An automated, programming-free web scraper for interactive sites
Project description
A project of Artificial Informer Labs.
AutoScrape is an automated scraper of structured data from interactive web pages. You point this scraper at a site and it will be crawled, searched for forms and structured data can then be extracted. No brittle, site-specific programming necessary.
This is an implementation of the web scraping framework described in the paper, Robust Web Scraping in the Public Interest with AutoScrape and presented at Computation + Journalism Symposium 2019.
Currently there are two methods of running AutoScrape:
as a local CLI python script
a full Web interface for scraping (see bottom of page)
Installation and running instructions are provided for both below.
Quickstart
Two ways, easiest first.
pip install autoscrape[all] autoscrape --backend requests --output outdir --maxdepth 2 https://bxroberts.org
This will install all dependencies for all backends and various options.
Or:
git clone https://github.com/brandonrobertz/autoscrape-py cd autoscrape-py/ pip install .[all] autoscrape --backend requests --output outdir --maxdepth 2 https://bxroberts.org
Either way, you can now use autoscrape from the command line.
Usage Examples
Here are some straightforward use cases for AutoScrape and how you’d use the CLI tool to execute them. These, of course, assume you have the dependencies installed.
Crawler Backends
There are two backends available for driving AutoScrape: requests, selenium and warc. The requests backend (the default) is based on the Python requests library and is only capable of crawling sites and submitting simple HTTP forms. For any interaction with forms or JavaScript powered buttons, you’ll need to use the selenium backend.
You can control the backened with the --backend option:
autoscrape \ --backend requests \ --output requests_crawled_site \ 'https://some.page/to-crawl'
In order to use backends other than requests, you need to install the proper dependencies. pip install autoscrape[all] will install everything required for all backends/functionality, but you can also install dependencies in isolation:
- ::
Selenium backend: pip install autoscrape[selenium-backend]
Crawl graph builder (for use in –save-graph) pip install autoscrape[graph]
WARC backend: pip install autoscrape[warc-backend]
Note that for the Selenium backend, you need to install geckodriver or chromedriver, depending if you’re using Firefox or Chrome, respectively. More information is below in the External Dependencies section.
Crawl
Crawl an entire website, saving all HTML and stylesheets (no screenshots):
autoscrape \ --backend requests \ --maxdepth -1 \ --output crawled_site \ 'https://some.page/to-crawl'
Archive Page (Screenshot & Code)
Archive a single webpage, both code and full-content screenshot (PNG), for future reference:
autoscrape \ --backend selenium \ --full-page-screenshots \ --load-images --maxdepth 0 \ --save-screenshots --driver Firefox \ --output archived_webpage \ 'https://some.page/to-archive'
Search Forms and Crawl Result Pages
Query a web form, identified by containing the text “I’m a search form”, entering “NAME” into the first (0th) text input field and select January 20th, 1992 in the second (1st) date field. Then click all buttons with the text “Next ->” to get all results pages:
autoscrape \ --backend selenium \ --output search_query_data \ --form-match "I'm a search form" \ --input "i:0:NAME,d:1:1992-01-20" \ --next-match "Next ->" \ 'https://some.page/search?s=newquery'
Setup for Standalone Local CLI
External Dependencies
If you want to use the selenium backend for interactive crawling, you need to have geckodriver installed. You can do that here:
https://github.com/mozilla/geckodriver/releases
Or through your package manager:
- ::
apt install firefox-geckodriver
Your geckodriver needs to be compatible with your current version of Firefox or you will get errors. If you install FF and the driver through your package manager, you should be okay, but it’s not guaranteed. We have specific versions of both pinned in the Dockerfile.
If you prefer to use Chrome, you will need the ChromeDriver (we’ve tested using v2.41). It can be found in your distribution’s package manager or here:
https://sites.google.com/a/chromium.org/chromedriver/downloads
Installing the remaining Python dependencies can be done using pip.
Pip Install Method
Next you need to set up your python virtual environment (Python 3.6 required) and install the Python dependencies:
pip install -r requirements.txt
Running Standalone Scraper
Environment Test Crawler
You can run a test to ensure your webdriver is set up correctly by running the test crawler:
./autoscrape --backend selenium --show-browser [SITE_URL]
The test crawler will just do a depth-first click-only crawl of an entire website. It will not interact with forms or POST data. Data will be saved to ./autoscrape-data/ (the default output directory).
Manual Config-Based Scraper
Autoscrape has a manually controlled mode, similar to wget, except this uses interactive capabilities and can input data to search forms, follow “next page”-type buttons, etc. This functionality can be used either as a standalone crawler/scraper or as a method to build a training set for the automated scrapers.
Autoscrape manual-mode full options:
AUTOSCRAPE - Interactively crawl, find searchable forms, input data to them and scrape data on the results, from an initial BASEURL. Usage: autoscrape [options] BASEURL General Options: --backend BACKEND The backend to use. Currently one of "selenium" or "requests". The requests browser is only capable of crawling, but is approximately 2-3.5x faster. [default: selenium] --loglevel LEVEL Loglevel, note that DEBUG is extremely verbose. [default: INFO] --quiet This will silence all logging to console. Crawl-Specific Options: --maxdepth DEPTH Maximum depth to crawl a site (in search of form if the option --form-match STRING is specified, see below). Setting to 0 means don't crawl at all, all operations are limited to the BASEURL page. Setting to -1 means unlimited maximum crawl depth. [default: 10] --leave-host By default, autoscrape will not leave the host given in the BASEURL. This option lets the scraper leave the host. --link-priority SORT_STRING A string to sort the links by. In this case, any link containing "SORT_STRING" will be clicked before any other links. --ignore-links MATCH_STRING This option can be used to remove any links matching MATCH_STRING (can be a regex or just a string match) from consideration for clicking. --result-page-links MATCH_STRINGS_LIST If specified, AutoScrape will click on any links matching this string when it arrives on a search result page. Interactive Form Search Options: --form-match SEARCH_STRING The crawler will identify a form to search/scrape if it contains the specified string. If matched, it will be interactively scraped using the below instructions. --input INPUT_DESCRIPTION Interactive search descriptor. This describes how to interact with a matched form. The inputs are described in the following format: "c:0:True,i:0:atext,s:1:France:d:0:1991-01-20" A single-input type can be one of three types: checkbox ("c"), input box ("i"), option select ("s"), and date inputs ("d", with inputs in the "YYYY-MM-DD" format). The type is separated by a colon, and the input index position is next. (Each input type has its own list, so a form with one input, one checkbox, and one option select, will all be at index 0.) The final command, sepearated by another colon, describes what to do with the input. Multiple inputs are separated by a comma, so you can interact with multiple inputs before submitting the form. To illustrate this, the above command does the following: - first input checkbox is checked (uncheck is False) - first input box gets filled with the string "first" - second select input gets the "France" option chosen - first date input gets set to Jan 20, 1991 --next-match NEXT_BTN_STRING A string to match a "next" button with, after searching a form. The scraper will continue to click "next" buttons after a search until no matches are found, unless limited by the --formdepth option (see below). [default: next page] --formdepth DEPTH How deep the scraper will iterate, by clicking "next" buttons. Zero means infinite depth. [default: 0] --form-submit-natural-click Some webpages make clicking a link element difficult due to JavaScript onClick events. In cases where a click does nothing, you can use this option to get the scraper to emulate a mouse click over the link's poition on the page, activating any higher level JS interactions. --form-submit-wait SECONDS How many seconds to force wait after a submit to a form. This should be used in cases where the builtin wait-for-page-load isn't working properly (JS-heavy pages, etc). [default: 5] Webdriver-Specific and General Options: --load-images By default, images on a page will not be fetched. This speeds up scrapes on sites and lowers bandwidth needs. This option fetches all images on a page. --show-browser By default, we hide the browser during operation. This option displays a browser window, mostly for debugging purposes. --driver DRIVER Which browser to use. Current support for "Firefox", "Chrome", and "remote". [default: Firefox] --remote-hub URI If using "remote" driver, specify the hub URI to connect to. Needs the proto, address, port, and path. [default: http://localhost:4444/wd/hub] Data Saving Options: --output DIRECTORY_OR_URL If specified, this indicates where to save pages during a crawl. This directory will be created if it does not currently exist. This directory will have several sub-directories that contain the different types of pages found (i.e., search_pages, data_pages, screenshots). This can also accept a URL (i.e., http://localhost:5000/files) and AutoScrape will POST to that endpoint with each file scraped. [default: autoscrape-data] --keep-filename By default, we hash the files in a scrape in order to account for dynamic content under a single-page app (SPA) website implmentation. This option will force the scraper to retain the original filename, from the URL when saving scrape data. --save-screenshots This option makes the scraper save screenshots of each page, interaction, and search. Screenshots will be saved to the screenshots folder of the output dir. --full-page-screenshots By default, we only save the first displayed part of the webpage. The remaining portion that you can only see by scrolling down isn't captured. Setting this option forces AutoScrape to scroll down and capture the entire web content. This can fail in certain circumstances, like in API output mode and should be used with care. --save-graph This option allows the scraper to build a directed graph of the entire scrape and will save it to the "graph" subdirectory under the output dir. The output file is a timestamped networkx pickled graph. --disable-style-saving By default, AutoScrape saves the stylesheets associated with a scraped page. To save storage, you can disable this functionality by using this option.
AutoScrape Web UI (Docker)
AutoScrape can be ran as a containerized cluster environment, where scrapes can be triggered and stopped via API calls and data can be streamed to this server.
This requires the autoscrape-www submodule to be pulled:
git submodule init git submodule update
This will pull the browser-based UI into the www/ folder.
You need docker-ce and docker-compose. Once you have these dependencies installed, simply run:
docker-compose build --pull docker-compose up
This will build the containers and launch a API server running on local port 5000. More information about the API calls can be found in autoscrape-server.py.
If you have make installed, you can simply run make start.
NOTE: This is a work in progress prototype that will likely be removed once AutoScrape is integrated into CJ Workbench.
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