I suspect that the key to this lies in the HTTP headers, which
you can access via PHP.  You need to send a 404 Not Found error.
Use the PHP header() function as a code init element before 
any other code is output.
--
Paul Gillingwater <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Red Hat Certified Linux Engineer
Acting Unit Head, Network Support Unit
Computer Services Centre, International Atomic Energy Agency
http://www.iaea.org



-----Original Message-----
From: Torben Nehmer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, April 03, 2000 00:07
To: Midgard Mailing-Liste
Subject: [midgard] Active Pages and non Existing Urls


Hi.

I have defined some active pages. While the whole thing works fine I have
one Problem. Let's say the active page is reachable under /nathan/.... If
you give him an URL that doesn't exist, he brings the standard-page,
because my code init doesen create an article id. Sure, I could create an
custom error-message to handle this. But this doesn't work with search
engines. How can I configure an active page so that an search-engine/bot
recognizes that the page in question doesn't exist anymore? So that
/nathan/some_rubbish.html results in a regular apache-not-found page.

Live long and prosper!
Torben Nehmer

-- 
ICQ-ID           : 14148813
WWW              : http://www.nathan-syntronics.de
E-Mail           : [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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