The URL Inspection tool provides information about Google's indexed version of a specific page, and also allows you to test whether a URL might be indexable. Information includes details about structured data, video, linked AMP, and indexing/indexability. There are two ways
to access the URL Inspection tool: Open the URL Inspection Tool URL Inspection Tool - Google Search Console Training Common tasks
What isn't testedThe test results don't test for the following things, which are required to appear in Google:
See the status of a URL in the Google indexYou can request detailed Google index information about a URL in your property, including indexability, any rich results or videos found, mobile usability, and more. To see information in the Google index about a URL:
There is a daily limit of inspection requests for each property that you own. About the indexed URL statusKey points
Understanding the results
The index status includes the following information: Overall page status The top section of the report provides a summary evaluation about whether or not the URL is eligible to appear in Google Search results (with some caveats). The following values are possible: URL is on Google
URL is on Google, but has issues
URL is not on Google
URL is an alternate version
Page indexing (Can Google fetch and index the page?) This section provides information about whether Google could find and index the page. Indexing statusWhether or not the URL is indexed. The section heading includes a short, descriptive reason for the status of the URL, explaining why the URL is or isn't on Google. The following values are supported:
<link rel="canonical"> tag, an HTTP header, a sitemap, or a few other methods. There is no guarantee that Google will choose your preferred canonical, but we will take this into
consideration. For AMP pages, the canonical should be the non-AMP version unless it is a self-canonical AMP.Google-selected canonicalThe page that Google selected as the canonical (authoritative) URL when it found similar pages on your site. Google might select the user-declared canonical, but sometimes Google might choose another URL that it considers a better canonical example. If the page has no alternate versions, the Google-selected canonical is the inspected URL. If you find an unexpected page here, consider explicitly declaring a canonical version. The canonical URL is not always the one shown in Search results: for example, if a page has both a desktop and a mobile version, Google will probably show the URL appropriate for the user's device. Note that this value can be a few hours out of date from our index value. Video indexing (Videos found on the page) This section is present only if a video was detected on an indexed page. The indexing status describes whether a video was indexed or could not be indexed on this page. Only one video can be indexed per page. If the page has only one video, the information is shown for that video. If the page has multiple videos, Google tries to index videos in order of best preference, and stops when one video can be indexed. The information shown in the report is for the video that was indexed, if successful, or for the top candidate, if video indexing failed. Learn more about video indexing. Video indexing statusThe following video indexing statuses can be shown for a page where a video is detected:
Additional video informationAdditional video information shown in the report is described here. Video indexing issuesAny of the following issues, shown in the Video details section, can prevent a video from being indexed. If multiple videos were found on the page, the issue shown applies to the best candidate video.
Enhancements (Mobile usability, AMP, and more) This section describes any Search enhancements detected by Google on your URL the last time it was indexed. This section will be empty if the URL could not be indexed or if no enhancements were detected. Clicking a section for an enhancement will open up a sub-page for that enhancement. To navigate back to the main inspection page, click URL Inspection at the top of the page. This tool does not yet show all possible enhancements. Here are the enhancements supported by this tool: Mobile UsabilityDiscover whether your page is easy to use on a mobile device. Not all pages are tested for mobile usability. The URL tested for mobile usability might not be the same URL that you entered. During indexing, Google tries to determine the best mobile version for any canonical URL, and so it will follow redirects, rel=alternate, and linked AMP versions when choosing and testing a URL. The following verdicts are possible:
Expand the details section to get more details about mobile usability for this URL. For an interactive mobile usability test to help you debug and test your code, use the Mobile-Friendly tool. AMPIf you inspect a non-AMP page with a linked AMP version, or are inspecting an AMP page directly, you can see information about it by selecting the AMP result. Use this information to help find and troubleshoot AMP-specific indexing and other issues. Details shown here apply to the AMP version referenced by the current page; they do not apply to the current page unless the AMP is the canonical page. In addition to standard AMP errors, you might see these Google-specific AMP errors. To see other pages on your site affected by a specific issue, select the issue description row, then select Open Report. An AMP or Web Story page inspected with the URL Inspection tool can have the following possible statuses:
For an interactive AMP code debugger, you can use the AMP Test. Rich results detected on the pageYou can see information about any rich result types (structured data) found on the page. Information includes the number of valid items found on the URL, descriptions of each item, and details about any warnings or errors found. Expand Detected items to see details about any structured data found on the page, with any issues marked. Click an issue highlighted in the report to see the problematic code, where possible. For an interactive structured data debugger, where you can modify and test structured data, use the Rich Results test, which also shows a preview of some kinds of structured data. The following rich result types are supported:
My rich result isn't here! Not all rich result types are supported by the tool yet. Unsupported types might be present and valid on the page, and can appear in Search results, but won't appear in the tool. Additional response dataTo see additional response data such as the raw HTML returned, the HTTP headers, JavaScript console output, and any page resources loaded, click View crawled page. Additional response information is available only for URLs with a status of URL is on Google or URL is on Google, but has issues. The crawler used to generate the data depends on where you are when you open the side panel:
A screenshot of the rendered page is available only in a live test. Live URL testRun a live test of a URL in your property to check for indexing issues, mobile usability, structured data, and more. The life test is useful when fixing your page, to test whether an issue was fixed. To run a live test for potential indexing errors:
There is a per-property daily limit of live inspections. About the live test resultsKey points:
Does a valid result mean that my page will be indexed? No. The live URL test only confirms whether Googlebot can access your page for indexing. There is no definitive test that can guarantee whether your page will be included in the Google index. Even if you get a valid or warning verdict in the live test, your page must still fulfill other conditions in order to be indexed. For instance:
The live test results include the following information: Overall page status (live test) The top section of the report gives a general evaluation of whether or not the live URL can be indexed. A positive result is not a guarantee that it will appear in Search results, but it means that the URL can be crawled and parsed. The URL Inspection tool doesn't take into account manual actions, content removals, quality and security issues, or temporarily blocked URLs. Important: The live test does not cover all possible indexing conditions. Issues marked "no" in this table are not checked in the live test, and can occur when the page is indexed, no matter what the live URL status is. If the page has a redirect, Google will test the redirect target without indicating that there is a redirection, or which URL was finally tested in the live test. The indexed report will show redirections. The following values are possible: URL is available to Google
URL is available to Google, but has issues
URL is not available to Google
Availability (live test) This section of the tool describes whether it's likely that the page can be indexed by Google. However, a positive result is no guarantee that it will appear in Search results. The test doesn't check that the page conforms to Google's quality and security guidelines, any manual actions or security issues, content removals, or temporarily blocked URLs. Your page must pass all these checks during indexing to be available in Google Search results. Availability status The availability status of the live URL. The following values are possible:
<link rel="canonical"> tag, an HTTP header, a sitemap, or a few other
methods. There is no guarantee that Google will choose this URL, but we will take this into consideration. For AMP pages, the canonical should be the non-AMP version (unless it is a self-canonical AMP).Index coverage issues not tested in the live test The live test can't detect all page conditions, or predict indexing success with 100% confidence. This is because some types of issues are not, or cannot be tested in real time, such as canonical selection or whether a URL was submitted in a sitemap. If a condition is not checked, the live test result might be URL is available to Google, when in fact indexing will fail due to the condition not tested in the live test. Here are indexing issues from the Index Coverage report that can't be tested in the live test:
Other enhancements: Mobile usability, AMP, structured data (live test) Mobile usabilitySee the indexed mobile usability section for more information. Which URL is tested? If there is an AMP URL associated with the submitted URL, that AMP URL will be tested for mobile usability*, unless the AMP is an invalid AMP page. If there is no AMP URL associated with the submitted URL (or if the associated AMP is invalid), the test will request the submitted URL with a mobile user agent, follow any redirects, and test the final URL. The tested URL is not shown in the report. Note that behavior during indexing is more complex, and considers alternate URLs, duplicates, and other conditions. Therefore you should depend on the indexed mobile usability test as authoritative, and understand that live mobile usability results might be against a different URL than that used during indexing. AMPSee the indexed AMP section for more information. Which URL is tested? To determine the AMP URL to test, the test fetches the submitted URL using a desktop user agent and follows all redirects. After that:
Structured dataSee the indexed AMP section for more information. Additional response data (live test)Click View tested page to see additional response data such as a screenshot of the rendered page, the raw HTML returned, the HTTP headers, JavaScript console output, and any page resources loaded. Additional response data is available in the live test only when the test status is URL is available to Google or URL is available to Google, but has issues. The crawler used to generate the data depends on where you are when you open the side panel:
Site-wide availability issues If the live Availability status indicates a site-wide issue, here are the possible Page fetch values:
Note that server errors can be transient, and so you might encounter server errors during a live test that won't occur during crawling or, conversely, your live test might succeed when a server error might have occurred during crawling. View the rendered pageYou can view a screenshot of the rendered page as Googlebot sees it. This is useful for confirming that all elements of the page are present and appear as you intend. Differences might be the result of resources that are blocked to Googlebot. A screenshot is available only in a live test with a successful test result. Screenshots are not available for the indexed URL, or for non-successful fetches of the live test. The page must be reachable to generate a screenshot. If your page is behind a firewall, you can expose it to the URL Inspection tool using a tunnel. To view the rendered page:
Request (re)indexingYou can request that an inspected URL be indexed by Google. Indexing can take up to a week or two; you can check the progress using this tool. Some caveats when requesting indexing:
To request indexing for a URL:
To request indexing of many new or updated pages, your best choice is to submit a sitemap, with the updated pages marked by Troubleshoot a missing pageIf you think your page hasn't been indexed, here's how to verify and troubleshoot the issue.
Known issues
Was this helpful? How can we improve it? Where can you find admitted patients in epic quizlet?The Pt Lists button is where you can view a list of all patients or just those who are currently admitted to the affiliated hospital.
Where in epic can you find self help guides?The Epic Tips and Tricks link can be found by clicking the Epic button on the top left after logging in, and then going to the Help section.
What can you view in the summary activity on Epic?The Synopsis Activity displays the Events by Type view by default. This sorts all the events info folders organized by type. Types include categories such as medication, lab, procedures, and many others. Within these folders, specific events that have occurred over the admission are listed.
What is main toolbar in epic?The main toolbar contains popular selections depending on your user role. Additional selections can be located from the Epic button.
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