|
|
| |
WWW::Search(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
WWW::Search(3) |
WWW::Search - Virtual base class for WWW searches
use WWW::Search;
my $sEngine = 'AltaVista';
my $oSearch = new WWW::Search($sEngine);
This class is the parent for all access methods supported by the
"WWW::Search" library. This library
implements a Perl API to web-based search engines.
See README for a list of search engines currently supported, and
for a lot of interesting high-level information about this distribution.
Search results can be limited, and there is a pause between each
request to avoid overloading either the client or the server.
Here is a sample program:
my $sQuery = 'Columbus Ohio sushi restaurant';
my $oSearch = new WWW::Search('AltaVista');
$oSearch->native_query(WWW::Search::escape_query($sQuery));
$oSearch->login($sUser, $sPassword);
while (my $oResult = $oSearch->next_result())
{
print $oResult->url, "\n";
} # while
$oSearch->logout;
Results are objects of type
"WWW::SearchResult" (see WWW::SearchResult
for details). Note that different backends support different result fields.
All backends are required to support title and url.
For specific search engines, see WWW::Search::TheEngineName (replacing
TheEngineName with a particular search engine).
For details about the results of a search, see
WWW::SearchResult.
- new
- To create a new WWW::Search, call
$oSearch = new WWW::Search('SearchEngineName');
where SearchEngineName is replaced with a particular search
engine. For example:
$oSearch = new WWW::Search('Yahoo');
If no search engine is specified, a default (currently
'Null::Empty') will be chosen for you.
- version
- Returns the value of the $VERSION variable of the
backend engine, or $WWW::Search::VERSION if the
backend does not contain $VERSION.
- maintainer
- Returns the value of the $MAINTAINER variable of
the backend engine, or $WWW::Search::MAINTAINER if
the backend does not contain $MAINTAINER.
- installed_engines
- Returns a list of the names of all installed backends. We can not tell if
they are up-to-date or working, though.
use WWW::Search;
my @asEngines = sort &WWW::Search::installed_engines();
local $" = ', ';
print (" + These WWW::Search backends are installed: @asEngines\n");
# Choose a backend at random (yes, this is rather silly):
my $oSearch = WWW::Search->new($asEngines[rand(scalar(@asEngines))]);
- native_query
- Specify a query (and optional options) to the current search object.
Previous query (if any) and its cached results (if any) will be thrown
away. The option values and the query must be escaped; call
WWW::Search::escape_query() to escape a string. The search process
is not actually begun until "results()"
or "next_result()" is called (lazy!), so
native_query does not return anything.
Example:
$oSearch->native_query('search-engine-specific+escaped+query+string',
{ option1 => 'able', option2 => 'baker' } );
The hash of options following the query string is optional.
The query string is backend-specific. There are two kinds of options:
options specific to the backend, and generic options applicable to
multiple backends.
Generic options all begin with 'search_'. Currently a few are
supported:
- search_url
- Specifies the base URL for the search engine.
- search_debug
- Enables backend debugging. The default is 0 (no debugging).
- search_parse_debug
- Enables backend parser debugging. The default is 0 (no debugging).
- search_to_file FILE
- Causes the search results to be saved in a set of files prefixed by FILE.
(Used internally by the test-suite, not intended for general use.)
- search_from_file FILE
- Reads a search from a set of files prefixed by FILE. (Used internally by
the test-suite, not intended for general use.)
Some backends may not implement these generic options, but any
which do implement them must provide these semantics.
Backend-specific options are described in the documentation for
each backend. In most cases the options and their values are packed together
to create the query portion of the final URL.
Details about how the search string and option hash are
interpreted might be found in the search-engine-specific manual pages
(WWW::Search::SearchEngineName).
- gui_query
- Specify a query to the current search object; the query will be performed
with the engine's default options, as if it were typed by a user in a
browser window.
Same arguments as
"native_query()" above.
Currently, this feature is supported by only a few backends;
consult the documentation for each backend to see if it is
implemented.
- cookie_jar
- Call this method (anytime before asking for results) if you want to
communicate cookie data with the search engine. Takes one argument, either
a filename or an HTTP::Cookies object. If you give a filename, WWW::Search
will attempt to read/store cookies there (by passing the filename to
HTTP::Cookies::new).
$oSearch->cookie_jar('/tmp/my_cookies');
If you give an HTTP::Cookies object, it is up to you to save
the cookies if/when you wish.
use HTTP::Cookies;
my $oJar = HTTP::Cookies->new(...);
$oSearch->cookie_jar($oJar);
If you pass in no arguments, the cookie jar (if any) is
returned.
my $oJar = $oSearch->cookie_jar;
unless (ref $oJar) { print "No jar" };
- date_from
- Set/get the start date for limiting the query by a date range. See the
documentation for each backend to find out if date ranges are
supported.
- date_to
- Set/get the end date for limiting the query by a date range. See the
documentation for each backend to find out if date ranges are
supported.
- env_proxy
- Enable loading proxy settings from environment variables. The proxy URL
will be read from $ENV{http_proxy}. The username
for authentication will be read from
$ENV{http_proxy_user}. The password for
authentication will be read from
$ENV{http_proxy_pwd}.
If you don't want to put passwords in the environment, one
solution would be to subclass LWP::UserAgent and use
$ENV{WWW_SEARCH_USERAGENT} instead (see
user_agent below).
env_proxy() must be called before the first retrieval
is attempted.
Example:
$ENV{http_proxy } = 'http://my.proxy.com:80';
$ENV{http_proxy_user} = 'bugsbun';
$ENV{http_proxy_pwd } = 'c4rr0t5';
$oSearch->env_proxy('yes'); # Turn on with any true value
...
$oSearch->env_proxy(0); # Turn off with zero
...
if ($oSearch->env_proxy) # Test
- http_proxy
- Set up an HTTP proxy (for connections from behind a firewall).
Takes the same arguments as
LWP::UserAgent::proxy().
This routine should be called before calling any of the result
functions (any method with "result" in its name).
Example:
# Turn on and set address:
$oSearch->http_proxy(['http','ftp'] => 'http://proxy:8080');
# Turn off:
$oSearch->http_proxy('');
- http_proxy_user, http_proxy_pwd
- Set/get HTTP proxy authentication data.
These routines set/get username and password used in proxy
authentication. Authentication is attempted only if all three items
(proxy URL, username and password) have been set.
Example:
$oSearch->http_proxy_user("myuser");
$oSearch->http_proxy_pwd("mypassword");
$oSearch->http_proxy_user(undef); # Example for no authentication
$username = $oSearch->http_proxy_user();
- maximum_to_retrieve
- Set the maximum number of hits to return. Queries resulting in more than
this many hits will return the first hits, up to this limit. Although this
specifies a maximum limit, search engines might return less than this
number.
Defaults to 500.
Example:
$max =
$oSearch->maximum_to_retrieve(100);
You can also spell this method
"maximum_to_return".
- maximum_to_return
- Synonym for maximum_to_retrieve
- timeout
- The maximum length of time any portion of the query should take, in
seconds.
Defaults to 60.
Example:
$oSearch->timeout(120);
- login
- Backends which need to login to the search engine should implement this
function. Takes two arguments, user and password. Return nonzero if login
was successful. Return undef or 0 if login failed.
- logout
- Backends which need to logout from the search engine should implement this
function.
- approximate_result_count
- Some backends indicate how many results they have found, e.g. with a
number shown at the top of the search results page. Note that there is no
corresponding method that returns the actual count of results; that's
because results are normally retrieved in batches (i.e. pages) and at any
given time there's no way to know how big the final list of results will
be. NEW: if request has not been made to the search provider, this method
will return undef (used to return zero). NEW: if the results page does not
explicitly indicate the result count, this method will return undef (used
to return zero).
- approximate_hit_count
- This is an alias for approximate_result_count().
- results
- Return all the results of a query as an array of WWW::SearchResult
objects.
Note: This might take a while, because a web backend will keep
asking the search engine for "next page of results" over and
over until there are no more next pages, and THEN return from this
function.
If an error occurs at any time during query processing, it
will be indicated in the response().
Example:
@results = $oSearch->results();
# Go have a cup of coffee while the previous line executes...
foreach $oResult (@results)
{
print $oResult->url(), "\n";
} # foreach
- next_result
- Call this method repeatedly to return each result of a query as a
WWW::SearchResult object. Example:
while ($oResult = $oSearch->next_result())
{
print $oResult->url(), "\n";
} # while
When there are no more results, or if an error occurs,
next_result() will return undef.
If an error occurs at any time during query processing, it
will be indicated in the response().
- seek_result($offset)
- Set which result should be returned next time
"next_result()" is called. Results are
zero-indexed.
The only guaranteed valid offset is 0, which will replay the
results from the beginning. In particular, seeking past the end of the
current cached results probably will not do what you might think it
should.
Results are cached, so this does not re-issue the query or
cause IO (unless you go off the end of the results). To re-do the query,
create a new search object.
Example:
$oSearch->seek_result(0);
- response
- Returns an HTTP::Response object which resulted from the
most-recently-sent query. Errors can be detected like this:
if (! $oSearch->response->is_success)
{
print STDERR "Error: " . $oSearch->response->as_string() . "\n";
} # if
Note to backend authors: even if the backend does not involve
the web, it should return an HTTP::Response object.
- submit
- This method can be used to submit URLs to the search engines for indexing.
Consult the documentation for each backend to find out if it is
implemented there, and if so what the arguments are.
Returns an HTTP::Response object describing the result of the
submission request. Consult the documentation for each backend to find
out the meaning of the response.
- opaque
- This function provides an application a place to store one opaque data
element (or many, via a Perl reference). This facility is useful to (for
example), maintain client-specific information in each active query when
you have multiple concurrent queries.
- escape_query
- Escape a query. Before queries are sent to the internet, special
characters must be escaped so that a proper URL can be formed. This is
like escaping a URL, but all non-alphanumeric characters are escaped and
and spaces are converted to "+"s.
Example:
$escaped = WWW::Search::escape_query('+hi +mom');
# $escaped is now '%2Bhi+%2Bmom'
See also "unescape_query()".
NOTE that this is not a method, it is a plain function.
- unescape_query
- Unescape a query. See "escape_query()"
for details.
Example:
$unescaped = WWW::Search::unescape_query('%22hi+mom%22');
# $unescaped eq q{"hi mom"}
NOTE that this is not a method, it is a plain function.
- strip_tags
- Given a string, returns a copy of that string with HTML tags removed. This
should be used by each backend as they insert the title and description
values into the search results objects.
NOTE that this is not a method, it is a plain function.
- is_http_proxy
- Returns true if proxy information is available.
- reset_search
- Resets internal data structures to start over with a new search (on the
same engine).
- is_http_proxy_auth_data
- Returns true if all authentication data (proxy URL, username, and
password) are available.
- agent_name($sName)
- If your search engine rejects certain browser, you can trick it into
thinking you're any browser type you want. See below under
user_agent().
- agent_email($sName)
- user_agent($NON_ROBOT)
- This internal routine creates a user-agent for derived classes that query
the web. If any non-false argument is given, a normal LWP::UserAgent
(rather than a LWP::RobotUA) is used.
Returns the user-agent object.
If a backend needs the low-level LWP::UserAgent or
LWP::RobotUA to have a particular name,
$oSearch->agent_name() and possibly
$oSearch->agent_email() should be
called to set the desired values *before* calling
$oSearch->user_agent().
If the environment variable WWW_SEARCH_USERAGENT has a value,
it will be used as the class for a new user agent object. This class
should be a subclass of LWP::UserAgent. For example,
$ENV{WWW_SEARCH_USERAGENT} = 'My::Own::UserAgent';
# If this env.var. has no value,
# LWP::UserAgent or LWP::RobotUA will be used.
$oSearch = new WWW::Search('MyBackend');
$oSearch->agent_name('MySpider');
if ($iBackendWebsiteRequiresNonRobot)
{
$oSearch->user_agent('non-robot');
}
else
{
$oSearch->agent_email('me@here.com');
$oSearch->user_agent();
}
Backends should use robot-style user-agents whenever
possible.
- http_referer
- Get / set the value of the HTTP_REFERER variable for this search object.
Some search engines might only accept requests that originated at some
specific previous page. This method lets backend authors "fake"
the previous page. Call this method before calling http_request.
$oSearch->http_referer('http://prev.engine.com/wherever/setup.html');
$oResponse = $oSearch->http_request('GET', $url);
- http_method
- Get / set the method to be used for the HTTP request. Must be either 'GET'
or 'POST'. Call this method before calling http_request. (Normally you
would set this during _native_setup_search().) The default is
'GET'.
$oSearch->http_method('POST');
- http_request($method, $url)
- Submit the HTTP request to the world, and return the response. Similar to
LWP::UserAgent::request. Handles cookies, follows redirects, etc. Requires
that http_referer already be set up, if needed.
- next_url
- Get or set the URL for the next backend request. This can be used to save
the WWW::Search state between sessions (e.g. if you are showing pages of
results to the user in a web browser). Before closing down a session, save
the value of next_url:
...
$oSearch->maximum_to_return(10);
while ($oSearch->next_result) { ... }
my $urlSave = $oSearch->next_url;
Then, when you start up the next session (e.g. after the user
clicks your "next" button), restore this value before calling
for the results:
$oSearch->native_query(...);
$oSearch->next_url($urlSave);
$oSearch->maximum_to_return(20);
while ($oSearch->next_result) { ... }
WARNING: It is entirely up to you to keep your interface in
sync with the number of hits per page being returned from the backend.
And, we make no guarantees whether this method will work for any given
backend. (Their caching scheme might not enable you to jump into the
middle of a list of search results, for example.)
- split_lines
- This internal routine splits data (typically the result of the web page
retrieval) into lines in a way that is OS independent. If the first
argument is a reference to an array, that array is taken to be a list of
possible delimiters for this split. For example, Yahoo.pm uses <p>
and <dd><li> as "line" delimiters for
convenience.
- generic_option
- This internal routine checks if an option is generic or backend specific.
Currently all generic options begin with 'search_'. This routine is not a
method.
- _native_setup_search
- Do some backend-specific initialization. It will be called with the same
arguments as native_query().
- setup_search
- This internal routine does generic Search setup. It calls
"_native_setup_search()" to do
backend-specific setup.
- need_to_delay
- A backend should override this method in order to dictate whether
user_agent_delay() needs to be called before the next HTTP request
is sent. Return any perlish true or zero value.
- user_agent_delay
- According to what need_to_delay() returns,
user_agent_delay() will be called between requests to remote
servers to avoid overloading them with many back-to-back requests.
- absurl
- An internal routine to convert a relative URL into a absolute URL. It
takes two arguments, the 'base' url (usually the search engine CGI URL)
and the URL to be converted. Returns a URI object.
- retrieve_some
- An internal routine to interface with
"_native_retrieve_some()". Checks for
overflow.
- _native_retrieve_some
- Fetch the next page of results from the web engine, parse the results, and
prepare for the next page of results.
If a backend defines this method, it is in total control of
the WWW fetch, parsing, and preparing for the next page of results. See
the WWW::Search::AltaVista module for example usage of the
_native_retrieve_some method.
An easier way to achieve this in a backend is to inherit
_native_retrieve_some from WWW::Search, and do only the HTML parsing.
Simply define a method _parse_tree which takes one argument, an
HTML::TreeBuilder object, and returns an integer, the number of results
found on this page. See the WWW::Search::Yahoo module for example usage
of the _parse_tree method.
A backend should, in general, define either
_parse_tree() or _native_retrieve_some(), but not
both.
Additional features of the default _native_retrieve_some
method:
Sets $self->{_prev_url} to the URL
of the page just retrieved.
Calls
$self->preprocess_results_page() on
the raw HTML of the page.
Then, parses the page with an HTML::TreeBuilder object and
passes that populated object to
$self->_parse_tree().
Additional notes on using the _parse_tree method:
The built-in HTML::TreeBuilder object used to parse the page
has store_comments turned ON. If a backend needs to use a subclassed or
modified HTML::TreeBuilder object, the backend should set
$self->{'_treebuilder'} to that object before
any results are retrieved. The best place to do this is at the end of
_native_setup_search.
my $oTree = new myTreeBuilder;
$oTree->store_pis(1); # for example
$self->{'_treebuilder'} = $oTree;
When _parse_tree() is called, the
$self->next_url is cleared. During parsing,
the backend should set $self->next_url to the
appropriate URL for the next page of results. (If _parse_tree()
does not set the value, the search will end after parsing this page of
results.)
When _parse_tree() is called, the URL for the page
being parsed can be found in
$self->{_prev_url}.
- result_as_HTML
- Given a WWW::SearchResult object, formats it human-readable with
HTML.
- preprocess_results_page
- A filter on the raw HTML of the results page. This allows the backend to
alter the HTML before it is parsed, such as to correct for known problems,
HTML that can not be parsed correctly, etc.
Takes one argument, a string (the HTML webpage); returns one
string (the same HTML, modified).
This method is called from within _native_retrieve_some
(above) before the HTML of the page is parsed.
See the WWW::Search::Ebay distribution 2.07 or higher for
example usage.
- test_cases (DEPRECATED)
- Deprecated.
Returns the value of the $TEST_CASES
variable of the backend engine.
- hash_to_cgi_string (DEPRECATED)
- Given a reference to a hash of string => string, constructs a CGI
parameter string that looks like 'key1=value1&key2=value2'.
If the value is undef, the key will not be added to the
string.
At one time, for testing purposes, we asked backends to use
this function rather than piecing the URL together by hand, to ensure
that URLs are identical across platforms and software versions. But this
is no longer necessary.
Example:
$self->{_options} = {
'opt3' => 'val3',
'search_url' => 'http://www.deja.com/dnquery.xp',
'opt1' => 'val1',
'QRY' => $native_query,
'opt2' => 'val2',
};
$self->{_next_url} = $self->{_options}{'search_url'} .'?'.
$self->hash_to_cgi_string($self->{_options});
"WWW::Search" supports backends to separate
search engines. Each backend is implemented as a subclass of
"WWW::Search". WWW::Search::Yahoo provides a
good sample backend.
A backend must have the routine
"_native_setup_search()". A backend must
have the routine "_native_retrieve_some()"
or "_parse_tree()".
"_native_setup_search()" is
invoked before the search. It is passed a single argument: the escaped,
native version of the query.
"_native_retrieve_some()" is the
core of a backend. It will be called periodically to fetch URLs. It should
retrieve several hits from the search service and add them to the cache. It
should return the number of hits found, or undef when there are no more
hits.
Internally,
"_native_retrieve_some()" typically sends
an HTTP request to the search service, parses the HTML, extracts the links
and descriptions, then saves the URL for the next page of results. See the
code for the "WWW::Search::AltaVista"
module for an example.
Alternatively, a backend can define the method
"_parse_tree()" instead of
"_native_retrieve_some()". See the
"WWW::Search::Ebay" module for a good
example.
If you implement a new backend, please let the authors know.
The bugs are there for you to find (some people call them Easter Eggs).
Desired features:
- A portable query language.
- A portable language would easily allow you to move queries easily between
different search engines. A query abstraction is non-trivial and
unfortunately will not be done any time soon by the current maintainer. If
you want to take a shot at it, please let me know.
John Heidemann <johnh@isi.edu> Maintained by Martin Thurn,
"mthurn@cpan.org",
<http://www.sandcrawler.com/SWB/cpan-modules.html>.
Copyright (c) 1996 University of Southern California. All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted
provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are duplicated
in all such forms and that any documentation, advertising materials, and
other materials related to such distribution and use acknowledge that the
software was developed by the University of Southern California, Information
Sciences Institute. The name of the University may not be used to endorse or
promote products derived from this software without specific prior written
permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. Output converted with ManDoc. |