table. If the incoming request is www.contoso.com/sub, and the custom forwarding path is set to /, then the forwarded path would be /sub. However, if the custom forwarding path is set to /fwd/, then the forwarded path would be /fwd/sub. The emphasized parts of the paths indicate the portions that are part of the wildcard match.

Incoming request Most-specific match path / /fwd/ /foo/ /foo/bar/
www.contoso.com/ /* / /fwd/ /foo/ /foo/bar/
www.contoso.com/sub /* /sub /fwd/sub /foo/sub /foo/bar/sub
www.contoso.com/a/b/c /* /a/b/c /fwd/a/b/c /foo/a/b/c /foo/bar/a/b/c
www.contoso.com/foo /foo / /fwd/ /foo/ /foo/bar/
www.contoso.com/foo/ /foo/* / /fwd/ /foo/ /foo/bar/
www.contoso.com/foo/bar /foo/* /bar /fwd/bar /foo/bar /foo/bar/bar

Note

Azure Front Door (classic) only supports URL rewrite from a static path to another static path. Preserve unmatched path is supported with Azure Front Door Standard and Premium. For more information, see Preserve unmatched path.

Optional settings

Cache configuration - If disabled or not specified, requests that match to this routing rule doesn't attempt to use cached content and instead always fetch from the backend. For more information, see caching with Azure Front Door.

Next steps