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  • Rank 201,081 (Top 4 %)
  • Language
    HTML
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created about 10 years ago
  • Updated over 7 years ago

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Repository Details

Scrape a website efficiently, block by block, page by page. Based on cheerio and curl.

Cheers

Scrape a website efficiently, block by block, page by page.

Motivations

This is a Cheerio based scraper, useful to extract data from a website using CSS selectors.
The motivation behind this package is to provide a simple cheerio-based scraping tool, able to divide a website into blocks, and transform each block into a JSON object using CSS selectors.

Built on top of these excellent modules :

https://github.com/cheeriojs/cheerio
https://github.com/chriso/curlrequest
https://github.com/kriskowal/q

CSS mapping syntax inspired by :

https://github.com/dharmafly/noodle

Getting Started

Install the module with: npm install cheers

Usage

Configuration options:

  • config.url : the URL to scrape (single URL, or array of URLs, or sitemap.xml)
  • config.blockSelector : the CSS selector to apply on the page to divide it in scraping blocks. This field is optional (will use "body" by default)
  • config.scrape : the definition of what you want to extract in each block. Each key has two mandatory attributes : selector (a CSS selector or . to stay on the current node) and extract. The possible values for extract are text, html, outerHTML, a RegExp or the name of an attribute of the html element (e.g. "href")
  • config.curlOptions : additionnal options you want to pass to curl. See the documentation from https://github.com/chriso/curlrequest for more information.
  • config.curlOptions : additionnal options you want to pass to curl. See the documentation from https://github.com/chriso/curlrequest for more information.
  • config.blacklist : an array of URL to ignore (for sitemap scraping).
  • config.verbose : show more logs when scraping (for debugging purpose).
var cheers = require('cheers');

//let's scrape this excellent JS news website
var config = {
    url: "http://www.echojs.com/",
    curlOptions: {
        'useragent': 'Cheers'
    },
    blockSelector: "article",
    scrape: {
        title: {
            selector: "h2 a",
            extract: "text"
        },
        link: {
            selector: "h2 a",
            extract: "href"
        },
        articleInnerHtml: {
            selector: ".",
            extract: "html"
        },
        articleOuterHtml: {
            selector: ".",
            extract: "outerHTML"
        },
        articlePublishedTime: {
            selector: 'p',
            extract: /\d* (?:hour[s]?|day[s]?) ago/
        }
    }
};

cheers.scrape(config).then(function (results) {
    console.log(JSON.stringify(results));
}).catch(function (error) {
    console.error(error);
});

Shell script

Instead of using cheers with javascript, you can also use the provided shell script that encapsulates the library. To install the shell script globally on your system, please run the command npm install cheers -g or npm install cheers --global

You'll then be able to use cheers command from a terminal.

Cheers will scrape the content according to a config file similar to what is described in the above documentation, except it will take the form of a JSON file.

Example of config file (same config as above) :

config.json :

{
    "url": "http://www.echojs.com/",
    "blockSelector": "article",
    "scrape": {
        "title": {
            "selector": "h2 a",
            "extract": "text"
        },
        "link": {
            "selector": "h2 a",
            "extract": "href"
        },
        "articleInnerHtml": {
            "selector": ".",
            "extract": "html"
        },
        "articleOuterHtml": {
            "selector": ".",
            "extract": "outerHTML"
        },
        "articlePublishedTime": {
            "selector": "p",
            "extract": "/\\d* (?:hour[s]?|day[s]?) ago/"
        }
    }
}

The main difference is found when you want to use a regular expression, you have to escape all the \ to respect the JSON format.

Usage example :

cheers -conf /directory/config.json

Unit tests

Tests can be run by typing the command npm test

If you don't want to use the test dependencies, please use npm install --production when installing.

Roadmap

  • Option to change the user agent
  • Command line tool
  • Unit tests
  • Array of URLs
  • Start from sitemap
  • Website pagination
  • Option to use request instead of curl
  • Option to use a headless browser

Contributors

Cheers!

License

Copyright (c) 2015 Fabien Allanic
Licensed under the MIT license.