No index tag robots.txt
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Hi Mozzers,
A client's website has a lot of internal directories defined as /node/*.
I already added the rule 'Disallow: /node/*' to the robots.txt file to prevents bots from crawling these pages.
However, the pages are already indexed and appear in the search results.
In an article of Deepcrawl, they say you can simply add the rule 'Noindex: /node/*' to the robots.txt file, but other sources claim the only way is to add a noindex directive in the meta robots tag of every page.
Can someone tell me which is the best way to prevent these pages from getting indexed? Small note: there are more than 100 pages.
Thanks!
Jens -
Hi Jens
I don't know Drupal but if it's like Wordpress it will add a noindex tag to the page.
Do it for one page then take a look at the code.
Go to the page: right click > View Source
Then go to the three dots top right in chrome and search noindex. It will look like this attached. (ignore the red line crossed out piece)
Best Regards Nigel
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Hi Guys,
In Drupal between the advanced tags (meta tags), there is an option:
' Prevents search engines from indexing this page 'Do you happen to know whether these tags are seen as valid by Searchbots?
Thanks again guys!
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For the sake of balance, probably worth mentioning that I'm with David in that I've seen a robots.txt noindex work. It has been relatively recently used by a large publisher when they had an article they had to take down but which Google was holding on to. That's irrelevant nuance in this situation but I think David deserves more credit than he got here.
In terms of this specific fix I agree with Nigel - remove the Disallow and add a noindex (prompt Google to crawl the pages, with a sitemap if they don't seem to be shifting). You can re-add the Disallow if you think it's necessary but once all of the appropriate pages have a noindex tag they should stay out of the index and if they are heavily linked to on the site disallowing them could result in a loss of link equity (it'll stop with the link to the disallowed pages). So if you think you can achieve this with just a noindex you might want to leave it at that.
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Hi David
I'd rather listen to John Mueller - he has specifically said to not use it:
https://www.seroundtable.com/google-do-not-use-noindex-in-robots-txt-20873.html
I wouldn't be advising people to use it on that basis whether it has worked for you this time or not. It's not best practice.
That's all. (Sorry Jens!)
Regards
Nigel
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Thanks a lot for your answers guys!
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Hi Nigel,
I agreed that what you said is the best solution in this case but noindex can definitely be done in robots.txt.
I'm not sure of the questionable sites you've seen it mentioned on, but I'd consider Stone Temple and Deep Crawl to be reputable sources.
That said, I always like to test things for myself!
I tried robots.txt noindex on one of my own big sports news websites a little while ago because I didn't want to manually set thousands of old posts to noindex. The robots.txt noindex worked fine.
Cheers,
David
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Hi Jens/David
You should not use a noindex in Robots.txt. You can put it on the page as a robots tag, but not in Robots.txt
I have never ever seen it used in the Robots.txt - I have seen it mentioned a few times on some questionable sites and the odd mention many years ago but it's bad practice in my opinion.
Read more about Robots.txt here: https://moz.com/learn/seo/robotstxt
If you follow what I have said, that is the correct solution.
Regards Nigel
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Hi Nigel and Jens,
Just to clarify - noindex is valid in robots.txt for Google but it's not recognized by Bing.
Here's a case study by Stone Temple on using noindex in robots.txt: https://www.stonetemple.com/does-google-respect-robots-txt-noindex-and-should-you-use-it/
From their case study, it was found to be pretty effective, but not 100%. It would be a good solution for large websites, but if you're only looking at 100+ pages I would do as Nigel said above and implement the meta robots noindex tags.
Cheers,
David
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Hi Jens
You can't add a noindex in the Robots.txt file.
Firstly you need to add a noindex tag to all of the pages in the /node/ directory.
Then remove the nofollow directive in the Robots.txtYou need to do this for Google to see the noindex tags!
If you have a noindex tag and a nofollow then the directory is blocked so Google can't see the tags!
Once all the pages have gone from search then add the nofollow back to the Robots.txt file so that Google doesn't waste crawl budget trying to index them.
This will solve your problem.
Regards
Nigel
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