|
These can, for example, be a large number of URLs that are generated by the system, but which should not actually be created in the first place, as in the following case, when several thousand (!) URLs were generated via the cookie notice: #2 Broken links / links to redirects You can also use the Screaming Frog to export your internal links to 404 pages or links to redirects with just one mouse click. You can find this option under “Bulk Export” > “Response Codes”. Here you can easily export the broken links sorted by their status code into.
Excel: export inlinks 4xxx, 3xx You will then receive a list of all inlinks that India Car Owner Phone Number List return a 3xx status code. I then recommend that you separate page-wide and individual links by sorting according to link text and link target - all that match here and appear more than 10 times are usually page-wide links and can be corrected together. You can quickly identify and correct all errors in individual links via the link source and the link text. The disadvantage is that you have to make a separate export for each type of broken link, but the advantage is that the individual reports are clear and small. But there is another way to identify broken links: #3 Export all internal links > all broken links in one file You simply start this method via “Bulk Export” > “All Inlinks”.
This exports all incoming links from your site. You can then filter out and delete all 200s. What remains are all pages that have a status code other than “200”: export all inlinks screaming frog This means that you now have to work with a larger amount of data than with tip 2 and adjust a little more in Excel, but you then have all the broken inlinks in one file, which I personally find more convenient. method you choose.
|
|