In order to explain this behaviour, we need to make some assumptions about your file system, and by "work" you mean that a file is served (you don't see a directory listing)...
The .htaccess
file is located in the document root and /mywebsite
is a physical directory that contains an index.php
file (or some DirectoryIndex
document). There is no index.php
file in the document root. In other words:
example.com/
.htaccess
mywebsite/
index.php
In this scenario, when you request example.com/mywebsite/
the following happens:
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-f
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ index.php
/mywebsite/
is a physical directory, so the first condition fails and the RewriteRule
is not processed.
mod_dir then searches for a DirectoryIndex
, finds index.php
and the .htaccess
file is reprocessed. This now maps to a physical file, so the second condition fails and the RewriteRule
is not processed.
The net result is that example.com/mywebsite/index.php
gets requested. The same as if there was no .htaccess
file at all.
RewriteRule ^(.*)$ index.php
However, in this scenario, there are no conditions. The RewriteRule
gets processed unconditionally and internally rewrites the request to example.com/index.php
(strictly speaking it's <filesystem-path-to-document-root>/index.php
) since that is where the .htaccess
file is located.
However, there is no index.php
file in the document root; hence the 404.
Why is RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} !-d
mandatory?
Whether it is mandatory or not is really dependent on your filesystem and what you are trying to do. But generally, you don't normally want physical directories to be processed by the front controller.
The !-f
condition is usually more important since you often don't want physical files to be processed by the front controller. This is required when you want to serve static resources (eg. CSS, JavaScript and images) from the same area on the filesystem. However, you might omit this directive if you wanted to control access to some physical files (perhaps a "download" section) through the front controller.