Jaa


Manage crawl rules in SharePoint Server

APPLIES TO: yes-img-132013 yes-img-162016 yes-img-192019 yes-img-seSubscription Edition no-img-sopSharePoint in Microsoft 365

You can add a crawl rule to include or exclude specific paths when you crawl content. When you include a path, you can provide alternative account credentials to crawl it. In addition to creating or editing crawl rules, you can test, delete, or reorder existing crawl rules.

Use crawl rules to do the following:

  • Prevent content on a site from being crawled. For example, if you created a content source to crawl 'http://www.contoso.com', but you do not want the search system to crawl content from the subdirectory 'http://www.contoso.com/downloads', create a crawl rule to exclude content from that subdirectory.

  • Crawl content on a site that would be excluded otherwise. For example, if you excluded content from 'http://www.contoso.com/downloads' from being crawled, but you want content in the subdirectory 'http://www.contoso.com/downloads/content' to be crawled, create a crawl rule to include content from that subdirectory.

  • Specify authentication credentials. If a site to be crawled requires different credentials than those of the default content access account, create a crawl rule to specify the authentication credentials.

You can use the asterisk (*) as a wildcard character in crawl rules. For example, to exclude JPEG files from crawls on 'http://www.contoso.com', create a crawl rule to exclude 'http://www.contoso.com/*.jpg'.

The order of crawl rules is important, because the first rule that matches a particular set of content is the one that is applied.

To create or edit a crawl rule

  1. Verify that the user account that is performing this procedure is an administrator for the Search service application.

  2. In Central Administration, in the Application Management section, click Manage Service Applications.

  3. On the Manage Service Applications page, in the list of service applications, click the Search service application.

  4. On the Search Administration page, in the Crawling section, click Crawl Rules. The Manage Crawl Rules page appears.

  5. To create a new crawl rule, click New Crawl Rule. To edit an existing crawl rule, in the list of crawl rules, point to the name of the crawl rule that you want to edit, click the arrow that appears, and then click Edit.

  6. On the Add Crawl Rule page, in the Path section:

  • In the Path box, type the path to which the crawl rule will apply. You can use standard wildcard characters in the path.

  • To use regular expressions instead of wildcard characters, select Use regular expression syntax for matching this rule.

  1. In the Crawl Configuration section, select one of the following options:
  • Exclude all items in this path. Select this option if you want to exclude all items in the specified path from crawls. If you select this option, you can refine the exclusion by selecting Exclude complex URLs (URLs that contain question marks (?)) to exclude URLs that contain parameters that use the question mark (?) notation.

  • Include all items in this path. Select this option if you want all items in the path to be crawled. If you select this option, you can further refine the inclusion by selecting any combination of these options:

    Follow links on the URL without crawling the URL itself. Select this option if you want to crawl links contained within the URL, but not the starting URL itself.

    Crawl complex URLs (URLs that contain a question mark (?)). Select this option if you want to crawl URLs that contain parameters that use the question mark (?) notation.

    Crawl SharePoint Server content as http pages. Normally, SharePoint Server sites are crawled by using a special protocol. Select this option if you want SharePoint Server sites to be crawled as HTTP pages instead. When the content is crawled by using the HTTP protocol, item permissions are not stored.

  1. In the Specify Authentication section, perform one of the following actions:

    Note

    This option is not available unless the Include all items in this path option is selected in the Crawl Configuration section.

  • To use the default content access account, select Use the default content access account.

  • If you want to use a different account, select Specify a different content access account and then in the Account box, type the user account name that can access the paths that are defined in this crawl rule. Next, in the Password and Confirm Password boxes, type the password for this user account. To prevent basic authentication from being used, select the Do not allow Basic Authentication check box. The server attempts to use NTLM authentication. If NTLM authentication fails, the server attempts to use basic authentication unless the Do not allow Basic Authentication check box is selected.

  • To use a client certificate for authentication, select Specify client certificate, expand the Certificate menu, and then select a certificate.

  • To use form credentials for authentication, select Specify form credentials, type the form URL (the location of the page that accepts credentials information) in the Form URL box, and then click Enter Credentials. When the logon prompt from the remote server opens in a new window, type the form credentials with which you want to log on. You are prompted if the logon was successful. If the logon was successful, the credentials that are required for authentication are stored on the remote site.

  • To use cookies, select Use cookie for crawling, and then select Obtain cookie from a URL to obtain a cookie from a website or server. Or, select Specify cookie for crawlingto import a cookie from your local file system or a file share. You can optionally specify error pages in the Error pages (semi-colon delimited) box.

  • To allow anonymous access, select Anonymous access.

  1. Click OK.

To test a crawl rule on a URL

  1. Verify that the user account that is performing this procedure is an administrator for the Search service application.

  2. In Central Administration, in the Application Management section, click Manage Service Applications.

  3. On the Manage Service Applications page, in the list of service applications, click the Search service application.

  4. On the Search Administration page, in the Crawling section, click Crawl Rules.

  5. On the Manage Crawl Rules page, in the Type a URL and click test to find out if it matches a rule box, type the URL that you want to test.

  6. Click Test. The result of the test appears below the Type a URL and click test to find out if it matches a rule box.

To delete a crawl rule

  1. Verify that the user account that is performing this procedure is an administrator for the Search service application.

  2. In Central Administration, in the Application Management section, click Manage Service Applications.

  3. On the Manage Service Applications page, in the list of service applications, click the Search service application.

  4. On the Search Administration page, in the Crawling section, click Crawl Rules.

  5. On the Manage Crawl Rules page, in the list of crawl rules, point to the name of the crawl rule that you want to delete, click the arrow that appears, and then click Delete.

  6. Click OK to confirm that you want to delete this crawl rule.

To reorder crawl rules

  1. Verify that the user account that is performing this procedure is an administrator for the Search service application.

  2. In Central Administration, in the Application Management section, click Manage Service Applications.

  3. On the Manage Service Applications page, in the list of service applications, click the Search service application.

  4. On the Search Administration page, in the Crawling section, click Crawl Rules.

  5. On the Manage Crawl Rules page, in the list of crawl rules, in the Order column, specify the crawl rule position that you want the rule to occupy. Other values shift accordingly.