Cylon is a library for reading robots.txt files.
Cylon attempts to remain compatible with the Robots Exclusion Protocol.
The following directives are supported (notably Site-map
is missing):
User-Agent
Allow
Disallow
Crawl-Delay
(Optional, enable using thecrawl-delay
feature)
The following special characters are supported:
*
- a wildcard character to match any lench substring$
- matches the end of a path#
- denotes a comment that is ignored by Cylon
Using Cylon is very simple. Simply create a new compiler for your user agent, then compile the robots.txt file.
// You can use something like hyper or reqwest to download
// the robots.txt file instead.
let example_robots = r#"
User-agent: googlebot
Allow: /
User-agent: *
Disallow: /
"#
.as_bytes();
// Create a new compiler that compiles a robots.txt file looking for
// rules that apply to the "googlebot" user agent.
let compiler = Compiler::new("googlebot");
let cylon = compiler.compile(example_robots).await.unwrap();
assert_eq!(true, cylon.allow("/index.html"));
assert_eq!(true, cylon.allow("/directory"));
// Create a new compiler that compiles a robots.txt file looking for
// rules that apply to the "bing" user agent.
let complier = Compiler::new("bing");
let cylon = compiler.compile(example_robots).await.unwrap();
assert_eq!(false, cylon.allow("/index.html"));
assert_eq!(false, cylon.allow("/directory"));
Contributions are welcome! Please make a pull request. Issues may not be addressed in a timely manner unless they expose fundamental issues or security concerns.
This library uses an async API by default. This library does not assume any async runtime so you can use it with any (tokio, async-std, etc.)
A synchronous API may be an optional feature in the future, but there are no current plans to add one. If you need a synchronous API consider adding one yourself (contributions are welcome).
Cylon compiles robots.txt files into a NFA. This means it is well-suited for web crawlers that need to use the same robots.txt file for multiple URLs. Re-using the same compiled Cylon NFA will avoid repeated work.
The NFA will often match more efficiently than a naive solution. This is because the NFA matches multiple rules simultaneously, which requires fewer comparisons. In general, the more repeated prefixes in a robot.txt file, the more the NFA "compresses" the amount of work required.
There are some degenerate cases where it may perform worse than a naive approach. Special care is taken to avoid exponential runtime when encounting rendudant wildcard matches. Multiple repeated wildcards are treated as a single wildcard.
Cylon minimizes random memory access when compiling and running the NFA to maximize cache-locality.
This library uses serde to allow serializing/deserializing the compiled Cylon NFA structs. This is useful e.g. if you need to cache the NFA in something like Memcached or Redis. (Use a format like bincode or msgpack to convert it to bytes first.)
Robots.txt files are more like guidelines than actual rules.
In general, Cylon tries not to cause errors for things that might be considered an invalid robots.txt file, which means there are very few failure cases.
MIT