System information

139
CONFIGURING AND ADMINISTERING COLDFUSION 9
Indexing Collections with Verity Spider
Last updated 2/21/2012
Note: When specifying a URL, use full, absolute paths using the same format that appears in the HTML hypertext link.
If the link is relative, change it to absolute to use it with the
-include option.
See also
-regexp” on page 128.
-indexclude
Syntax
-indexclude exp_1 [exp_n] ...
Specifies that the files and paths in URLs that match the expressions are not indexed. They are, however, still followed.
If you use backslashes, double them so that they are properly escaped; for example:
C:\\test\docs\path
You can use wildcard expressions, where the asterisk (*) is for text strings and the question mark (?) is for single
characters; for example:
'/my_doc*/year199?'
In Windows, include double-quotation marks around the argument to protect the special characters, such as the
asterisk (*). On UNIX, use single-quotation marks. This is only required when you run the indexing job from a
command line. Quotation marks are not necessary within a command file (the
-cmdfile option).
To use regular expressions, also specify the -regexp option.
You would use this option to gather some documents, such as HTML tables of contents, to gain access to other
documents for indexing.
Where the -exclude option prevents Verity Spider from even following anything that matches the specified
expressions, the
-indexclude option allows Verity Spider to follow anything while only skipping that which matches
the specified expressions.
For document types, use the -indmimeexclude option instead.
Note: When specifying a URL, use full, absolute paths using the same format as appears in the HTML hypertext link. If
the link is relative, change it to absolute to use it with
-indexclude.
See also
-regexp” on page 128.
-indinclude
Syntax
-indinclude exp_1 [exp_n] ...
Specifies that only those files and paths in URLs that match the expressions be followed and indexed. If you use
backslashes, double them so that they are properly escaped; for example:
C:\\test\docs\path
You can use wildcard expressions, where the asterisk (*) is for text strings and the question mark (?) is for single
characters; for example: