I figure i’d blog a post on trackback linkbuilding. A trackback is … (post a few and you’ll get it). The trackback protocol isn’t that interesting, but the implementation of it by blog-platforms and cms’es makes it an excellent means for network development, because it uses a simple http-post. cUrl makes that easy).
To post a succesful link proposal I need some basic data :
about my page
- url (must exist)
- blog owner (free)
- blog name (free)
about the other page
- url (must exist)
- excerpt (should be proper normal text)
my page : this is preferably a php routine that hacks some text, pictures and video’s, PLR or articles together, with a url rewrite. I prefer using xml textfiles in stead of a database, works faster when you set stuff up.
other page : don’t use “I liked your article so much…”, use text that maches text on target pages, preferably get some proper excerpts from xml-feeds like blogsearch, msn and yahoo (excerpts contain the keywords I searched for, as anchor text it works better for search engine visibility and link value).
Let’s get some stuff from the MSN rss feed :
//a generic query = 5% success
//add "(powered by) wordpress"
$query=urlencode('keywords+wordpress+trackback');
$xml = @simplexml_load_file("http://search.live.com/results.aspx?q=$query&count=50&first=1&format=rss");
$count=0;
foreach($xml->channel->item as $i) {
$count++;
//the data from msn
$target['link'] = (string) $i->link;
$target['title'] = (string) $i->title;
$target['excerpt'] = (string) $i->description;
//some variables I'll need later on
$target[id'] = $count;
$target['trackback'] = '';
$target['trackback_success'] = 0;
$trackbacks[]=$target;
}
25% of the cms sites in the top of the search engines are WordPress scripts and WordPress always uses /trackback/ in the rdf-url. I get the source of the urls in the search-feed and grab all link-url’s in it, if any contains /trackback/, I post a trackback to that url and see if it sticks.
(I can also spider all links and check if there is an rdf-segment in the target’s source (*1), but that takes a lot of time, I could also program a curl array and use multicurl, for my purposes this works fast enough).
for($t=0;$t]*?href[\s]?=[\s\"\']+".
"(.*?)[\"\']+.*?>"."([^< ]+|.*?)?<\/a>/",
$content, &$matches);
$uri_array = $matches[1];
foreach($uri_array as $key => $link) {
if(strpos($link, 'rackbac')>0) {
$trackbacks[$t]['trackback'] = $link;
break;
}
}
}
When I fire a trackback, the other script will try and assert if my page has a link and matching text. I have to make sure my page shows the excerpts and links, so I stuff all candidates in a cached xml file.
function cache_xml_store($trackbacks, $pagetitle)
{
$xml = '< ?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
';
for($a=0;$a';
$xml .= ''.$arr['excerpt'].' ';
$xml .= ''.$arr['link'].'';
$xml .= ''.$arr['title'].' ';
$xml .= '';
}
$xml .= ' ';
$fname = 'cache/trackback'.urlencode($pagetitle).'.xml';
if(file_exists($fname)) unlink('cache/'.$fname);
$fhandle = fopen($fname, 'w');
fwrite($fhandle, $xml);
fclose($fhandle);
return;
}
I use simplexml to read that cached file and show the excertps and links once the page is requested.
// retrieve the cached xml and return it as array.
function cache_xml_retrieve($pagetitle)
{
$fname = 'cache/trackback'.urlencode($pagetitle).'.xml';
if(file_exists($fname)) {
$xml=@simplexml_load_file($fname);
if(!$xml) return false;
foreach($xml->entry as $e) {
$trackback['id'] =(string) $e->id;
$trackback['link'] = rid((string) $e->link);
$trackback['title'] = (string) $e->title;
$trackback['description'] = (string) $e->description;
$trackbacks[] = $arr;
}
return $trackbacks;
}
return false;
}
(this setup requires a subdirectory cache set to read/write with chmod 777)
I use http://www.domain.com/financial+trends.html and extract the pagetitle as “financial trends’, which has an xml-file http://www.domain.com/cache/financial+trends.xml. (In my own script I use sef urls with mod_rewrite, you can also use the $_SERVER array).
$pagetitle=preg_replace('/\+/', ' ', htmlentities($_REQUEST['title'], ENT_QUOTES, "UTF-8"));
$cached_excerpts = cache_xml_retrieve($pagetitle);
//do some stuff with, make it look nice :
for($s=0;$s'.$cached_excerpts['title'].'';
}
Now I prepare the data for the trackback post :
for($t=0;$t "url of my page with the link to the target",
"title" => "title of my page",
"blog_name" => "name of my blog",
"excerpt" => '[...]'.trim(substr($trackbacks[$t]['description'], 0, 150).'[...]'
);
//...and try the trackback
$trackbacks[$t]['trackback_success'] = trackback_ping($trackback_url, $mytrackbackdata);
}
}
This the actual trackback post using cUrl. cUrl has a convenient timeout setting, I use three seconds. If a host does not respond in half a second it’s probably dead. Three seconds is generous.
function trackback_ping($trackback_url, $trackback)
{
//make a string of the data array to post
foreach($trackback as $key=>$value) $strout[]=$key."=".rawurlencode($value);
$postfields= implode('&', $strout);
//create a curl instance
$ch = curl_init();
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_URL, $trackback_url);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT, 3);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_USERAGENT, "Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 5.01; Windows NT 5.0)");
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, true);
//set a custom form header
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, array('Content-type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded'));
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_NOBODY, true);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_POST, true);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS, $postfields);
$content = curl_exec($ch);
//if the return has a tag 'error' with as value 0 it went flawless
$success = 0;
if(strpos($content, '>0')>0) $success = 1;
curl_close ($ch);
unset($ch);
return $success;
}
Now the last routine : rewrite the cached xml file with only the successful trackbacks (seo stuff) :
for($t=0;$t0) {
$store_trackbacks[]=$trackbacks[$t];
}
}
cache_xml_store($store_trackbacks, $pagetitle);
voila : a page with only successful trackbacks.
Google (the backrub engine) don’t like sites that use automated link-building methods, other engines (Baidu, MSN, Yahoo) use a more normal link popularity keyword matching algorithm. Trackback linking helps getting you a clear engine profile at relative low cost.
0) for brevity and clarity, the code above is rewritten (taken from a trackback script I am developing on another site), it can contain some typo’s.
*1) If you want to spider links for rdf-segments : TYPO3v4 have some code for easy retrieval of trackback-uri’s :
/**
* Fetches ping url from the given url
*
* @param string $url URL to probe for RDF
* @return string Ping URL
*/
protected function getPingURL($url) {
$pingUrl = '';
// Get URL content
$urlContent = t3lib_div::getURL($url);
if ($urlContent && ($rdfPos = strpos($urlContent, '', $rdfPos)) !== false) {
// We will use quick regular expression to find ping URL
$rdfContent = substr($urlContent, $rdfPos, $endPos);
$pingUrl = preg_replace('/trackback:ping="([^"]+)"/', '\1', $rdfContent);
}
}
return $pingUrl;
}
Hi,
I am looking to build links on my website, i could add your site to PC Hack, PR3 and to Free PHP Code
In return i would ask that you add my link
Please email me at hackspc@gmail.com if you would like to go ahead.
Many thanks
Ivan
What ratios are you getting doing this? worth the roi? they are all nofollow too (although we all know they still count for something.)?
I get about 10% backlinks when I spider, more than I expected as the site doesn’t have any content of itself. Buying links or using tnx is more effective, as background process this works better. I want a stand alone script with an xml cache so I can use it on other sites without being dependant on script capabilities.
I really liked your awe-inspiring blog! The info you provide is impressive ! I think im gonna stick around and read about 7 of your posts. ttyl