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Top Forums Web Development Removing VBSEO for vbulletin – Reverting back to vbulletin URLs Post 302869061 by Neo on Tuesday 29th of October 2013 02:47:23 PM
Old 10-29-2013
Got some email and private messages how there should be some magic "one liners" that can rewrite all the 404s "file not found" errors when all the URLs of a forum change when they remove vBSEO.

Some, oddly enough, who have no experience with vBSEO (or rewriting all the URLS of a forum with a half a million pages indexed in Google) seemed to find my very clear explanation of how to change 404s to 301s cryptic, as if their is some "magic bullet" that works for all forums.

In my original post, I gave "the core examples" (from the now defunct vBSEO web site) about rewrite URLs for forum threads. There are three different examples based on three different vBSEO configuration.

However, a forum has a lot more pages than "threads". There are forum pages, and forum indexes, and archives and archive indexes, and there are single posts and their are RSS feeds and their are other pages where the URLs were rewritten by vBSEO.

If the vBSEO product is removed, all of these links, indexed in search engines, will break, and cause a 404 error. Each of these URLs need to be properly rewritten based on how the forum vBSEO setup was configured. There are many configuration switches for vBSEO, so there is not one "magic bullet" mod_rewrite rule which will work for every forum. Even 100 rewrite rules for our forums will not work for another forum because their configuration is different.

So, having said this; I outlined how to correctly do this; and obviously the method I outlined worked because our forums (this forum) has actually seen an increase in traffic and (so far) no negative SEO hit after removing vBSEO. Our traffic has increased since removing vBSEO.

Did the traffic increase because we removed vBSEO and there was some "magic bullet" one or two liner mod_rewrite rule that magically worked for posts, threads, forums, index pages, archives, print friendly pages, archive indexes, forum indexes, and more?

No, removing vBSEO without careful planning and observing 404 errors and then writing mod_rewrite rules to insure the old vBSEO URL were correctly 301'ed to working forum pages is not a trivial task.

This is why many people who have removed vBSEO and tried to use a quick "one or two liner" mod_rewrite rule have seen their search referral traffic drop. That is not what happened here. Our search referral traffic has actually increased since removing vBSEO because of careful mod_rewrite rule implementation via the technique outlined in earlier posts.

And don't forget that it is important to property use the canonical directive when doing a move like this. Search engines need to know that pages with duplicate content (old URLs and new URLs that point to the same content) have a pointer to the "authority" page, the canonical page.
 

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GIT-REMOTE(1)							    Git Manual							     GIT-REMOTE(1)

NAME
       git-remote - Manage set of tracked repositories

SYNOPSIS
       git remote [-v | --verbose]
       git remote add [-t <branch>] [-m <master>] [-f] [--[no-]tags] [--mirror=<fetch|push>] <name> <url>
       git remote rename <old> <new>
       git remote remove <name>
       git remote set-head <name> (-a | --auto | -d | --delete | <branch>)
       git remote set-branches [--add] <name> <branch>...
       git remote get-url [--push] [--all] <name>
       git remote set-url [--push] <name> <newurl> [<oldurl>]
       git remote set-url --add [--push] <name> <newurl>
       git remote set-url --delete [--push] <name> <url>
       git remote [-v | --verbose] show [-n] <name>...
       git remote prune [-n | --dry-run] <name>...
       git remote [-v | --verbose] update [-p | --prune] [(<group> | <remote>)...]

DESCRIPTION
       Manage the set of repositories ("remotes") whose branches you track.

OPTIONS
       -v, --verbose
	   Be a little more verbose and show remote url after name. NOTE: This must be placed between remote and subcommand.

COMMANDS
       With no arguments, shows a list of existing remotes. Several subcommands are available to perform operations on the remotes.

       add
	   Adds a remote named <name> for the repository at <url>. The command git fetch <name> can then be used to create and update
	   remote-tracking branches <name>/<branch>.

	   With -f option, git fetch <name> is run immediately after the remote information is set up.

	   With --tags option, git fetch <name> imports every tag from the remote repository.

	   With --no-tags option, git fetch <name> does not import tags from the remote repository.

	   By default, only tags on fetched branches are imported (see git-fetch(1)).

	   With -t <branch> option, instead of the default glob refspec for the remote to track all branches under the refs/remotes/<name>/
	   namespace, a refspec to track only <branch> is created. You can give more than one -t <branch> to track multiple branches without
	   grabbing all branches.

	   With -m <master> option, a symbolic-ref refs/remotes/<name>/HEAD is set up to point at remote's <master> branch. See also the set-head
	   command.

	   When a fetch mirror is created with --mirror=fetch, the refs will not be stored in the refs/remotes/ namespace, but rather everything
	   in refs/ on the remote will be directly mirrored into refs/ in the local repository. This option only makes sense in bare repositories,
	   because a fetch would overwrite any local commits.

	   When a push mirror is created with --mirror=push, then git push will always behave as if --mirror was passed.

       rename
	   Rename the remote named <old> to <new>. All remote-tracking branches and configuration settings for the remote are updated.

	   In case <old> and <new> are the same, and <old> is a file under $GIT_DIR/remotes or $GIT_DIR/branches, the remote is converted to the
	   configuration file format.

       remove, rm
	   Remove the remote named <name>. All remote-tracking branches and configuration settings for the remote are removed.

       set-head
	   Sets or deletes the default branch (i.e. the target of the symbolic-ref refs/remotes/<name>/HEAD) for the named remote. Having a
	   default branch for a remote is not required, but allows the name of the remote to be specified in lieu of a specific branch. For
	   example, if the default branch for origin is set to master, then origin may be specified wherever you would normally specify
	   origin/master.

	   With -d or --delete, the symbolic ref refs/remotes/<name>/HEAD is deleted.

	   With -a or --auto, the remote is queried to determine its HEAD, then the symbolic-ref refs/remotes/<name>/HEAD is set to the same
	   branch. e.g., if the remote HEAD is pointed at next, "git remote set-head origin -a" will set the symbolic-ref refs/remotes/origin/HEAD
	   to refs/remotes/origin/next. This will only work if refs/remotes/origin/next already exists; if not it must be fetched first.

	   Use <branch> to set the symbolic-ref refs/remotes/<name>/HEAD explicitly. e.g., "git remote set-head origin master" will set the
	   symbolic-ref refs/remotes/origin/HEAD to refs/remotes/origin/master. This will only work if refs/remotes/origin/master already exists;
	   if not it must be fetched first.

       set-branches
	   Changes the list of branches tracked by the named remote. This can be used to track a subset of the available remote branches after the
	   initial setup for a remote.

	   The named branches will be interpreted as if specified with the -t option on the git remote add command line.

	   With --add, instead of replacing the list of currently tracked branches, adds to that list.

       get-url
	   Retrieves the URLs for a remote. Configurations for insteadOf and pushInsteadOf are expanded here. By default, only the first URL is
	   listed.

	   With --push, push URLs are queried rather than fetch URLs.

	   With --all, all URLs for the remote will be listed.

       set-url
	   Changes URLs for the remote. Sets first URL for remote <name> that matches regex <oldurl> (first URL if no <oldurl> is given) to
	   <newurl>. If <oldurl> doesn't match any URL, an error occurs and nothing is changed.

	   With --push, push URLs are manipulated instead of fetch URLs.

	   With --add, instead of changing existing URLs, new URL is added.

	   With --delete, instead of changing existing URLs, all URLs matching regex <url> are deleted for remote <name>. Trying to delete all
	   non-push URLs is an error.

	   Note that the push URL and the fetch URL, even though they can be set differently, must still refer to the same place. What you pushed
	   to the push URL should be what you would see if you immediately fetched from the fetch URL. If you are trying to fetch from one place
	   (e.g. your upstream) and push to another (e.g. your publishing repository), use two separate remotes.

       show
	   Gives some information about the remote <name>.

	   With -n option, the remote heads are not queried first with git ls-remote <name>; cached information is used instead.

       prune
	   Deletes stale references associated with <name>. By default, stale remote-tracking branches under <name> are deleted, but depending on
	   global configuration and the configuration of the remote we might even prune local tags that haven't been pushed there. Equivalent to
	   git fetch --prune <name>, except that no new references will be fetched.

	   See the PRUNING section of git-fetch(1) for what it'll prune depending on various configuration.

	   With --dry-run option, report what branches will be pruned, but do not actually prune them.

       update
	   Fetch updates for a named set of remotes in the repository as defined by remotes.<group>. If a named group is not specified on the
	   command line, the configuration parameter remotes.default will be used; if remotes.default is not defined, all remotes which do not
	   have the configuration parameter remote.<name>.skipDefaultUpdate set to true will be updated. (See git-config(1)).

	   With --prune option, run pruning against all the remotes that are updated.

DISCUSSION
       The remote configuration is achieved using the remote.origin.url and remote.origin.fetch configuration variables. (See git-config(1)).

EXAMPLES
       o   Add a new remote, fetch, and check out a branch from it

	       $ git remote
	       origin
	       $ git branch -r
		 origin/HEAD -> origin/master
		 origin/master
	       $ git remote add staging git://git.kernel.org/.../gregkh/staging.git
	       $ git remote
	       origin
	       staging
	       $ git fetch staging
	       ...
	       From git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/gregkh/staging
		* [new branch]	    master     -> staging/master
		* [new branch]	    staging-linus -> staging/staging-linus
		* [new branch]	    staging-next -> staging/staging-next
	       $ git branch -r
		 origin/HEAD -> origin/master
		 origin/master
		 staging/master
		 staging/staging-linus
		 staging/staging-next
	       $ git checkout -b staging staging/master
	       ...

       o   Imitate git clone but track only selected branches

	       $ mkdir project.git
	       $ cd project.git
	       $ git init
	       $ git remote add -f -t master -m master origin git://example.com/git.git/
	       $ git merge origin

SEE ALSO
       git-fetch(1) git-branch(1) git-config(1)

GIT
       Part of the git(1) suite

Git 2.17.1							    10/05/2018							     GIT-REMOTE(1)
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