When we setup a Blogger blog, we give up control of files and folders, and let Blogger maintain the structure of the blog.
When we publish a Blogger blog (either to BlogSpot, or to a Google Custom Domain), all that we do is post, and maintain the blog template. Even with the files and folders controlled by Blogger, and normally hidden from view, there are ways to examine the contents of some files.
Those who would be better off not examining file content do so anyway, become confused, and stress themselves needlessly. Every week, we read anxious queries
You can make two Settings changes that are relevant here, but mostly this file is maintained by Blogger code.
Blogger maintains "robots.txt", in each blog, on our behalf.
Occasionally, Blogger makes changes to our blogs in general, and changes the content of "robots.txt" to support the changes made. Recently, changes to "feedReaderJson" necessitated a change to "robots.txt".
Here's the "robots.txt" file for this blog, "blogging.nitecruzr.net", as of 2016/01.
There are 3 main entries, in a standard "robots.txt" file.
Here we see 3 entries. For an explanation of some terms, and for a demonstration illustrating the results, please refer to Google Webmaster Tools - "Analyze robots.txt". You may also be enlightened by reading The Web Robots Pages.
You can use Search Console, for an analysis of your "robots.txt" file.
Here's my analysis of "robots.txt" for this blog, run using the wizard. You'll want to view this in full screen mode, zoomed as highly as possible.
Note the hypothetical effects of indexing 3 hypothetical blog URLs, against both "Googlebot" and "Mediapartners-Google", shown at the very bottom.
I've now examined a dozen or so different similar files, for blogs published to both native BlogSpot and custom domains, and excepting the URL of the sitemap, all files have been identical in content. My conclusion is that this is a normal file, and unless we start seeing a flood of complaints about indexing problems, I see no reason to suspect a problem.
So, the next time someone comes to you moaning
When we publish a Blogger blog (either to BlogSpot, or to a Google Custom Domain), all that we do is post, and maintain the blog template. Even with the files and folders controlled by Blogger, and normally hidden from view, there are ways to examine the contents of some files.
Those who would be better off not examining file content do so anyway, become confused, and stress themselves needlessly. Every week, we read anxious queries
Help! My blog has been hacked!!or
My robots.txt file is blocking my blog from being indexed!
You can make two Settings changes that are relevant here, but mostly this file is maintained by Blogger code.
Blogger maintains "robots.txt", in each blog, on our behalf.
Occasionally, Blogger makes changes to our blogs in general, and changes the content of "robots.txt" to support the changes made. Recently, changes to "feedReaderJson" necessitated a change to "robots.txt".
Here's the "robots.txt" file for this blog, "blogging.nitecruzr.net", as of 2016/01.
User-agent: Mediapartners-Google
Disallow:
User-agent: *
Disallow: /search
Allow: /
Sitemap: http://blogging.nitecruzr.net/sitemap.xml
There are 3 main entries, in a standard "robots.txt" file.
Here we see 3 entries. For an explanation of some terms, and for a demonstration illustrating the results, please refer to Google Webmaster Tools - "Analyze robots.txt". You may also be enlightened by reading The Web Robots Pages.
- This allows access to all blog components of the blog ("Disallow: (null)"), to the spider "Mediapartners-Google", which is the spider that crawls pages to determine AdSense content. This entry overrides the following entry, for the specified spider.
User-agent: Mediapartners-Google
Disallow: - This disallows indexing from all URLs containing "/search"(ie, label searches) - and it allows all other blog URLs.
User-agent: *
Disallow: /search
Allow: / - This defines the URL of the sitemap.
Sitemap: http://blogging.nitecruzr.net/sitemap.xml
The sitemap is separate from the blog feed, and automatically provided.
You can use Search Console, for an analysis of your "robots.txt" file.
Here's my analysis of "robots.txt" for this blog, run using the wizard. You'll want to view this in full screen mode, zoomed as highly as possible.
Note the hypothetical effects of indexing 3 hypothetical blog URLs, against both "Googlebot" and "Mediapartners-Google", shown at the very bottom.
I've now examined a dozen or so different similar files, for blogs published to both native BlogSpot and custom domains, and excepting the URL of the sitemap, all files have been identical in content. My conclusion is that this is a normal file, and unless we start seeing a flood of complaints about indexing problems, I see no reason to suspect a problem.
So, the next time someone comes to you moaning
My robots.txt file is blocking my blog from being indexed!you can assure them
No, your "robots.txt" file is normal.Then, introduce them to Google Webmaster Tools, and its many diagnostic reports.
Comments
When running the wizard all is fine but still my blog does not get indexed or found in search engines. Maybe I am too impatient.
Used to work before though. Let's hope those spiders will come by again sometime, lol.
Until next time...Annie
Have you used the Webmaster Tools utility, to see what you need? Or, you could drop by Blogger Help Forum: Something Is Broken, and we could go over the details.
http://digitalfruitblog.blogspot.com| Here's my blog, and if anyone else could explain why there was such a delay for my blog being listed I would love to get a comment or and e-mail.
That sounds like a great discussion item for Blogger Help Forum: Something Is Broken, where a few people might have ideas to mention. Peer support could be very helpful here.
Problem is the impact on navigation. Prevents the use of max-results = [large number].
So if you have hundreds of posts, and/or hundreds of posts with a particular tag/label, there doesn't seem to be a way to display everything in one batch.
Or is there?
Look at my Custom Domains label series. It's segmented, because of Auto Pagination, but you can get all of it, by <using the "Older Posts" links.
I have one problem ...
my original .blogspot.com blog automatically indexed by google in 2-3 days ..
but when i applied a custom domain to my blog and than added my blog to google webmaster tools , in "Crawl Errors" my home page means whole domain is getting "403 error" ..and my new domain is not getting indexed at all from many weeks ...
how can i solve this .???
I think you should post this in a new discussion in Blogger Help Forum: Something Is Broken, so we can diagnose your problem.
When I do a crawl query they all say..."Indexing Restricted by Robots.txt"
Not to be rude, but your wrong!
Carefully look at the report - and at the specific blocked URL.
http://blogging.nitecruzr.net/2008/07/google-webmaster-tools-and-label.html