I am try to use Scrapy to crawl Shoescribe. But somehow the parse_item is not called. I try to same code with other website and it works fine. Totally no idea what goes wrong. Any help will be really really appreciate! Thanks!
import scrapy
from scrapy import log
from scrapy.contrib.spiders import CrawlSpider, Rule
from scrapy.contrib.linkextractors import LinkExtractor
from lsspider.items import *
class ShoeScribeSpider(CrawlSpider):
name = "shoescribe"
merchant_name = "shoescribe.com"
allowed_domains = ["www.shoescribe.com"]
start_urls = [
"http://www.shoescribe.com/us/women/ankle-boots_cod44709699mx.html",
]
rules = (
Rule(LinkExtractor(allow=('http://www.shoescribe.com/us/women/ankle-boots_cod44709699mx.html')), callback='parse_item', follow=True),
)
def parse_item(self, response):
print 'parse_item'
item = Item()
item['url'] = response.url.split('?')[0]
print item['url']
return item
I am not sure if you already figured it out but here are a few observations that I have made that might be helpful.
print statement won't work in your situation, even if the code got executed. Usually you can use the logging command as Scrapy recommended, or you have to turn on the logging so Scrapy will forward all the stdout/stderr to you.
I basically copied your code to a brand new scrapy project with modifying the item class so it will contain the URL field. Then I ran the crawler using the parse and seems like it passed the rule and also used the proper callback function. In the end, it has Scrapyed Items generated. I bet if you write some pipeline the result will be properly generated too.
Here is the output that proved your code is working
Related
I have this nested sitemap. Scrapy docs say it is supposed to work with nested sitemaps without any problem.
My target links are like this one https://flatinfo.ru/arenda_kvartir.asp?id=867039
So in my understanding my sitemap_rules , conaining the keyword from the link ('/arenda_kvartir/') should make the spider behave in the following logic:
all links, found in the sitemap.xml and containing keyword from sitemap_rules should be scraped into parsed function. But this never happens according to the logs. The spider just goes through all major categories in the sitemap and quits.
Where am I wrong?
Below is my code.
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import scrapy
from scrapy.spiders import SitemapSpider
class CodeSpider(SitemapSpider):
name = 'code_s'
sitemap_urls = ['https://flatinfo.ru/sitemap.xml']
sitemap_rules = [
('/arenda_kvartir/', 'parsed'),
('/sitemap_prodaja_kvartir/', 'parsed'),
]
def parsed(self, response):
yield {
}
You need to match two type of URLs in your sitemap_rules: https://flatinfo.ru/arenda.asp?house=43182 and https://flatinfo.ru/prodaja_kvartir.asp?id=17488515. The correct sitemap_rules will be:
sitemap_rules = [
('arenda.asp', 'parsed'),
('prodaja_kvartir.asp', 'parsed'),
]
sitemap_follow = ['sitemap_prodaja_kvartir', 'sitemap_arenda']
(I added sitemap_follow to skip other sitemap entries).
One more thing: you need to wait (almost 20 minutes till the first processed URL for me!) because each XML file takes a lot of time to process.
I need a bit help and your guidance on Scrapy.
My Start_Url is :: http://lighting.philips.co.uk/prof/
Have pasted my code below, which is able to get the links / paths till the below url. But not going beyond that. I need to go to each product's page, listed under the path below. In the "productsinfamily" page the specific products are listed (perhaps within a java script). My Crawler is not able to reach those individual product pages.
http://www.lighting.philips.co.uk/prof/led-lamps-and-tubes/led-lamps/corepro-ledbulb/productsinfamily/
Below is the code for the Crawl spider-
import scrapy
from scrapy.spiders import CrawlSpider, Rule
from scrapy.linkextractors import LinkExtractor
class ProductSearchSpider(CrawlSpider):
name = "product_search"
allowed_domains = ["lighting.philips.co.uk"]
start_urls = ['http://lighting.philips.co.uk/prof/']
rules = (Rule(LinkExtractor(allow=
(r'^https?://www.lighting.philips.co.uk/prof/led-lamps-and-tubes/.*', ),),
callback='parse_page', follow=True),)
def parse_page(self, response):
yield{'URL' : response.url}
You are right that the links are defined in javascript.
If you take a look at the html source, on line 3790 you can see a variable named d75products created. This is later used to populate a template and display the products.
The way I'd approach this would be to extract this data from the source and use the json module to load it. Once you have the data, you can do with it whatever you want.
Another way would be to use something (e.g. a browser) to execute the javascript, and then parse the resulting html. I do think that's unnecessary and overcomplicated though.
I am new to Scrapy and trying to extract content from web page, but getting lots of extra characters in the output. See image attached.
How can I update my code to get rid of the characters? I need to extract only the href from the web page.
My code:
class AttractionSpider(CrawlSpider):
name = "get-webcontent"
start_urls = [
'http://quotes.toscrape.com/page/1/'
]
rules = ()
def create_dirs(dir):
if not os.path.exists(dir):
os.makedirs(dir)
else:
shutil.rmtree(dir) #removes all the subdirectories!
os.makedirs(dir)
def __init__(self, name=None, **kwargs):
super(AttractionSpider, self).__init__(name, **kwargs)
self.items_buffer = {}
self.base_url = "http://quotes.toscrape.com/page/1/"
from scrapy.conf import settings
settings.overrides['DOWNLOAD_TIMEOUT'] = 360
def write_to_file(file_name, content_list):
with open(file_name, 'wb') as fp:
pickle.dump(content_list, fp)
def parse(self, response):
print ("Start scrapping webcontent....")
try:
str = ""
hxs = Selector(response)
links = hxs.xpath('//li//#href').extract()
with open('test1_href', 'wb') as fp:
pickle.dump(links, fp)
if not links:
return
log.msg("No Data to scrap")
for link in links:
v_url = ''.join( link.extract() )
if not v_url:
continue
else:
_url = self.base_url + v_url
except Exception as e:
log.msg("Parsing failed for URL {%s}"%format(response.request.url))
raise
def parse_details(self, response):
print ("Start scrapping Detailed Info....")
try:
hxs = Selector(response)
yield l_venue
except Exception as e:
log.msg("Parsing failed for URL {%s}"%format(response.request.url))
raise
Now I must say... obviously you have some experience with Python programming congrats, and you're obviously doing the official Scrapy docs tutorial which is great but for the life of me I have no idea exactly given the code snippet you have provided of what you're trying to accomplish. But that's ok, here's a couple of things:
You are using a Scrapy crawl spider. When using a cross spider the rules set the follow or pagination if you will as well as pointing in a car back to the function when the appropriate regular expression matches the rule to a page to then initialize the extraction or itemization. This is absolutely crucial to understand that you cannot use a crossfire without setting the rules and equally as important when using a cross spider you cannot use the parse function, because the way the cross spider is built parse function is already a native built-in function within itself. Do go ahead and read the documents or just create a cross spider and see how it doesn't create in parse.
Your code
class AttractionSpider(CrawlSpider):
name = "get-webcontent"
start_urls = [
'http://quotes.toscrape.com/page/1/'
]
rules = () #big no no ! s3 rul3s
How it should look like
class AttractionSpider(CrawlSpider):
name = "get-webcontent"
start_urls = ['http://quotes.toscrape.com'] # this would be cosidered a base url
# regex is our bf, kno him well, bassicall all pages that follow
#this pattern ... page/.* (meant all following include no exception)
rules = (
Rule(LinkExtractor(allow=r'/page/.*'), follow=True),callback='parse_item'),
)
Number two: go over the thing I mentioned about using the parts function with a Scrapy crawl spider, you should use "parse-_item"; I assume that you at least looked over the official docs but to sum it up, the reason that it cannot be used this because the crawl spider already uses Parts within its logic so by using Parts within a cross spider you're overriding a native function that it has and can cause all sorts of bugs and issues.
That's pretty straightforward; I don't think I have to go ahead and show you a snippet but feel free to go to the official Docs and on the right side where it says "spiders" go ahead and scroll down until you hit "crawl spiders" and it gives some notes with a caution...
To my next point: when you go from your initial parts you are not (or rather you do not) have a call back that goes from parse to Parts details which leads me to believe that when you perform the crawl you don't go past the first page and aside from that, if you're trying to create a text file (or you're using the OS module 2 write out something but you're not actually writing anything) so I'm super confused to why you are using the right function instead of read.
I mean, myself I have in many occasions use an external text file or CSV file for that matter that includes multiple URLs so I don't have to stick it in there but you're clearly writing out or trying to write to a file which you said was a pipeline? Now I'm even more confused! But the point is that I hope you're well aware of the fact that if you are trying to create a file or export of your extracted items there are options to export and to three already pre-built formats that being CSV JSON. But as you said in your response to my comment that if indeed you're using a pipeline and item and Porter intern you can create your own format of export as you so wish but if it's only the response URL that you need why go through all that hassle?
My parting words would be: it would serve you well to go over again Scrapy's official docs tutorial, at nauseam and stressing the importance of using also the settings.py as well as items.py.
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import scrapy
import os
from scrapy.linkextractors import LinkExtractor
from scrapy.spiders import CrawlSpider, Rule
from quotes.items import QuotesItem
class QcrawlSpider(CrawlSpider):
name = 'qCrawl'
allowed_domains = ['quotes.toscrape.com']
start_urls = ['http://quotes.toscrape.com/']
rules = (
Rule(LinkExtractor(allow=r'page/.*'), callback='parse_item', follow=True),
)
def parse_item(self, response):
rurl = response.url
item = QuotesItem()
item['quote'] =response.css('span.text::text').extract()
item['author'] = response.css('small.author::text').extract()
item['rUrl'] = rurl
yield item
with open(os.path.abspath('') + '_' + "urllisr_" + '.txt', 'a') as a:
a.write(''.join([rurl, '\n']))
a.close()
Of course, the items.py would be filled out appropriately by the ones you see in the spider but by including the response URL both itemized I can do both writing out given even the default Scrappy methods CSV etc or I can create my own.
In this case being a simple text file but one can get pretty crafty; for example, if you write it out correctly that's the same using the OS module you can, for example as I have create m3u playlist from video hosting sites, you can get fancy with a custom CSV item exporter. But even with that then using a custom pipeline we can then write out a custom format for your csvs or whatever it is that you wish.
Would the correct method with a Scrapy Spider for entering a zip code value "27517" automatically within the entry box on this website: Locations of Junkyards be to use a Form Request?
Here is what I have right now:
import scrapy
from scrapy.http import FormRequest
from scrapy.item import Item, Field
from scrapy.http import FormRequest
from scrapy.spider import BaseSpider
class LkqSpider(scrapy.Spider):
name = "lkq"
allowed_domains = ["http://www.lkqcorp.com/en-us/locationResults/"]
start_urls = ['http://www.lkqcorp.com/en-us/locationResults/']
def start_requests(self):
return [ FormRequest("http://www.lkqcorp.com/en-us/locationResults/",
formdata={'dnnVariable':'27517'},
callback=self.parse) ]
def parsel(self):
print self.status
It doesn't do anything when run though, is Form Request mainly for completing login fields? What would be the best way to get to THIS page? (which comes up after the search for the zip 27517 and is where I would start scraping my desired information with a scrapy spider)
this isn't really a FormRequest as FormRequests is only a name for a POST request in scrapy, and of course it helps you fill a form, but a form is also normally a POST request.
You need some debugging console (I prefer Firebug for Firefox) to check which requests are being done, and it looks like it is a GET request and quite simple to replicate, the url would be something like this where you'll have to change the number after /fullcrit/ to the desired zip code, but you also need the lat and lng arguments, for that you could use the Google Maps API, check this answer for an example on how to get it, but to summarise just do this Request and get the location argument.
Is it possible to create a spider which inherits/uses functionality from two base spiders?
I'm trying to scrape various sites and I've noticed that in many instances the site provides a sitemap but this just points to category/listing type pages, not 'real' content. Because of this I'm having to use the CrawlSpider (pointing to the website root) instead but this is pretty inefficient as it crawls through all pages including a lot of junk.
What I would like to do is something like this:
Start my Spider which is a subclass of SitemapSpider and pass each response to the parse_items method.
In parse_items test if the page contains 'real' content
If it does then process it, if not pass the response to the
CrawlSpider (actually my subclass of CrawlSpider) to process
CrawlSpider then looks for links in the page, say 2 levels deep and
processes them
Is this possible? I realise that I could copy and paste the code from the CrawlSpider into my spider but this seems like a poor design
In the end I decided to just extend sitemap spider and lift some of the code from the crawl spider as it was simpler that trying to deal with multiple inheritance issues so basically:
class MySpider(SitemapSpider):
def __init__(self, **kw):
super(MySpider, self).__init__(**kw)
self.link_extractor = LxmlLinkExtractor()
def parse(self, response):
# perform item extraction etc
...
links = self.link_extractor.extract_links(response)
for link in links:
yield Request(link.url, callback=self.parse)
from scrapy.linkextractors import LinkExtractor
from scrapy.spiders import SitemapSpider, CrawlSpider, Rule
class MySpider(SitemapSpider, CrawlSpider):
name = "myspider"
rules = ( Rule(LinkExtractor(allow=('', )), callback='parse_item', follow=True), )
sitemap_rules = [ ('/', 'parse_item'), ]
sitemap_urls = ['http://www.example.com/sitemap.xml']
start_urls = ['http://www.example.com']
allowed_domains = ['example.com']
def parse_item(self, response):
# Do your stuff here
...
# Return to CrawlSpider that will crawl them
yield from self.parse(response)
This way, Scrapy will start with the urls in the sitemap, then follow all links within each url.
Source: Multiple inheritance in scrapy spiders
You can inherit as usual, the only thing you have to be careful is that the base spiders usually override the basic methods start_requests and parse. The other thing to point out is that CrawlSpider will get links form every response that goes through _parse_response.
Setting a low value do DEPTH_LIMIT should be a way to manage the fact that CrawlSpider will get links for every response that goes through _parse_response (after reviewing the original question, it was alrady proposed).