Mass 404 Checker?
-
Hi all,
I'm currently looking after a collection of old newspaper sites that have had various developments during their time. The problem is there are so many 404 pages all over the place and the sites are bleeding link juice everywhere so I'm looking for a tool where I can check a lot of URLs at once.
For example from an OSE report I have done a random sampling of the target URLs and some of them 404 (eek!) but there are too many to check manually to know which ones are still live and which ones have 404'd or are redirecting. Is there a tool anyone uses for this or a way one of the SEOMoz tools can do this?
Also I've asked a few people personally how to check this and they've suggested Xenu, Xenu won't work as it only checks current site navigation.
Thanks in advance!
-
Hi,
we are seo agency at turkey, our name clicksus. We can deadlinkchecker.com and it is very easy & good.
-
Glad I was able to help!
It would be great if you could mark the answers you found helpful, and mark the question as answered if you feel you got the information you needed. That will make it even more useful for other users.
Paul
-
Wow nice one mate did not know that in the Top Pages tab that is perfect! I'll remember to click around more often now.
I found this tool on my adventures which was exactly what I was after: http://www.tomanthony.co.uk/tools/bulk-http-header-compare/
Also cheers for your walkthrough, having problems with the site still bleeding 404 pages, first thing first however is fixing these pages getting high quality links to them
Cheers again!
-
Sorry, one additional - since you mentioned using Open Site Explorer...
Go to the Top Pages tab in OSE and filter the results to include only incoming links. One of the columns in that report is HTTP Status. It will tell you if the linked page's status is 404. Again, just download the full CSV, sort the resulting spreadsheet by the Status column and you'll be able to generate a list of URLs that no longer have pages associated with them to start fixing.
Paul
-
Ollie, if I'm understanding your question correctly, the easiest place for you to start is with Google Webmaster Tools. You're looking to discover URLs of pages that used to exist on the sites, but no longer do, yes?
If you click on the Health link in left sidebar, then click Crawl Errors, you get a page showing different kinds of errors the Google crawler has detected. Click on the Not Found error box and you'll get a complete list of all the pages Google is aware of that can no longer be found on your site (i.e. 404s).
You can then download the whole list as a CSV and start cleaning them up from there.
This list will basically include pages that have been linked to at one time or another from other sites on the web, so while not exhaustive, it will show the ones that are most likely to still be getting traffic. For really high-value incoming links, you might even want to contact the linking site and see if you can get them to relink to the correct new page.
Alternatively, if you can access the sites' server logs, they will record all the incoming 404s with their associated URLs as well and you can get a dump from the log files to begin creating your work list. I just find it's usually easier to get access to Webmaster Tools than to get at a clients server log files.
Is that what you're looking for?
Paul
-
To be honest, I don't know anyone who has bad things to say about Screaming Frog - aside from the cost, but as you said, really worth it.
However, it is free for up to 500 page crawl limit, so perhaps give it a go?
Andy
-
Cheers Andy & Kyle
Problem with this tool as it works similar to Xenu which is great for making sure your current navigation isn't causing problems.
My problem is there are over 15k links pointing to all sorts of articles and I have no idea what's live and what's not. Running the site through that tool won't report the pages that aren't linked in the navigation anymore but are still being linked to.
Example is manually checking some of the links I've found that the site has quite a few links from the BBC going to 404 pages. Running the site through Xenu or Screamy Frog doesn't find these pages.
Ideally I'm after a tool I can slap in a load of URLs and it'll do a simple HTTP header check on them. Only tools I can find do 1 or 10 at a time which would take quite a while trying to do 15k!
-
Agree with Screaming Frog. It's more comprehensive than **Xenu's Link Sleuth. **
It costs £99 for a year but totally worth it.
I had a few issues with Xenu taking too long to compile a report or simply crashing.
-
Xenu Liunk Seuth - its free and will go through internal links, external or both, it will also show you where the 404 page is being linked from.
Also can report 302s.
-
Screaming Frog Spider does a pretty good job...
As simple as enter the URL and leave it to report back when completed.
Andy
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
404 or rel="canonical" for empty search results?
We have search on our site, using the URL, so we might have: example.com/location-1/service-1, or example.com/location-2/service-2. Since we're a directory we want these pages to rank. Sometimes, there are no search results for a particular location/service combo, and when that happens we show an advanced search form that lets the user choose another location, or expand the search area, or otherwise help themselves. However, that search form still appears at the URL example.com/location/service - so there are several location/service combos on our website that show that particular form, leading to duplicate content issues. We may have search results to display on these pages in the future, so we want to keep them around, and would like Google to look at them and even index them if that happens, so what's the best option here? Should we rel="canonical" the page to the example.com/search (where the search form usually resides)? Should we serve the search form page with an HTTP 404 header? Something else? I look forward to the discussion.
Technical SEO | | 4RS_John1 -
My site doesnt give any 404 error
Hi guyz, I've realized that when someone try to access some url that doesn't exist on my site, my site gives a custom 404 page but not give any 404 http status code.
Technical SEO | | atakala
It still give 200 http status code. My system is IIS based how can I solve it?0 -
Wordpress Website + 404 Errors
Hi everyone, I like to do a bit of auditing for our clients using SEOMoz. Once client that's using a Wordpress website had reported over a couple hundred 404 errors. However, when checking out the links, all the webpages (that I've tested) loaded just fine. Does anyone know why this would be the case? I thought, perhaps, the website might have gone down when it was crawling, but I have no evidence to back this up.
Technical SEO | | ThinkShiftInc0 -
301 redirect all 404 pages
Hi I would like to have a second opinion on this. I am working on an ecommerce website that they 301 redirect all 404 pages (including the URLs entered incorrectly) to the “All categories page”. Will this have any negative SEO impact?
Technical SEO | | iThinkMedia0 -
What is the difference between 301 redirect to 404 vs just 404.
A bunch of pages on my site are set to 301 redirect to our 404 page. Intuitively, I feel like they should all just 404 from the page's url and not redirect to the 404 page. How do I explain to my developer that they should not redirects but should just 404? Is there much of a difference between the redirect first vs 404 first? Thanks!
Technical SEO | | gaytravel0 -
Any idea why this is reporting a 404 in MozTools?
I did away with a vague category and 301 redirected the category url to the home page. However the link is reporting as a 404 in Moz Tools when it scans my site. Here's the link, and as you can see it redirects to the home page. Just curious if I did something wrong. Thanks.
Technical SEO | | NoahsDad0 -
Google's "cache:" operator is returning a 404 error.
I'm doing the "cache:" operator on one of my sites and Google is returning a 404 error. I've swapped out the domain with another and it works fine. Has anyone seen this before? I'm wondering if G is crawling the site now? Thx!
Technical SEO | | AZWebWorks0 -
Mass 404 pages
Hi Guys, If I were to have to take down the majority of my site, taking all content and links pointing to that content down. How would the search engines react? Would I get a penalty for the majority of the site all of the sudden missing? My only concern is the loss of traffic on the remanding pages. Thanks!
Technical SEO | | DPASeo0