User Guide
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Introduction
- Administering ColdFusion MX 7
- Administering ColdFusion MX
- Using the ColdFusion MX Administrator
- Contents
- Initial administration tasks
- Accessing user assistance
- Server Settings section
- Data & Services section
- Debugging & Logging section
- Extensions section
- Event Gateways section
- Security section
- Packaging and Deployment section
- Enterprise Manager section
- Custom Extensions section
- Administrator API
- Data Source Management
- Contents
- About JDBC
- Adding data sources
- Connecting to DB2 Universal Database
- Connecting to Informix
- Connecting to Microsoft Access
- Connecting to Microsoft Access with Unicode
- Connecting to Microsoft SQL Server
- Connecting to MySQL
- Connecting to ODBC Socket
- Connecting to Oracle
- Connecting to other data sources
- Connecting to Sybase
- Connecting to JNDI data sources
- Web Server Management
- Deploying ColdFusion Applications
- Administering Security
- Using Multiple Server Instances
- Administering Verity
- Introducing Verity and Verity Tools
- Indexing Collections with Verity Spider
- Using Verity Utilities
- Contents
- Overview of Verity utilities
- Using the mkvdk utility
- Using the rck2 utility
- Using the rcvdk utility
- Using the didump utility
- Using the browse utility
- Using the merge utility
- Index

134 Chapter 9: Indexing Collections with Verity Spider
-mimeinclude
Syntax:
-mimeinclude mime_1 [mime_n] ...
Specifies MIME types to be included.
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).
The default is to include all MIME types. For the mime variable, you can include the asterisk (*)
wildcard for text strings; for example:
'text/*'
You cannot use the question mark (?) wildcard, and the -regexp option does not let you use
regular expressions.
-mindocsize
Syntax:
-mindocsize integer
Specifies the minimum size, in kilobytes, for documents to be indexed. Any documents smaller
than the value specified by the
-mindocsize option are ignored.
The default is to index documents of any sizes.
-skip
Typ e : Web crawling only
Syntax:
-skip HTML_tag "exp"
Specifies that Verity Spider not index any HTML document that contains the text of exp within
the given HTML_tag. For multiple HTML_tag and exp combinations, use multiple instances of
the
-skip option.
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).
If you use backslashes, you must double them so that they are properly escaped; for example:
C:\\test\\docs\\path
To use regular expressions, also specify the -regexp option.