Using robots.txt to hide from search engines

The robots.txt protocol is used to tell search engines (Google, MSN, etc) which parts of a website should not be crawled.

For Jira instances where non-logged-in users are able to view issues, a robots.txt file is useful for preventing unnecessary crawling of the Issue Navigator views (and unnecessary load on your Jira server).

Editing robots.txt

Jira (version 3.7 and later) installs the following robots.txt file at the root of the Jira web app ($JIRA-INSTALL/atlassian-jira):

# robots.txt for Jira
# You may specify URLs in this file that will not be crawled by search engines (Google, MSN, etc)
#
# By default, all SearchRequestViews in the IssueNavigator (e.g.: Word, XML, RSS, etc) and all IssueViews
# (XML, Printable and Word) are excluded by the /sr/ and /si/ directives below.

User-agent: *
Disallow: /sr/
Disallow: /si/

Alternatively, if you already have a robots.txt file, simply edit it and add Disallow: /sr/ and Disallow: /si/.

Publishing robots.txt

The robots.txt file needs to be published at the root of your Jira internet domain, e.g. jira.mycompany.com/robots.txt.

If your Jira instance is published at jira.mycompany.com/jira, change the contents of the file to Disallow: /jira/sr/ and Disallow: /jira/sr/. However, you still need to put robots.txt file in the root directory, i.e. jira.mycompany.com/robots.txt (not jira.mycompany.com/jira/robots.txt).

Last modified on Aug 26, 2021

Was this helpful?

Yes
No
Provide feedback about this article
Powered by Confluence and Scroll Viewport.