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This document introduces you to the tools that enhance
navigation between the pages of your site. These are:
- Redirect URL to redirect visitors
from one page to another;
- Directory Indexes to specify
what files will be treated as index pages;
- Error Pages to configure error pages
that are shown when the requested pages fail to open;
- Server Side Imagemap to add links to
parts of your images;
- MIME Types to specify the MIME type for a
particular file extension.
- WAP Support to configure Web server be able
to serve WML pages or WMLScripts
Redirect URL
Use this feature to redirect your visitors from one web page to
another or even to a different website.
To create a redirect in a Unix-based account, do the
following:
- On the control panel home page, click Web Options.
Select the domain if you have more than one.
- On the Web Service page, scroll down to find the
Redirect option and click the Add icon next to
it.
- Agree with the charges.
- On the page that appears, create the redirect rule.
Unix-based accounts
Entering http://www.examples.com/products into
the Redirect from field and
http://www.examples.com?param1=yes in the to
field, will take all the http://www.examples.com/products
visitors to the http://www.examples.com?param1=yes page.

If you leave the Redirect from field empty, visitors will
be redirected from any location in the site. In the to
field, you can enter URLs with parameters, as illustrated in the
screenshot above.
Leave Redirect status as is unless you want to change the
default:
- Permanent
returns a permanent redirect status (301) indicating that the
resource has moved permanently.
- Temporary
returns a temporary redirect status (302). This is the default and
indicates to the client that the resource has moved
temporarily.
- See other
returns a "See Other" status (303) indicating that the resource has
been replaced.
- Gone
will cause a visitor's browser display "The requested resource
is no longer available on this server and there is no forwarding
address. Please remove all references to this resource."
message when trying to go to the 'to' URL..
Windows-based accounts
In Windows plans, redirect works in a slightly different
manner:

- The exact URL entered above
redirects requests for any files in the indicated directory to one
file. For example, to redirect all requests for
products.html file to the following URL:
'www.example.net', enter
www.example.net/products.html in the To field and
select this option.
You can redirect requests to URLs with parameters, for example
www.examples.net/?param1=yes
*Note: you can redirect requests for files and directories both to
your own site and to any other external URL.
- A directory below this one
redirects a parent directory to a child directory.
- For example, to redirect your 'examples.net/products'
directory to a subdirectory named 'news', enter
'excample.net/products/news' in the 'to' text box and
select this option. Without this option, the Web server will
continually map the parent to itself.
- A permanent redirection for this resource
sends the following message to the client: '301 Permanent
Redirect'. Redirects are considered temporary, and the client
browser receives the following message: '302 Temporary Redirect'.
Some browsers can use the '301 Permanent Redirect' message as the
signal to permanently change a URL, such as a bookmark.
Directory Indexes
This tool allows you to set your own index pages instead of
those specified in the default settings. In other words, you can
tell your visitors' browsers which page to load as they hit your
domain. Usually, it's /index.html by default, but you can
set any other custom welcome page.
Example: If a visitor goes to your site
http://www.example.com, the first page to open will be
http://www.example.com/index.html. However, if you set
/welcome.html as the directory index, the page to open will
be http://www.example.com/welcome.html.
Warning: your custom index pages won't add to the
defaults; they will replace them. Therefore, make sure to enter the
full list of indexes you would like to have in your
configuration.
To set your custom directory indexes, do the following:
- On the control panel home page, click Web Options.
Select the domain if you have more than one.
- On the Web Service page, scroll down to find the
Directory Indexes option and turn it on.
- Agree with the charges.
- In the box that appears, enter the names for files that will be
treated as indexes. Put file names in the descending order of
priority and separate them with spaces (e.g. index.html cgi.bin
about.html).

- Skip this step if you are using a Windows-based
plan.
At the top of the Web Service page, click the Apply
link for the Server configuration to change. The changes will take
effect within 15 minutes.
- To edit the list you have made, click the Edit icon next
to the Directory Indexes option: with spaces (e.g.
index.html cgi.bin about.html).

If you are using a Unix-based plan, click the Apply link at
the top of the Web Service page.
Error Pages
Use this utility to define what will be done if a requested page
on your site is missing or fails to open for any other reason. In
order to specify your own ErrorDocuments, you need to be slightly
familiar with the server returned error codes:
Successful Client Requests
200 OK
201 Created
202 Accepted
203 Non-Authorative Information
204 No Content
205 Reset Content
206 Partial Content
Client Request Redirected
300 Multiple Choices
301 Moved Permanently
302 Moved Temporarily
303 See Other
304 Not Modified
305 Use Proxy
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Client Request Errors
400 Bad Request
401 Authorization Required
402 Payment Required (not used yet)
403 Forbidden
404 Not Found
405 Method Not Allowed
406 Not Acceptable (encoding)
407 Proxy Authentication Required
408 Request Timed Out
409 Conflicting Request
410 Gone
411 Content Length Required
412 Precondition Failed
413 Request Entity Too Long
414 Request URI Too Long
415 Unsupported Media Type
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Server Errors
500 Internal Server Error
501 Not Implemented
502 Bad Gateway
503 Service Unavailable
504 Gateway Timeout
505 HTTP Version Not Supported
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To configure Error Pages, do the following:
- On the control panel home page, click Web Options.
Select the domain if you have more than one.
- On the Web Service page, scroll down to find the
Error option and click the Add icon on its
right.
- In the form that appears, enter the error document
settings:
For Unix accounts:

- Error Document Code: choose the one you need from the
drop-down box.
- Message or URL: the path to the page with ERROR
message
IMPORTANT: if ErrorDocument 401 is chosen in Error Document Code,
the path must be relative to the local user's site home root
- Type: Specify if the text in the previous field must be
treated as a URL (Redirect) or as a text message
(Message).
For Windows accounts
Users will get a slightly different form to enter the path to the
custom error page.
* Note that the path should be relative to the home directory, not
to the virtual host directory.

If you check "FILE":
- only static error page files can be used;
- the same error page files for this domain can be shared with
other account domains.
For instance, with the following file path, all account domains
will share this error page: pages\404_error.html
- use the "\" character as a delimiter in the file path;
- do not start the file path with "\".
If you check "URL":
- it will allow you to use scripts (php/ASP) to dynamically
generate error pages (alternatively, use static error page files
for each type of error page);
- error page files for this domain can't be shared with other
domains;
- "Path to Custom Error page" must be relative to the virtual host
and start with "/".
Server Side Imagemap
This feature allows your server to regard files with a specific
extension as map files. In other words, the server checks the file
with the specified extension to define the links of an image
(unlike a client-side image map, which uses the info inserted into
the HTML code) and reports back to the browser where to go.
To add an imagemap file extension, do the following:
- On the control panel home page, click Web Options.
Select the domain if you have more than one.
- On the Web Service page, scroll down to find the
Server Side Imagemap option and click the Add icon on
its right.
- Agree with the charges.
- Enter the file extension beginning with a dot:

MIME Types
This utililty allows you to define file formats that are not
defined in web browsers. This enables the browser to display or
output files that are not in HTML format, just like it displays
simple text files, .gif graphics files and PostScript files.
To add a definition for your own file format, do the
following:
- On the control panel home page, click Web Options.
Select the domain if you have more than one.
- On the Web Service page, scroll down to find the MIME
Type option and click the Add icon on its right.
- Agree with the charges.
- On the page that appears, enter the extension for this file
type:

Begin file extension with a dot. The MIME type must comply with
MIME type specifications, e.g.: text/rtf or
video/mpeg.
WAP Support
WAP (Wireless Application Protocol)
is a secure specification that allows users to access information
instantly via handheld wireless devices such as mobile phones,
pagers, two-way radios, smartphones and communicators. Although WAP
supports HTML and XML, the WML language (an XML application) is
specifically devised for small screens and one-hand navigation
without a keyboard. WAP also supports WMLScript.
To add support for WML or WMLScript, add the following MIME Types:
| Content |
MIME Type |
File Extension |
| WML Source |
text/vnd.wap.wml |
.wml |
| Compiled WML |
application/vnd.wap.wmlc |
.wmlc |
| WMLScript source |
text/vnd.wap.wmlscript |
.wmls |
| Compiled WMLScript |
application/vnd.wap.wmlscriptc |
.wmlsc |
| Wireless Bitmap |
image/vnd.wap.wbmp |
.wbmp |
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