Forum Moderators: martinibuster
I'm now in the process of weeding out old pages from my site and rather than setting up redirect-er pages, I'd rather just blow away the ones I don't need anymore.
Can anybody out there give me the step-by-step method of pinging deep URLs?
Welcome to Webmaster World [webmasterworld.com]
I've never pinged to check incoming links so somebody else will have to help you there. But as a starting point to find who links to your site try a search on alltheweb.com with this syntax:
link.all:www.yoursite.com -site:www.yoursite.com
This will return all pages that link to pages on your site minus your own pages.
Jim
To check the deep page index of your site in various search engines, here is a reference (from an old sheet of mine) please check for any latest syntax changes on search engines if these do not work.
Type in the following URL in search engines -
Google: site:www.yoursite.com www.yoursite.com
HotBot/Inktomi: www.yoursite.com
AltaVista: host:www.yoursite.com
AllTheWeb: +url.all:http://www.yoursite.com +site:www.yoursite.com
Most search engines have syntax guidelines in their ‘Advance Search’ section to search for indexed pages of a single domain.
Pinging to my knowledge just tells you if the domain/IP address is alive by sending a signal (ping) back to you and only addresses the issue of a live or dead domain/IP -- not individual pages.
You can ping your main domain (and find out your IP address) by doing the following: Go to the Start menu in windows (bottom left), select "Run" and type
"ping www.yoursite.com" in the input box then "OK" it.
Note: Don't include the "http://" or "/" (or page names) at the end of the domain name.
If the site is alive, the IP details will show for a couple of seconds before closing. If the site is dead (or you haven't input the domain/IP correctly), it will flash open and then close within a fraction of a second... just enough to see a blank black window open and close.
I hope this is what you meant?
Kieron