I need to export a list of all redirect links for a web site which uses Dynamicweb CMS.
There are redirect rules in Management Center > Web and HTTP > Direct paths:
But this list of redirects is not full, as the web site uses much more rules to redirect from one path to another.
What are the other places that I should check to get all redirect paths?
There is also [Page] table with page short cut links in [PageShortCut] field.
Related
I'm using a marketing automation platform to build landing pages and those landing pages URLS are automatically published with a subdomain structure, like:
https://subdomain.example.com/mylandingpage
I want to redirect all www and non www visits to the main domain to this landing page that I created, in other words I wish the https://example.com and https://www.example.comto be redirected to https://subdomain.example.com/mylandingpage
Since I'm only using this platform and did not subscribe to any hosting, I'm trying to use Cloudflare to make all this redirects.
I saw a tutorial and this guy said that A entries in my DNS shouldn't be blank and recommended setting them to a reserved IP address, so I set both A entries to 192.0.2.0.
Ok, then I went to page rules and set a 301 redirect to *example.com to be redirected to https://subdomain.example.com/mylandingpage
I can see that when I visit my main domain it's redirected to the subdomain correctly, but the page doesn't load, and I get a too many redirections error. I believe that I made something wrong and it's redirecting everything to the subdomain, even the subdomain is redirecting to itself, even having a page path /mylandingpage after the hostname.
Did I make myself clear? Is there any other way to do what I want?
In Cloudflare page rules instead of *.example.com, please use exact domain match.
URL path we can use wildcard.
www.example.com/* - https://subdomain.example.com/mylandingpage
example.com/* - https://subdomain.example.com/mylandingpage
When I first started my website, I had a home/landing page and I installed my blog at myurl.com/blog. I no longer need that homepage and am wondering if there is a way to set myurl.com/blog as my homepage? So if someone types in myurl.com, it will automatically go to myurl.com/blog.
I'd like to avoid any "click here to be redirected" or "you'll be redirected in 10 seconds" type of thing.
There are likely multiple approaches, depending on your setup, but IF your setup qualifies (linux hosting etc) then a simple .htaccess permanent redirect would be the simplest approach:
# Permanent URL redirect
Redirect 301 /blog myurl.com
I need to redirect an AEM page to an external URL. For eg., I have a page /content/test, and I have to redirect it to http://www.google.com/. How can I do that?
Basically, when someone hits that page, it should get redirected to http://www.google.com/
Can I use vanity URLs for this?
If you are extending from the foundation page component, you can specify the redirect in the Advanced tab of the page properties. This would behave similar to a 301 redirect.
Another way of doing the same would be do define /etc/map configurations.
However, I would prefer having the redirect configured in the Web Server (Apache vhost file) or CDN itself (if there is one) so that the request doesn't reach AEM servers.
I have a Business Catalyst site that needs the following domains redirected to the default domain.
www.membersalliance.com.au/
www.membersalliance.com.au/index.aspx
The default domain is www.membersalliance.com.au
We have been told that these three pages are seen by google as separate content and we want to consolidate them to all go to the default domain.
I have spoken to adobe support and they said that:
Redirecting to another page can be done, there's no issue with that. But what we're looking for here is to not have any other postfix with the domain name. When a page is set to be the starting page, there is an automatic functionality that the postfix/name of the page is removed, but that is not the case with other pages.So, they would still show the name of the page, even if you redirect it to the home page (starting page set for your domain).
So, I can redirect to www.membersalliance.com.au/home.html but is this seen by google as a separate page to www.membersalliance.com.au?
If you re-direct a page using 301 redirects (which is how BC re-directs a page if you use re-directs) Google will only see the one page, not multiple pages.
Take a look at the Google Webmaster Tools help on "canonical" URLs.
https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/139394?hl=en
In your case, add to page head:
<link rel="canonical" href="www.membersalliance.com.au"/>
This will tell Google to treat all variants of homepage to be recorded against a single domain.
For example in past my website look like this:
Example: www.mywebsite.com/keyword
Now look like this:
Example: www.mywebsite.com/search.php?q=keyword
How can i redirect people who search for a specific tag to my new link?
From "www.mywebsite.com/keyword" to "www.mywebsite.com/search.php?q=keyword"
I'm not so good with coding so based to my examples can somebody make the code that need to be inserted in htaccess file pls.
This are the examples of links:
OLD: www.mywebsite.com/keyword
NEW: www.mywebsite.com/search.php?q=keyword
That redirecting is called URL Rewriting, and is usually done via a .htaccess file for Apache, or with magic if you're using Lighttpd.
I would take a look at this website, which more or less explains how to do it (assuming you're running Apache): http://www.yourhtmlsource.com/sitemanagement/urlrewriting.html
The specific details depend on the web server being used (IIS, Apache, etc.) but basically you could configure those to redirect to a specific web page and extract the keyword from the original URL and place it in the query string parameter list.
For example, in IIS you would do the following:
Start > Programs > Administrative Tools > Internet Services Manager
Select your web site from the list and right-click to go Properties.
The Custom Errors tab is where you will see a list of HTTP errors.
Select the "404" page and "Edit Properties" to point this to a web page of your choosing.
The last step is where you will plug in your custom code that will handle the redirect.