A WordPress site affected by spam and added private page but not listing in the pages tab. But it's showing count as 1 in the pages tab.
How can I delete that page from Wordpress, because it's opening some spam page automatically when loading any site's page from Mobile.
If you are sure that it is SPAM, then deleting the post created by SPAM will not solve your problem. However, there are solutions-
Remove all the nulled themes and plugins
Install this
free plugin and run full scan
Follow the scan result instructions
Related
Recently I started working on MediaWiki. I noticed one thing that when particular dev team delete the page for their project from wiki it goes to Orphaned pages under Tools--->Special Pages.To investigate it I created a page and deleted it but it didn't go to the Orphaned pages.
Can someone have any idea how this is happening?I want that if someone delete the pages it should not go under Orphaned Pages.Are there any permission we need to set or some kind of settings we need to change?
Deleted pages have nothing to do with orphaned pages. Orphaned pages are pages that are not linked from or transcluded into other pages in your wiki.
So there could be active (not deleted) orphaned pages too.
If another page links to an orphaned page it will disappear from https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Special:LonelyPages
My website had a link to my profilepage, profile.html. Later I changed it to ItsMe.html. When I search for the website in the Google, its still showing profile.html. How can I change this to ItsMe.html in the google? In fact I have deleted the profil.html from my website and created the new itsme.html. I dont want to show the profile.html anywhere in google search.
You will have to wait until Google crawls your site again. Once they do that, they will update their index. For a popular, continually updated site that would probably happen several times a day, but for a small personal site that doesn't often change, it will likely be a lot longer.
You can submit a request for them to recrawl your site, but no guarantees it will actually happen any quicker. ;-)
You should also set up a 301 redirect from profile.html to ItsMe.html.
I have a WordPress blog account already (abc.wordpress.com). And I have my own web site: www.xyz.com
I would like to integrate my WordPress blog content into my own site. Hopefully something like blog.xyz.com or just replace the home page of xyz.com with abc.wordpress.com
I know that I can download WordPress' code from wordpress.org and run my own WordPress. And having my own MySQL database, but WordPress is always releasing new code. I don't have the time to keep updating the source on my end to match it.
I'm running my own site as a hobby, so I prefer to let WordPress.com to manage the content for me and continue reuse my own blog at abc.wordpress.com, but make the content show up in my own site: xyz.com
I hope I was clear when explaining this.
Anyone knows a way to do this?
Thanks.
If your main worry is about the updates, I would say don't be. A simple click of the 'Updates' button in the wordpress admin is all you need to do in order to apply the updates for wordpress. A notification will pop up alerting you of any updates.
And as Calle has already mentioned, you can retrieve your content via RSS, or you could just export your current content from Wordpress.com, import the content into your own site, and manage it there. Everything would be in one spot.
Good Luck.
I don't know how good you are with programming but there's a PHP library called Simple Pie which would help you retrieve your content via RSS (which Wordpress automatically generates for you). The adress is here: http://simplepie.org/
If you are not very good with programming, perhaps you can get someone to do it for you or find a script which is already written somewhere. I do think RSS is definitely the best way to go.
I also think you exaggerate the problems of hosting Wordpress yourself. It's not something that you have to keep updated with, and if you want to, all you have to do is log in from time to time, perhaps once a month (how often are you writing articles?), and click "update" and Wordpress will do everything for you. Both for your plugins and WP version.
For the ability to use your own domain (xyz.com) and have wordpress redirect users from abc.wordpress.com(your wordpress blog) to your domain requires a premium account.
If you have a premium account then you can just log in to wordpress.com, click 'upgrades' and select 'domains'. From there you will see the option "Map an Existing Domain" and you will want to enter your domain here. Now your wordpress.com blog is what will show when users enter your domain's url (xyz.com).
Alternatively, if you need a workaround with a free wordpress.com account then you want to just embed your blog and for that you will need to use an RSS feed. Note: this method will not maintain your wordpress styles it will merely transport the content. Also by default not all browsers support RSS feeds.
You can view your blog's current feed by adding 'feed' to the end of your wordpress.com url, i.e. abc.wordpress.com/feed. You can read more about feeds here (http://en.support.wordpress.com/feeds/). Now you are just left with the task of figuring out how to embed the feed into your page.
One final hail-mary you might attempt is just redirecting your domain to your blog. Reference on how to do this different ways here: (http://css-tricks.com/redirect-web-page/). Example, place this tag in the section of your domains pages:
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0; URL='http://google.com'" />
(this will redirect after 0 seconds to the specified url)
I have a web site with an index.html homepage that is updated from time to time. We sometimes add offers for our clients, special messages and so on, which have to be visible by next day for everyone.
If index.html is cached by browsers, many users will not notice that anything has changed, unless they explicitly refresh the contents of the page...
Which is the best way to be sure that 100% visitors have an up-to-date index.html page, without compromising cache performance?
My best answer would be to skip out on updating the index.html each time and go with a server-side programming language, like PHP. You can then set the headers for the page to not cache, and you can also set up an admin page that you can use to change the content. Or you could go with a browser-side script with JavaScript using AJAX. Then the page has an ability to update before the next loading of the site.
Have a wiki installed in our organization, and want to start using it.
Failed to find the answers for the next 2 basic questions:
How do I configure the entry page to show a list of all existing pages
How do I create a new page (!). Only succeeded doing it by typing a url of an non existing page. Guess there are nicer methods for this
Thanks
Gidi
For how to show a list of all pages, look at DynamicPageList, which is part of MediaWiki. (There's a more advanced third-party version, but it's not needed for such a simple task.)
Creating a new page really is exactly as you said: Type a URL and save some edits. Most beginning editors will edit a link into a page, and then use that link to browse to the page, so that they don't accidentally forget the spelling and lose the page to the Ether. (Of course it would show up in the recently edited and other special pages.)
This is more of a webapps.stackexchange.com question though.