Recently I setup a 301 domain forwarding from www.olddomain.com to www.newdomain.com.
But Google still shows the old domain instead of the new one.
So I tried to use Google Search Console and change the address.
However, it seems that using a 301 redirect I cannot fetch the www.olddomain.com page.
Now I am confused:
Is it because I used domain forwarding 301 instead of 301 redirect so Google Search Console couldn't forward to the old page?
What should I do for Google to show www.newdomain.com instead of www.olddomain.com whenever I type the keyword? ex: I type "Alexaclub"
Any help or advice will be much appreciated.
Thank you.
Related
I have a ".com.br" with a 301 redirect pointing to a ".com" domain, but the ".com.br" domain is showing up on google search results (SEPR). How can I remove the ".com.br" domain from google? Since it's a 301 redirect, was it suppoused to show up on results?
I am afraid that this ".com.br" domain is creating self-competition with my main domain (.com)
My search engine traffic is going down.
Can someone help me?
I have a domain with GoDaddy called "livingmiracles.org". For years I had this domain forwarding to my livingmiraclescenter.org Joomla website. Recently, I discovered that the way the livingmiracles.org domain now forwards to our livingmiraclescenter.org site has changed and has left me with broken links on almost all of the over 60 websites I manage.
This is what used to happen:
Any URL of the livingmiraclescenter.org website would be able to be displayed with the livingmiracles.org domain instead. For example, the following URLs were interchangeable:
livingmiraclescenter.org/david-hoffmeister.html and
livingmiracles.org/david-hoffmeister.html
livingmiraclescenter.org/contact.html and
livingmiracles.org/contact.html
livingmiraclescenter.org/spiri-tv.html and
livingmiracles.org/spiri-tv.html
Also, variations of the above without ".html" would work.
Now, none of this works anymore. For the "livingmiracles.org/" links above, now, either the livingmiraclescenter.org home page pulls up or I get a GoDaddy error page.
I called GoDaddy and they confirmed a change in the way they handle domain forwarding now.
Can anyone suggest a simple/smart way—perhaps a RewriteRule or something like that—that I can set up somewhere (where?) to handle those specific page redirects? Basically, I want all my livingmiraclescenter.org links to be interchangeable with livingmiracles.org links like I wrote above in those examples.
Thank you so much!
Jutta
i have this problem where i have a subdomain sub.host.com and a new domain www.new.com. I want to redirect www.new.com to sub.host.com without showing the browser that the url had changed. The content is in sub.host.com but i want that even after the page has fully loaded, it is still showing www.new.com
This means also that when i go to sub.host.com/function, it should also appear as www.new.com/function
The reason is the actual subdomain looks ugly and contains numerics. Is this possible to do? Ive tried searching but all that comes up are only about how to go about creating cname records and none about keeping it intact after redirecting. Thanks
A (reverse proxy) server like Nginx, which is very light-weight, features the url-rewrite rules that you need. IIS7 has also a good url-rewrite engine.
When I enter http://www.google.com in Chrome or any other browser, it redirects to https://www.google.ie/?gws_rd=cr&ei=alyXUpSMCOjiywOU8oF4 or something similar with a different hash.
Anybody knows why this is happening ?
Google is trying to keep track of their users when you bookmark the site in favorites?
Thank you.
It is Google automatically redirecting you to your closest country. This is done using DNS. The tags are automatically added on.
If you go straight to https://www.google.ie you should not get them.
There is a new domain, let's say va.in.
Content is being prepared for the sub-domain a.va.in
The idea is that va.in/index could contain pointers to various sections sometime in future (e.g. b.va.in, c.va.in etc.). As of now, it does not make sense to have such a page as there is just one section i.e. a.va.in
If I decide to re-direct va.in to a.va.in for now, will the search engines follow the re-direct and index the site?
Is DNS the best place to do the re-direction?
Using "301 Moved Permanently" search engine will only index sub-domain a.va.in.
If that's ok, you can do this using web server's config.
For example in Apache:
<VirtualHost va.in www.va.in>
Redirect permanent / http://a.va.in/
</VirtualHost>
You can't really use DNS to do redirect, because in DNS you cannot assign CNAME to #.
See: Is Root domain CNAME to other domain allowed by DNS RFC?
There is question related to yours: 301 Redirect vs DNS change: Is it ever safe to kill a 301 redirect and update the DNS for a subdomain?
Yes, the search engines follow redirects, if you redirect with a HTTP header
header ('HTTP/1.1 301 Moved Permanently');
header ('Location: '.$location);
I don't know about DNS redirect, but I'd rather not use it..
You can read more about how to do a HTTP redirect here.
You can redirect in two ways.
Programaticlally as evilpenguin said
Using the webserver (Example iis)
But there is one thing common in both these options. The redirect must be permanent redirect if you want to inform search engines that va.in is permanently moved to a.va.in
If you dont specity permanent redirects, still crawlers will go to a.va.in but in this case they wont be notified that it is a permanet redirect.
If some one has bookmarked va.in and in the first case (permanent redirection) bookmarks will get updated. But in the second case book marks wont be updated.
Hope this helps.