About webs and subwebs
When working with a large Web site, it's often easier to break up the site into
smaller subwebs. A subweb is a complete Microsoft FrontPage-extended Web that is
located in a subdirectory of the root
Web site or of another subweb. Each subweb
can have many levels of subdirectories. A Web that has subwebs is called a parent Web.
A root Web site is a Web site that is the top-level
content directory of a Web server or, in a multi-hosting
environment, of a virtual Web server. The content of the root Web site can be
contained in many levels of subdirectories. However, there is only one root Web
site per Web server or virtual Web server.
For example, if a company has an intranet, each major department can have a subweb. That way, each group can manage its
own site
and the main home page
in the parent Web site can provide links between the
departmental sites.
There are several benefits to setting up your Web site with subwebs:
- Each subweb can be maintained by a different owner.
- Each subweb can maintain separate security settings.
- Performance can improve, because the time required to recalculate
hyperlinks is directly proportional to the number and size of the documents
stored in a single Web.
Even though subwebs appear below other Web sites in the Web server's file
system and URL space, the content of a subweb is not included in its parent Web
site. An author of a Web site does not automatically have
permission to edit any of its subwebs, and users cannot browse from a parent Web
site to a subweb. FrontPage Server Extensions maintains this separation of content automatically.
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