When we launched last year the first version of our Web Page Error Toolkit we got a lot of interest from the community and lots of feedback on how we could make it better.
This year not only have we revamped the existing Windows/IIS version, but we have also listened to your feedback and the full source code is now available on Codeplex in open source under MS-PL.
Also, thanks to the help of our colleagues in the interoperability team, we have today the pleasure to announce a version of the Web Page Error Toolkit for PHP users that can work on Apache as well as IIS and is not bound to a Windows Server.
All the versions of the Web Page Error Toolkit are available as Open Source and put you just one AppID registration away from increasing the ability of your site to keep users from hitting broken links.
After all, if you can’t find it, you better search for it J
Alessandro Catorcini - Lead PM, Bing API
You've seen it. So have I. Nearly every person who has actively browsed the Web for more than 15 minutes
thank you for these information
thanks for the information
Hello,
"Also, thanks to the help of our colleagues in the interoperability team, we have today the pleasure to announce a version of the Web Page Error Toolkit for PHP users that can work on Apache as well as IIS and is not bound to a Windows Server."
Web Page Error Toolkit for php on Apache works certaiinly for those who have access to ROOT/Server. What about people on shared hosting who cannot as Administrator, modify Apache config file, httpd.conf, find ErrorDocument listing, and add: ErrorDocument 404 ErrorDocument 404 /errordocs/WebErrorPHPToolkit/Error404.php.
Please do consider hared hosting on APACHE. Thanks.
good for me
thank you
Couldn't you just use the Apache License rather than your own custom ones?
License fragmentation sucks, it makes it really hard to combine open source projects together. The MS-PL is especially bad in this regard, as it's incompatible with every other license out there, including the (L)GPL which is used by the overwhelming majority of OSS projects.
The Apache license is much more broadly used (it's really the 'new BSD'), and is compatible with (L)GPL versions 3+, which means it can be combined with most OSS code out there.
Great Info, Thanx
Will this work on a Apache web server?
good method to rmove broken links
it increases the effciency of web pages and improve the content quality
thanx man good one
Really informative
I find it great that the developers listen to the community to make things better. This ensures a great futur for bing.
I get 1 visit a day from bing.com for travelinireland.com and get 500 a day from Google, why such a descrepency?
The webpage error kit is very useful.