# Clean URLs Removing `index.php` from your urls. To keep your URLs clean, you will probably want to be able to access your app without having `/index.php/` in the URL. There are two steps to remove `index.php` from the URL. 1. Edit the bootstrap file 2. Set up rewriting ## 1. Configure Bootstrap The first thing you will need to change is the `index_file` setting of [Kohana::init] to false: Kohana::init(array( 'base_url' => '/myapp/', 'index_file' => FALSE, )); This change will make it so all of the links generated using [URL::site], [URL::base], and [HTML::anchor] will no longer include "index.php" in the URL. All generated links will start with `/myapp/` instead of `/myapp/index.php/`. ## 2. URL Rewriting Enabling rewriting is done differently, depending on your web server. Rewriting will make it so urls will be passed to index.php. ## Apache Rename `example.htaccess` to only `.htaccess` and alter the `RewriteBase` line to match the `base_url` setting from your [Kohana::init] RewriteBase /myapp/ The rest of the `.htaccess file` rewrites all requests through index.php, unless the file exists on the server (so your css, images, favicon, etc. are still loaded like normal). In most cases, you are done! ### 404 errors If you get a "404 Not Found" error when trying to view a page then it's likely Apache is not configured to read the `.htaccess` file. In the main apache configuration file (usually `httpd.conf`), or in the virtual server configuration file, check that the `AccessFileName` directive is set to `.htaccess` and the `AllowOverride` directive is set to `All`. AccessFileName .htaccess AllowOverride All ### Failed! If you get a "Internal Server Error" or "No input file specified" error, try changing: RewriteRule ^(?:application|modules|system)\b - [F,L] Instead, we can try a slash: RewriteRule ^(application|modules|system)/ - [F,L] If that doesn't work, try changing: RewriteRule .* index.php/$0 [PT] To something more simple: RewriteRule .* index.php [PT] ### Still Failed! If you are still getting errors, check to make sure that your host supports URL `mod_rewrite`. If you can change the Apache configuration, add these lines to the configuration, usually `httpd.conf`: Order allow,deny Allow from all AllowOverride All You should also check your Apache logs to see if they can shed some light on the error. ## NGINX It is hard to give examples of nginx configuration, but here is a sample for a server: location / { index index.php index.html index.htm; try_files $uri index.php; } location = index.php { include fastcgi.conf; fastcgi_pass 127.0.0.1:9000; fastcgi_index index.php; } If you are having issues getting this working, enable debug level logging in nginx and check the access and error logs.