Dynadot — .com Registration $8.99

Interesting ...

Spaceship Spaceship
Watch

-PS-

Established Member
Impact
4
well yesturday, i just finished writing the first tool for site armory, and i still have the log files still open on the server up on the screen, and seen this

66.249.70.187 - - [04/Jul/2007:05:19:22 -0500] "GET /pr/ HTTP/1.1" 200 8434 "-" "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; Googlebot/2.1; +http://www.google.com/bot.html)"
66.249.70.187 - - [04/Jul/2007:08:21:55 -0500] "GET /ajax/pr_check.php HTTP/1.1" 200 4 "-" "Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; Googlebot/2.1; +http://www.google.com/bot.html)"

While it doesn't seem like much, but the pr_checker.php is an ajax call, and isn't linked anywhere else.. maybe the big g is starting to index ajax calls ?
The pr_check.php file isn't any where else on the site, esp not in a link..

Anyone else seen the same thing at all ?

(even though it requested the file, there wasn't a ajax call placed, just the file was requested - i have still yet to see google submit a form)
 
0
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
AfternicAfternic
I think this will get some more and better answers in programming section rather then Search engine section.

Moving it to programming section.

Thanks.
 
0
•••
-Nick- said:
I think this will get some more and better answers in programming section rather then Search engine section.

Moving it to programming section.

Thanks.
no worries at all nick, just though it might of been good in the se section as the request uri is in the javascript code, and not in the stanard html. People usally say the se's don't(can't?) procress the javascript on sites.
 
0
•••
I did read something about a form.php which was included in one Modal AJAX box. Many people did had this issue of getting their form.php file crawled by the search engines. So they had to block it from robots.txt
 
0
•••
Appraise.net

We're social

Unstoppable Domains
Domain Recover
DomainEasy — Zero Commission
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back