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A robots.txt file tells search engine crawlers which URLs the crawler can access on your site. This is used mainly to avoid overloading your site with requests.
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The robots.txt report shows which robots.txt files Google found for the top 20 hosts on your site, the last time they were crawled, and any warnings or errors ...
Web site owners use the /robots.txt file to give instructions about their site to web robots; this is called The Robots Exclusion Protocol. It works likes this: ...
The robots.txt files allow you to customize how your documentation is indexed in search engines. It's useful for: Hiding various pages from search engines, ...
A /robots.txt file is a text file that instructs automated web bots on how to crawl and/or index a website. Web teams use them to provide information ...
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A robots.txt file lives at the root of your site. Learn how to create a robots.txt file, see examples, and explore robots.txt rules.
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Feb 19, 2010 · I basically want to add a command in robots.txt so crawlers don't follow any such links that have NAME at the end. What's the best command to use in robots.txt ...
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You can find your domains robots. txt file by entering the website with the following extension into the browser: www.domain.com/robots.txt. Many website-management-system like WordPress do generate those files automatically for you and let you edit them within the backend.
A robots.txt file tells search engine crawlers which URLs the crawler can access on your site. This is used mainly to avoid overloading your site with requests; it is not a mechanism for keeping a web page out of Google.
Not having one should result in all your content being indexed. The implication from the first comment on that Meta question was that the robots. txt file existed but was inaccessible (for whatever reason), rather than not being there at all. That might cause the web crawlers some issues, but that's speculation.
The Robots Exclusion Standard was quickly embraced by the web community. Most major search engine crawlers adopted it, respecting the rules outlined in robots. txt files. While it's a voluntary protocol (bad bots can ignore it), the vast majority of web crawlers still abide by it.
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