Use /status/ for go-live checks
What /status/ checks, how to interpret failures, and how it protects SEO/ads rollouts.
What this problem looks like
JSON failures are usually strict-syntax or type-shape mismatches (for example object vs array, string vs number).
Treat errors as signals. Fix the input format first, validate locally, then convert and export.
- Validate first: run a local validator for strict JSON/XML/CSV.
- Sample: test 20–50 rows/items before processing a full export.
- Spot-check: verify a few keys/rows before downloading.
Practical checklist (fast)
Use a fast checklist: confirm strict syntax, confirm expected shape, and only then convert. This reduces “random fixing” and prevents exporting broken output.
If you handle sensitive data, local processing avoids accidental uploads while debugging.
- Confirm your delimiter/quotes for CSV or your tag structure for XML.
- Confirm JSON is strict (double quotes, no trailing commas, no comments).
- Export only after the sample output looks correct.
Local conversion workflow
For CSV and JSON exports, keep transformations simple: parse → normalize → serialize. When issues appear, fix the input rather than adding hidden “auto-fixes”.
Use the built-in download/copy actions to move data to the next step without sending it to a server.
Before you “go live”, treat /status/ as a preflight checklist: it confirms the domain replacement happened, canonical tags match the production domain, and robots/sitemap are accessible from the same origin.
- Canonical check: home and at least one tool page should reference your real domain.
- Sitemap check: should list URLs for tools and guides, and must not contain
no-upload.ruafter prod build. - Redirects check: non-trailing-slash URLs should resolve to the trailing-slash version on your host.
When something fails, fix the deployment config first (domain replacement, redirects), then re-build and re-check—don’t try to “patch” URLs manually inside many pages.
Trust note: All processing happens locally in your browser. Files are never uploaded.
FAQ
Why does it work in one tool but not in another? Different tools accept different non-standard inputs. Stick to strict JSON/XML/CSV for reliability.
Is it safe to convert private files online? If privacy matters, prefer local no-upload tools and verify via the Network tab.
Local verification snippet
Run a quick local check before export/convert:
const text = input.trim();
const value = JSON.parse(text);
console.log(Array.isArray(value) ? 'array' : typeof value);