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        4. Robots.txt, does it need preceding directory structure?

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        Robots.txt, does it need preceding directory structure?

        Intermediate & Advanced SEO
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        • Milian
          Milian last edited by

          Do you need the entire preceding path in robots.txt for it to match?

          e.g:

          I know if i add Disallow: /fish to robots.txt it will block

          /fish
          /fish.html
          /fish/salmon.html
          /fishheads
          /fishheads/yummy.html
          /fish.php?id=anything

          But would it block?:

          en/fish
          en/fish.html
          en/fish/salmon.html
          en/fishheads
          en/fishheads/yummy.html
          **en/fish.php?id=anything

          (taken from Robots.txt Specifications)** I'm hoping it actually wont match, that way writing this particular robots.txt will be much easier!

          As basically I'm wanting to block many URL that have BTS- in such as:

          http://www.example.com/BTS-something
          http://www.example.com/BTS-somethingelse
          http://www.example.com/BTS-thingybob

          But have other pages that I do not want blocked, in subfolders that also have BTS- in, such as:

          http://www.example.com/somesubfolder/BTS-thingy
          http://www.example.com/anothersubfolder/BTS-otherthingy

          Thanks for listening

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Milian
            Milian last edited by

            Yes this is what I thought, but wanted some second opinions.

            Although I wouldn't actually need a wild card after BTS, as just leaving it open is the same as using a wildcard:

            /fish*..........  Equivalent to "/fish" -- the trailing wildcard is ignored. https://developers.google.com/webmasters/control-crawl-index/docs/robots_txt Thanks for the link, I'll take a look

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • PinpointDesigns
              PinpointDesigns last edited by

              You're right in with the **Disallow: /fish **in the robots file blocking all those initial links, but if you wanted to block everything inside the /en/ folder, you would need to do disallow: /en/fish

              You could use a wildcard in the robots.txt file to do something along the lines of Disallow: /BTS-*

              This _'should' _work, but it's always worth checking using a tool to make sure it's all implemented correctly. Distilled did a post a while back about a JS tool which allows you to test if robots.txt files work correctly which can be found here - http://www.distilled.net/blog/seo/js-bookmarklet-for-checking-if-a-page-is-blocked-by-robots-txt/

              In addition to this, you could also use the 'blocked URLs' tool in GWT to see if the pages are successfully blocked once you've implemented the code.

              Hope this helps!

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