1.0.5 • Published 8 years ago

@mrharel/scrappy v1.0.5

Weekly downloads
5
License
ISC
Repository
github
Last release
8 years ago

scrappy

Scrappy is a utility module that helps you scrap web pages using NodeJS without needing to write any logic code.

Scrappy is using scrappers, which are config objects that tells scrappy what to fetch and how to fetch it. Usually most web page scrapping is based on the same code just setting different configuration.

Scrappy was built with that in mind and allows you just to define scrappers objects and get whatever you want.

All you need to do is understand how to create scrappers and you are ready-to-go!

Since most scrappers are the same, i have also added a scrappers object with some pre-cooked scrappers that you might want to use.

installation

npm install @mrharel/scrappy --save

usage

var scrappy = require('@mrharel/scrappy');

scrappy.get({
    url:"http://finance.yahoo.com/news/facebooks-mark-zuckerberg-says-most-130903427.html"
  }, (response, error)=>{
    if( error ){
      console.log("error: ", error);
    }
    
    console.log(response);
  });

So for this url http://finance.yahoo.com/news/facebooks-mark-zuckerberg-says-most-130903427.html

alt tag

should return something like this:

alt tag

api

get

scrappy.get(config,callback) main function to get scrap parts from a web page.

config either string or an object.

if this is a string it is used as the url to fetch the webpage and scrapp it. In this case only the scrappy.scrappers.openGraph is used by default.

if this is an object here are the options:

  • url: the url of the webpage to fetch
  • $: cheerio context. provide a loaded cheerio object cheerio.load(html); so scrappy will use it as the scrapping context. if this is provided scrappy will ignore the url param. You can use this option if you want to load the page yourself.
  • loader: function which will get the url provided, and a callback method to be invoke when the html was loaded. use this option if you want to load the webpage yourself.
  • html: provide an html string. if this is provided the url is ignored.
  • scrappers: this is an object where the keys are the name of scrappers and the value is the scrappers object.

callback funciton(response, error) this function will be called with the final response or error.

scrappers

scrappy.scrappers scrappy has a built in scrappers to help you scrap webpages even faster. just mix some of the scrappers according to your needs and you are good to go.

Here is the current scrappers provided by the scrappy moddule:

Open Graph scrappy.scrappers.openGraph Use this scrappers to get most of the open graph meta tags.

Images

var relative = scrappy.scrappers.images.relative; //find images which has relative image source
var base64 = scrappy.scrappers.images.base64; //find images which has base64 images

scrappers

This is where scrappy shines. All you have to understand is how to define scrappers and that is it. If my grandma understand it, so can you.

A scrapper is an object which tell scrappy which elements in the page we want to fine, the value we want to extract from them and what values should we to filter from teh one we found.

You can provide an array of scrappers if you want to crete some fallbacks, or if you just want to have different sscrappers for the same result.

Lets see first all the options a scrapper object can have:

  • selector: css selector to find element/s within the webpage. (since we use cheerio, any css selector that it support is accepted here)
  • dataType: "html","text","attr"; this control what do you want to take from the element.
  • attrName: if dataType is "attr" then this should be the name of the attribute you want.
  • valueFn: function($element, cb) provide a function in case you want to extract the value from the element yourself. the function gets in the first parameter the $element which is the cheerio representation of the element. the second parameter is a callback function which you need to provide the value, or null to ignore this element.
  • onlyOne: if this is true, only one element will be used for getting it's data value. since the css selector can find more than one element, you can tell scrappy to work only on one element.
  • whichOne: "first","last", or any index number. use this to control which element you want in case you specified onlyOne=true.
  • next: if this is true and you have an array of scrappers, this will tell scrappy to continue to the next one. if this is not provided ot this is false, scrappy will only find the first scrappers which was match and will not continue to the next one.
  • filter: this is a way to filter out values from the result.

    • regex: provide an array of string regular expressions. the values will be matched to these regular expressions and only the ones which will not pass will be filtered out.
    • filterValue: function(value,cb) provide a function to filter a value. the function gets a value and a callback function. call the callback if true or false to tell scrappy if this value is valid. true=valid.
    • filterElement: function($element, cb) this is similar to the filterValue function but you will get the element rather the value.

Lets see some examples:

fetching relative links and links which are https

scrappy.get({
    url: "http:.....",
    scrappy: {
        links: {
          selector: "a",
          dataType: "attr",
          attrName: "href",
          filter:{
              regex: ["^\/"]
          }
        },
        {
            selector: "a,
            dataType: "attr" ,
            attrName: "href",
            filter: {
              regex: ["^https"]
            }
        }
      }
    }
},function(res,err){};

fetching text of a web page

scrappy.get({
    url: "http:.....",
    scrappy: {
        text: {
            selector: "article p",
            dataType: "text"
      }
    }
},function(res,err){};

fetching images that only have width greater thn 100px

var scrappy = require('@mrharel/scrappy');
var sizeOf = require('image-size');
var url = require('url');
var http = require('http');

var url = "http://adventure-journal.com/2016/09/2016-wildlife-photos-of-the-year-are-simply-epic/";

let scrappers = {
    images: {
      selector: "img",
      valueFn: function($element, cb){
        var imgUrl =  $element.attr("src");
        if( /^\/[^\/]/.test(imgUrl) ){
          cb(null);
          return;
        }

        if( /^\/\//.test(imgUrl) ){
          imgUrl = "http:" + imgUrl;
        }

        var options = url.parse(imgUrl);

        http.get(options, function (response) {
          var chunks = [];
          response.on('data', function (chunk) {
            chunks.push(chunk);
          }).on('end', function() {
            var buffer = Buffer.concat(chunks);
            var size = sizeOf(buffer);
            if( size.width > 1000 ){
              cb({
                url: imgUrl,
                width: size.width,
                height: size.height,
                type: size.type
              });
            }
            else{
              cb(null);
            }

          });
        });
      }
    }

  };
  scrappy.get({
    url:req.query.url,
    scrappers: scrappers
  }, (response, error)=>{
    if( error ){
      console.log("error: ", error);
    }
    console.log(response);
  });

This is what you should get:

{
images: [
  {
  url: "http://adventure-journal.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/5188.jpg",
  width: 1100,
  height: 764,
  type: "jpg"
  },
  {
  url: "http://adventure-journal.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/4908.jpg",
  width: 1100,
  height: 761,
  type: "jpg"
  },
  {
  url: "http://adventure-journal.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/2600.jpg",
  width: 1100,
  height: 732,
  type: "jpg"
  },
  {
  url: "http://adventure-journal.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/6668.jpg",
  width: 1100,
  height: 619,
  type: "jpg"
  },
  {
  url: "http://adventure-journal.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/3085.jpg",
  width: 1100,
  height: 730,
  type: "jpg"
  },
  {
  url: "http://adventure-journal.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/2600-1.jpg",
  width: 1100,
  height: 732,
  type: "jpg"
  },
  {
  url: "http://adventure-journal.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/5270.jpg",
  width: 1100,
  height: 733,
  type: "jpg"
  },
  {
  url: "http://adventure-journal.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/4221.jpg",
  width: 1100,
  height: 742,
  type: "jpg"
  },
  {
  url: "http://adventure-journal.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/5423.jpg",
  width: 1100,
  height: 734,
  type: "jpg"
  }
]
}

mixing some scrappers together

var scrappers = {
  text: {
    selector: "article p",
    dataType: "html"
  }
};

scrappers = Object.assign(scrappers, scrappy.scrappers.openGraph);

Join the scrappers cmmunity

did you wrote a cool scrapper? share it with us so others could use it too. either create a pull request or just open an issue with this suggestion.

scrapping the web wisely

web scrapping is on the gray area of the web, and you should make sure you understand all the legal issues before scrapping a web site.

that is it, i told you wht i had to, now you are on your own.

Good luck and happy scrapping.

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