http-crawler is a library for crawling websites. It uses requests to speak HTTP.
Install with pip:
$ pip install http-crawler
The http_crawler
module provides one generator function, crawl
.
crawl
is called with a URL, and yields instances of requests's Response
class.
crawl
will request the page at the given URL, and will extract all URLs from the response. It will then make a request for each of those URLs, and will repeat the process until it has requested every URL linked to from pages on the original URL's domain. It will not extract or process URLs from any page with a different domain to the original URL.
For instance, this is how you would use crawl
to find and log any broken links on a site:
>>> from http_crawler import crawl
>>> for rsp in crawl('http://www.example.com'):
>>> if rsp.status_code != 200:
>>> print('Got {} at {}'.format(rsp.status_code, rsp.url))
crawl
has a number of options:
follow_external_links
(defaultTrue
) If set,crawl
will make a request for every URL it encounters, including ones with a different domain to the original URL. If not set,crawl
will ignore all URLs that have a different domain to the original URL. In either case,crawl
will not extract further URLs from a page with a different domain to the original URL.ignore_fragments
(defaultTrue
) If set,crawl
will ignore the fragment part of any URL. This means that ifcrawl
encountershttp://domain/path#anchor
, it will make a request forhttp://domain/path
. Moreover, it means that ifcrawl
encountershttp://domain/path#anchor1
andhttp://domain/path#anchor2
, it will only make one request.verify
(defaultTrue
) This option controls the behaviour of SSL certificate verification. See the requests documentation for more details.
Why another crawling library? There are certainly lots of Python tools for crawling websites, but all that I could find were either too complex, too simple, or had too many dependencies.
http-crawler is designed to be a library and not a framework, so it should be straightforward to use in applications or other libraries.
There are a handful of enhancements on the issue tracker that would be suitable for somebody looking to contribute to Open Source for the first time.
For instructions about making Pull Requests, see GitHub's guide.
All contributions should include tests with 100% code coverage, and should comply with PEP 8. The project uses tox for running tests and checking code quality metrics.
To run the tests:
$ tox