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HomeWebsite & Server ToolsRedirect Chain Tracer

Redirect Chain Tracer

Follow full navigation hops, redirect headers, and detect loops.

Computational Status

AI Diagnostic Specialist

Automatically analyze tool output and explain results in plain English

Configure Tool Params

Used 1,245 times todaySecure In-Browser Execution
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Educational Guide: Understanding Redirect Chain Tracer

Step-by-Step Operation Guide

1

Enter Website URL

Specify the target web server URL, host, or resource page for Redirect Chain Tracer.

2

Run Performance Scan

Initialize latency audits, redirect hop tracing, or header analysis queries.

3

Check Speed & Headers

Review Core Web Vitals, redirects path, page speed parameters, and read the AI evaluation.

How to Interpret Diagnostic Results

Server diagnostics for Redirect Chain Tracer evaluate loading latency, HTTP codes, and header parameters to verify optimal resource delivery.

Examine HTTP status responses, document transfer delays, redirect chain links, and caching controls. Ensure headers prevent information leaks.

Troubleshooting & Industry Standards

Verify target site is online. Resolve connection failures by checking local firewall configurations, DNS routing, or CDN blockers.

Reference Standards & Protocols

RFC 7231 (HTTP Semantics)RFC 7540 (HTTP/2)W3C Performance APIsGoogle PageSpeed Metrics

Frequently Asked Questions

Learn more about how this tool works and standard configurations

A redirect chain occurs when a URL redirects to another URL, which then redirects to another, creating multiple hops before reaching the final destination.
While search engines can follow multiple hops, we recommend keeping redirects to a minimum (ideally 1, and no more than 3) to prevent latency and preserve SEO ranking.
Yes. If a URL redirects back to an earlier URL in the chain, the tool will flag a circular loop error, which prevents users from loading the page.