standard-redirects-for-cloudfront
A Lambda@Edge function that implements standard web server redirects:
URIs ending with a slash (e.g. "/something/") are "internally" redirected to "/something/index.html", i.e. the browser sees "/something/" but on the server-side the content is taken from "/something/index.html".
URIs without an extension (and not ending with a slash) will redirect with an HTTP status 301 (Moved Permanently) to the same URL with a slash appended.
Examples
/ -> internal redirect -> /index.html /foo/bar/ -> internal redirect -> /foo/bar/index.html /foo -> external redirect (301) -> /foo/ /foo.html -> no redirect /foo/bar.html -> no redirect /foo/index.html -> external redirect (301) -> /foo/
Notes
This URL scheme is somewhat opinionated. It tries to balance SEO requirements with server-side tooling. (E.g. S3 tooling tries to infer the content-type from the file extension.)
It allows you to have very nice outward facing URLs like "/cooltopic", that internally use a file with a correct extension: "cooltopic/index.html". To have content other than index.html in a folder, you need to expose the file extension: "/cooltopic/somecontent.html"
Installation
- Create a function called "LATE-standard-redirects-for-cloudfront" in N. Virginia (us-east-1)
- Run "npm run deploy"
This function assumes that your CloudFront distribution handles the URL "/" directly by having the property "Default Root Object" set to "index.html".
TODO: IAM, SAM