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XML::RSS::SimpleGen(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
XML::RSS::SimpleGen(3) |
XML::RSS::SimpleGen - for writing RSS files
# A complete screen-scraper and RSS generator here:
use strict;
use XML::RSS::SimpleGen;
my $url = q<http://www.exile.ru/>;
rss_new( $url, "eXile", "Moscow-based Alternative Newspaper" );
rss_language( 'en' );
rss_webmaster( 'xxxxx@yourdomain.com' );
rss_twice_daily();
get_url( $url );
while(
m{<h4>\s*<a href='/(.*?)'.*?>(.*?)</a>\s*</h4>\s*<p.*?>(.*?)<a href='/}sg
) {
rss_item("$url$1", $2, $3);
}
die "No items in this content?! {{\n$_\n}}\nAborting"
unless rss_item_count();
rss_save( 'exile.rss', 45 );
exit;
This module is for writing RSS files, simply. It transparently handles all the
unpleasant details of RSS, like proper XML escaping, and also has a good
number of Do-What-I-Mean features, like not changing the modtime on a
written-out RSS file if the file content hasn't changed, and like
automatically removing any HTML tags from content you might pass in.
This module isn't meant to have the full expressive power of RSS;
instead, it provides functions that are most commonly needed by RSS-writing
programs.
This module provides a bunch of functions for starting an RSS feed in memory,
putting items into it, and saving it to disk (or printing it as a string, as
in a CGI). If you prefer an object-oriented interface (obviously more useful
if you're composing several feeds at once), then you can use this module as a
class whose methods are the same as the function names minus "rss_".
Except for this detail of the naming, the functions and methods are the same,
behave the same, and take the same arguments.
That is, this functional code:
use XML::RSS::SimpleGen;
my $url = q<http://www.exile.ru/>;
rss_new( $url, "eXile" );
rss_language( 'en' );
get_url( $url );
...
does the same work as this OO code:
use XML::RSS::SimpleGen ();
my $url = q<http://www.exile.ru/>;
my $rss = XML::RSS::SimpleGen->new( $url, "eXile");
$rss->language( 'en' );
$rss->get_url( $url );
...
(Note that the function
"get_url" doesn't have a leading
"rss_", so its method name is the same as its function name. It's
the one exception.)
If this talk of objects puzzles you, see HTML::Tree::AboutObjects
in the "HTML-Tree" dist, and/or see the
chapter "User's View of Object-Oriented Modules" in my book
Perl & LWP
(<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596001789>). (The book is
also useful as an extended discussion of screen-scraping.)
Note: in the code below, I use the word "accessor" a
lot, to refer to a function or method that you can call two possible ways:
1) like
"foo(val)"
to set the "foo" attribute to the value val, or 2) like
"foo()" to return the value of the
"foo" attribute.
- "rss_new( url );"
- "rss_new( url, title );"
- "rss_new( url, title, description );"
- or: "$rss = XML::RSS::SimpleGen->new(...);"
- This function creates a new RSS feed in memory. This should be the first
"rss_whatever"
function you call in your program. If you call it again, it erases the
current object (if any) and sets up a new one according to whatever
parameters you pass.
The parameters are the full URL, the title, and the
description of the site (or page) that you're providing an RSS feed of.
The description is optional, but you should provide at least a URL and
title.
Examples:
rss_new( $url, "eXile", "Moscow-based Alternative Newspaper" );
rss_new( 'http://www.mybazouki.com/news/', "Bazouki News!" );
(As a method, XML::RSS::SimpleGen->new simply returns a new
RSS object.)
- the accessor "rss_language(language_tag)"
- This declares what language this RSS feed is in. It must be an
RFC3066-style language tags like "en", or "en-US", or
"zh-TW". (See I18N::LangTags::List for a list.) If you
don't set the feed's language, it defaults to "en", for generic
English.
If you call this function without a parameter, it returns the
current value of the RSS feed's language. For example:
print "I'm making an RSS feed for ", rss_language(), "!\n";
The same is true for all the functions that I label as
"accessors".
- the accessor "rss_item_limit(number)"
- This sets the maximum number of items that this feed will show.
The default value is 0, meaning that there is no maximum.
If you set it to a positive number N, then the feed
will show only the first N items that you declare with
"rss_item". (Or, if you set
"rss_history_file", then the newest
N items that you declare with
"rss_item".)
If you set it to a negative number -N, then the feed
will show only the last N items that you declare with
"rss_item". (Or, if you set
"rss_history_file", then the oldest
N items you declare with
"rss_item", which is unlikely to be
useful!)
- the accessor "rss_webMaster(email-address)"
- This declares what email address you, the RSS generator manager, can be
reached at. Example:
rss_webMaster( 'sburke@bazouki-news.int' );
- "rss_history_file( filename )"
- This declares that you want this RSS feed to keep track of what items are
new, and to list them first when the RSS is emitted. To do this, the RSS
generator has to store information in a file, where it tracks its
"history", i.e., when was the first time it saw given URLs, and
the most recent time it saw given URLs.
Typical usage is:
rss_history_file( 'thisrssfeed.dat' );
You should call
"rss_history_file" before you
make any calls to "rss_item".
The history-file feature is meant for cases where your
RSS-generator program calls "rss_item"
on every link it sees, but only wants the new links to
appear in the RSS output. (This can be a good approach if you're making
an RSS feed of a page like
"http://www.guardian.co.uk/" where
there's some new links (to the recently added stories), but also links
to some days-old stories, and also links to some always-there
things like "Archive Search" and "Contact Us"
pages.
Once you call rss_history_file, the specified file is read in.
The in-memory history (stored in the RSS object) is updated as you call
"rss_item". But the file isn't updated
until you call rss_save.
(A do-what-I-mean side effect of calling
"rss_history_file" is that it sets
rss_item_limit to 25 if it is currently 0.)
(Incidentally, if you're using rss_history_file as part of a
CGI that emits RSS data, instead of a program that just saves to an RSS
file, then things will get complicated. You'll need to call an internal
method to explicitly commit the history file to disk, and you'll need a
semaphore file to avoid race conditions. Email me for full info.)
- "rss_item( url );"
- "rss_item( url, title );"
- "rss_item( url, title, description );"
- This adds a new item to the current feed. You will need to specify the URL
to add (and it should be a valid-looking URL, starting with
"something:", and not containing any spaces). You may
also specify the title, but it's optional. And finally, you can optionally
specify a description. (You can remember this because it starts with the
essential item first, and progresses toward the most optional.)
Leading and tailing whitespace is removed from whichever of
url, title, and description are defined values, and
HTML is parsed out.
A simple usage:
rss_item(
"http://www.harpers.org/MostRecentWR.html",
"Harper's Magazine's Weekly Review"
);
Although in practice, a typical call won't have string
constants, but will instead be like the example in the Synopsis sectios,
namely:
rss_item("$url$1", $2, $3);
Incidentally, as a do-what-I-mean feature, if the first
parameter doesn't look like a URL but one of the others does, then this
error is silently forgiven. This is so you can occasionally slip up and
forget the order of the parameters.
(In the unlikely event where you need to avoid the
HTML-removal features, you can do this by passing scalar-references
instead of normal strings, like so:
"rss_item($url, $title,
\$not_to_be_escaped)".)
- "rss_item_count()"
- This returns the number of items you've declared. I anticipate that its
main usage will be something like:
die "What, no objects found at $url ?!"
unless rss_item_count();
or, maybe...
exit unless rss_item_count();
...depending on how/whether you'd want to react to cases where
you don't see anything to put into an RSS feed.
Note that the parens are optional, since this command takes no
options (just like Perl's "time()"
function).
- "rss_image( url, h, w );"
- This declares that you want to declare a particular image as the logo for
this feed. Most feeds don't have such a thing, and most readers just
ignore it anyway, but if you want to declare it, this function is how. The
three parameters, which are all required, are: the image's URL, its height
in pixels, and its width in pixels. According to various specs, the width
should/must be between 1 and 144, an the height should/must be between 1
and 400.
A typical usage:
rss_image("http://interglacial.com/rss/weebl.gif", 106, 140);
Be careful not to mix up the height and width.
- "rss_save( filename );"
- "rss_save( filename, max_age_days );"
- This saves the RSS date to the file you specify. If the RSS data hasn't
changed, the file (and its modtime) aren't altered. The optional
max_age_days parameter means that if ever the file exists, and its
content hasn't changed for that many days or longer, then the program
should die with a warning message. For example, in the case of a
screen-scraper for a site that we know should (in theory) change its
content at least weekly, we might save the RSS file with:
rss_save("whatever.rss", 17);
# Scream if the feed is unchanged for 17 days.
The seventeen there is gotten by assuming that just maybe the
site might skip two weeks for a vacation now and then, and might even
put out the pre-vacation issue a few days early -- but that if ever the
program notices that the data hasn't changed for 17 days, then it should
emit error messages. If you want to disable this feature on a one-time
basis, just change the modtime (like via
"touch") on the whatever.rss
file.
If you don't specify a
"max_age_days" value, then this whole
complain-if-it's-old feature is disabled.
- "rss_as_string();"
- This returns the RSS-XML data as a string. This function is called
internally by the rss_save function; but you might want to call it
explicitly, as in a CGI, where your CGI would probably end like this:
print "Content-type: application/xml\n\n", rss_as_string();
exit;
- "get_url( url );"
- "$content = get_url( url );"
- or: "$content = $rss->get_url(...);"
- or: "$content->get_url(...);"
- This tries to get the content of the given url, and returns it.
This is quite like LWP::Simple's
"get" function, but with some
additional features:
- "rss_hourly" or "rss_daily" or
"rss_twice_daily" or "rss_thrice_daily" or
"rss_weekly" or "rss_every_other_hour"
- Calling one of these functions declares that this feed is usually
generated at the same time(s) every day (or every week, in the case of
"rss_weekly"). And, where it's not just
once a day/week, these multiple times a day are evenly spaced. These
functions then set the feed's
"updatePeriod",
"updateBase",
"updateFrequency",
"skipHours",
"skipDays", and
"ttl" elements appropriately, so that
RSS readers can know at at what times there could (or couldn't) be new
content in this feed.
In other words: use
"rss_twice_daily" if this feed is
updated at about the same time every day and then again 12 hours later.
Use "rss_thrice_daily" if this feed is
updated at the same time daily, and then 8 hours later, and then 8 hours
later. And use "rss_every_other_hour"
if the feed updates at about n minutes past every even numbered
hour, or every odd-numbered hour.
Clearly I mean these functions to be used in programs that are
crontabbed to run at particular intervals, as with a crontab line like
one of these:
52 * * * * ~/thingy # => rss_hourly
52 23 * * * ~/thingy # => rss_daily
52 4,16 * * * ~/thingy # => rss_twice_daily
52 5,13,21 * * * ~/thingy # => rss_thrice_daily
52 23 * * 3 ~/thingy # => rss_weekly
52 */2 * * * ~/thingy # => rss_every_other_hour
Clearly there aren't
"rss_interval"
functions for all the scheduling possibilities programs -- if you have a
program that has to run at 6am, 8am, 1pm, and 4pm, there's no function
for that. However, the above crontab lines (or with minor changes, like
"1,9,17" instead of
"5,13,21") are just fine for almost
every RSS feed I've run.
An aside: I recommend running the programs at about 52 minutes
past the hour, generally in series, like so:
52 5,13,21 * * * ~/thingy ; ~/dodad ; ~/makething ; ~/gizmo
However, your mileage may vary.
Incidentally, these functions take no arguments, so the
parentheses are optional. That is, these two lines do the same
thing:
rss_hourly;
rss_hourly();
These are functions that you probably won't need often, or at all. I include
these for the sake of completeness, and so that advanced users might find them
useful in some cases.
- "rss_skipHours( gmt_hour_num, gmt_hour_num, ... );"
- This function directly sets the
"skipHours" element's values to the
specified GMT hour numbers.
- "rss_updateHours();"
- "rss_updateHours( gmt_hour_num, gmt_hour_num, ...
);"
- This function is a wrapper around
"rss_skipHours" -- you call
"rss_updateHours" with a list of GMT
hour numbers, and "rss_updateHours" will
call "rss_skipHours(0 .. 23)" except
without whatever hour numbers you specified.
If you call with an empty list (i.e.,
"rss_updateHours();"), then we uses
"gmtime" to find out the current hour
(and rounds it up if it's after 50 minutes past), basically just as if
you'd called:
rss_updateHours( (gmtime(600+time()))[2] );
- "rss_skipDays();"
- "rss_skipDays( gmt_day_num, gmt_day_num, ... );"
- "rss_skipDays( gmt_day_name, gmt_day_name, ... );"
- This function directly sets the
"skipDays" element's values to the
specified weekdays. Note that this accepts either integers (like 6 for
Saturday, Sunday being either 0 or 7), or their exact English names.
If you use the "skipDays"
field, consider that it refers to days figured by GMT, not local time.
For example, if I say to skip Saturdays, that means Saturdays GMT, which
in my timezone (Alaska) starts in the middle of Friday afternoon.
- "rss_updateDays();"
- "rss_updateDays( gmt_day_num, gmt_day_num, ... );"
- "rss_updateDays( gmt_day_name, gmt_day_name, ... );"
- This function is a wrapper around
"rss_skipDays" -- you call
"rss_updateDays" with a list of GMT day
names/numbers, and "rss_updateDays" will
call "rss_skipDays(0 .. 6)" except
without whatever days you specified.
If you call with an empty list (i.e.,
"rss_updateDays();"), then we uses
"gmtime" to find out the current day
(GMT!), basically just as if you'd called:
rss_updateDays( (gmtime(600+time()))[6] );
- "rss_updatePeriod( periodstring );"
- This function directly sets the
"sy:updatePeriod" element's value to the
period specified. You must specify one of the strings: "yearly",
"monthly", "weekly", "daily",
"hourly". I advise using "weekly" only if you know
what you're doing, and "yearly", "monthly" only if you
really know what you're doing.
- "rss_updatePeriod( periodstring, int, base
);"
- This is a shortcut for
"rss_updatePeriod(periodstring);
rss_updateFrequency(int)"
- "rss_updatePeriod( periodstring, int, base
);"
- This is a shortcut for
"rss_updatePeriod(periodstring);
rss_updateFrequency(int);
rss_updateBase(base)"
- "rss_updateBase( iso_date_string );"
- "rss_updateBase( epoch_time );"
- This function directly sets the
"sy:updateBase" element's value to the
moment specified. If you pass in an epoch time, it is converted to an ISO
date string.
- the accessor "rss_updateFrequency( integer );"
- This function directly sets the
"sy:updateFrequency" element's value to
the value specified. The value has to be a nonzero positive integer.
For example, this means that this feed updates at/by the start
of every hour and 30 minutes past:
rss_updateBase('2000-01-01T00:00-00:00');
rss_updateFrequency(2);
rss_updatePeriod('hourly'); # 2*hourly means "twice an hour"
Recall that this can also be done with the the
"rss_updatePeriod(
per, freq,
base )" shortcut, like
so:
rss_updateBase('hourly', 2, '2000-01-01T00:00-00:00');
- the accessor "rss_retention(number)"
- If you are using an
"rss_history_file(file
)", the history file will accrete a list of
all URLs it has seen. But to keep this file from potentially getting
immense, items that haven't been seen for a while are thrown out. The
period of time a feed's items go unseen before each is forgotten is called
that feed's retention, and is expressed in seconds.
The default retention value is 32 days (i.e., 32*24*60*60, the
number of seconds in 32 days). If you wanted to change it to just a
week, you would do this with
"rss_retention(7*24*60*60)".
As a special case, a zero or negative value for the retention
means to never clear anything from the history file, no matter how long
it has gone unseen.
- "rss_add_comment( strings );"
- Call this function if you want to add extra XML comments to this RSS file.
For example, if you call this:
rss_add_comment(
"Our terms of use: http://wherever.int/rsstou.html",
"Any questions? Ask jimmy@wherever.int",
);
...then this RSS feed will contain this XML fairly early on in
the file:
<!-- Our terms of use: http://wherever.int/rsstou.html -->
<!-- Any questions? Ask jimmy@wherever.int -->
- the accessor "rss_css( url )"
- This defines the given URL as being the XML-CSS stylesheet for this RSS
feed. The default value is "./rss.css" if
"-e "rss.css"" is true,
otherwise is the value http://www.interglacial.com/rss/rss.css
- the accessor "rss_xsl( url )"
- This defines the given URL as being the XML-XSL stylesheet for this RSS
feed. The default value is none.
- The accessors "rss_url( string ), rss_title( string ),
rss_description( string )"
- These define this feed's URL, title, and description. These functions are
just for completeness, since it's simpler to just specify any/all of these
parameters in the call to
"rss_new".
- the accessor "rss_ttl( number )"
- This sets the parameter of this RSS feed's
"ttl" element, which suggests how long
(in minutes, not seconds!) an RSS reader should wait after it polls a feed
until it polls it again. For example,
"rss_ttl(90)" would suggest that a
reader should not poll this feed more often than every 90 minutes.
(This element is somewhat obsolescent next to the newer and
more informative "sy:update*"
elements, but is included for backward compatability.)
- the accessor "rss_allow_duplicates( boolean )"
- This controls whether or not duplicate items are filtered out out the
feed. By default this is on. Note that duplicates are detected only
by their URL, so if you call this:
rss_item('http://foo.int/donate', "Give!");
rss_item('http://foo.int/donate', "We need money!");
rss_save('begging.rss');
...then only the first will appear in the feed, since the
second item has a URL that is already being saved in this feed.
(However, "rss_item_count" is still 2,
because filtering out duplicates is something that only happens as the
feed is saved.)
- the accessor "rss_docs( url )"
- This sets the value of the not-generally-useful
"doc" RSS element. The default value is
"./about_rss.html" if "-e
"about_rss.html"" is true, otherwise
"http://www.interglacial.com/rss/about.html".
- the accessors "rss_image_url(url),
rss_image_width(number), rss_image_height(number),
rss_image_title(text), rss_image_link(url),
rss_image_description(text)"
- These are for manually setting the values of this feed's image element's
subelements:
<image>
<url> (rss_image_url) </url>
<width> (rss_image_width) </width>
<height> (rss_image_height) </height>
<title> (rss_image_title) </title>
<link> (rss_image_link) </link>
<description> (rss_image_description) </description>
</image>
You rarely need to call any of these
"rss_image_whatever"
functions -- usually just calling "rss_image(
url, h, w );" is enough.
RSS feeds emitted by this module are basically according to v0.92 RSS, with a
very few extensions from v2.0 RSS. They are not RDF files.
XML::RSS
<http://my.netscape.com/publish/formats/rss-0.91.dtd>
<http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss>
<http://directory.google.com/Top/Reference/Libraries/Library_and_Information_Science/Technical_Services/Cataloguing/Metadata/RDF/Applications/RSS/Specifications/>
<http://feedvalidator.org/>
You might also like my book Perl and LWP, which discusses
the many screen-scraping techniques that you would use for extracting data
from HTML to make into RSS feeds:
- <http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/perllwp/>
- <http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596001789/>
- <http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0596001789/t>
- <http://interglacial.com/d/scrapers> -- examples of Perl programs
that produce RSS's (which are visible at
<http://interglacial.com/rss/> )
Copyright (c) 2003,4 Sean M. Burke. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of
merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
Portions of the data tables in this module are derived from the
entity declarations in the W3C XHTML specification.
Currently (January 2004), that's these three:
http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml-lat1.ent
http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml-special.ent
http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml-symbol.ent
Portions of the code in this module were adapted from parts of
Gisle Aas's LWP::Simple and the old (v2.x) version of his HTML::Parser.
Sean M. Burke "sburke@cpan.org"
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