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The All in One Web Scraping Framework

Project description

botasaurus

🤖 Botasaurus 🤖

The All in One Framework to build Awesome Scrapers.

The web has evolved. Finally, web scraping has too.

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Botasaurus has released a new version, causing previous Botasaurus scrapers to break. If you have come here because you have been affected, then simply set the Botasaurus version to 4.0.14 to use the old version of Botasaurus by running python -m pip install botasaurus==4.0.14.

🐿️ Botasaurus In a Nutshell

How wonderful that of all the web scraping tools out there, you chose to learn about Botasaurus. Congratulations!

And now that you are here, you are in for an exciting, unusual and rewarding journey that will make your web scraping life a lot, lot easier.

Now, let me tell you in bullet points about Botasaurus. (Because as per the marketing gurus, YOU as a member of Developer Tribe have a VERY short attention span.)

So, what is Botasaurus?

Botasaurus is an all-in-one web scraping framework that enables you to build awesome scrapers in less time and code, and with more fun.

A Web Scraping Magician has put all his web scraping experience and best practices into Botasaurus to save you hundreds of hours of Development Time!

Now, for the magical powers awaiting you after learning Botasaurus:

  • Convert any Web Scraper to a UI-based Scraper in minutes, which will make your Customer sing praises of you.

pro-gmaps-demo

  • In terms of Stealth Capabilities, what Superman is to Man, Botasaurus is to Selenium and Playwright. Easily pass every (Yes E-V-E-R-Y) bot detection test, no need to spend time finding ways to unblock a website.

solve-bot-detection

  • Easily save hours of Development Time with easy parallelization, profiles, extensions, and proxy configuration. Botasaurus makes asynchronous, parallel scraping a child's play.

  • Use Caching, Sitemap, Data cleaning, and other utilities to save hours of time spent in writing and debugging code.

  • Easily scale your scraper to multiple machines with Kubernetes, and get your data faster than ever.

And those are just the highlights. I Mean!

There is so much more to Botasaurus, that you will be amazed at how much time you will save with it.

🚀 Getting Started with Botasaurus

Let's dive right in with a straightforward example to understand Botasaurus.

In this example, we will go through the steps to scrape the heading text from https://www.omkar.cloud/.

Botasaurus in action

Step 1: Install Botasaurus

First things first, you need to install Botasaurus. Run the following command in your terminal:

python -m pip install botasaurus

Step 2: Set Up Your Botasaurus Project

Next, let's set up the project:

  1. Create a directory for your Botasaurus project and navigate into it:
mkdir my-botasaurus-project
cd my-botasaurus-project
code .  # This will open the project in VSCode if you have it installed

Step 3: Write the Scraping Code

Now, create a Python script named main.py in your project directory and paste the following code:

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@browser
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, data):
    # Navigate to the Omkar Cloud website
    driver.get("https://www.omkar.cloud/")
    
    # Retrieve the heading element's text
    heading = driver.get_text("h1")

    # Save the data as a JSON file in output/scrape_heading_task.json
    return {
        "heading": heading
    }
     
# Initiate the web scraping task
scrape_heading_task()

Let's understand this code:

  • We define a custom scraping task, scrape_heading_task, decorated with @browser:
@browser
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, data):
  • Botasaurus automatically provides an Anti-Detect driver to our function:
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, data):
  • Inside the function, we:
    • Navigate to Omkar Cloud
    • Extract the heading text
    • Return the data to be automatically saved as scrape_heading_task.json by Botasaurus:
    driver.get("https://www.omkar.cloud/")
    heading = driver.get_text("h1")
    return {"heading": heading}
  • Finally, we initiate the scraping task:
# Initiate the web scraping task
scrape_heading_task()

Step 4: Run the Scraping Task

Time to run your bot:

python main.py

After executing the script, it will:

  • Launch Google Chrome
  • Navigate to omkar.cloud
  • Extract the heading text
  • Save it automatically as output/scrape_heading_task.json.

Botasaurus in action

Now, let's explore another way to scrape the heading using the request module. Replace the previous code in main.py with the following:

from botasaurus.request import request, Request
from botasaurus.soupify import soupify

@request
def scrape_heading_task(request: Request, data):
    # Navigate to the Omkar Cloud website
    response = request.get("https://www.omkar.cloud/")

    # Create a BeautifulSoup object    
    soup = soupify(response)
    
    # Retrieve the heading element's text
    heading = soup.find('h1').get_text()

    # Save the data as a JSON file in output/scrape_heading_task.json
    return {
        "heading": heading
    }     
# Initiate the web scraping task
scrape_heading_task()

In this code:

  • We scrape the HTML using request, which is an Anti-Detect Request object specifically designed for making browser-like requests and is capable of bypassing bot detection mechanisms.
  • Next, we parse the HTML into a BeautifulSoup object using soupify() and extract the heading.

Step 5: Run the Scraping Task (which makes Anti-Detect HTTP Requests)

Finally, run the bot again:

python main.py

This time, you will observe the exact same result as before, but instead of opening a whole Browser, we are using the Anti-Detect request module.

💡 Understanding Botasaurus

How do I access Cloudflare-protected pages using Botasaurus?

We have created a powerful web driver called BotasaurusDriver which provides the following benefits:

  • It is indistinguishable from a real browser, allowing it to pass E-V-E-R-Y bot detection challenge.
  • Compared to Selenium and Playwright, it is super fast to launch and use.
  • The API is designed by and for web scrapers, and you will love it.

Cloudflare is by far the most popular bot detection system on the web. So, let's see how Botasaurus can help you access pages protected by various types of Cloudflare challenges.

Connection Challenge

This is the single most popular challenge and requires making a browser-like connection with appropriate headers to the target website. It's commonly used to protect:

  • Product Pages
  • Blog Pages
  • Search Result Pages

Example Page: https://www.g2.com/products/github/reviews

What Works?

  • Visiting the website via Google Referrer (which makes the website think that you are coming from Google Search Results, and allows you).
from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@browser
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, data):
    # Visit the website via Google Referrer
    driver.google_get("https://www.g2.com/products/github/reviews")
    driver.prompt()
    heading = driver.get_text('.product-head__title [itemprop="name"]')
    return heading

scrape_heading_task()
  • Use the stealth request mode to make the request more stealthy. The Request Object is smart and, by default, visits any link with a Google Referrer.
from botasaurus.request import request, Request

@request(use_stealth=True)
def scrape_heading_task(request: Request, data):
    response = request.get('https://www.g2.com/products/github/reviews')
    print(response.status_code)
    return response.text

scrape_heading_task()

JS with Captcha Challenge

This challenge requires performing JS computations that differentiate a Chrome controlled by Selenium/Puppeteer/Playwright from a real Chrome. It also involves solving a Captcha. It's used to protect pages which are rarely but sometimes visited by humans, like:

  • 5th Page of G2 Reviews
  • Auth pages

Example Page: https://www.g2.com/products/github/reviews.html?page=5&product_id=github

What Does Not Work?

Using @request does not work because although it can make browser-like HTTP requests, it cannot run JavaScript to solve the challenge.

What Works?

Pass the bypass_cloudflare=True argument to the google_get method to solve the Cloudflare challenge.

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@browser
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, data):
    driver.google_get("https://www.g2.com/products/github/reviews.html?page=5&product_id=github", bypass_cloudflare=True)
    driver.prompt()
    heading = driver.get_text('.product-head__title [itemprop="name"]')
    return heading

scrape_heading_task()

What are the benefits of a UI Scraper?

Here are some benefits of creating a scraper with a user interface:

  • Simplify your scraper usage for customers, eliminating the need to teach them how to modify and run your code.
  • Protect your code by hosting the scraper on the web and offering a monthly subscription, rather than providing full access to your code. This approach:
    • Safeguards your Python code from being copied and reused, increasing your customer's lifetime value.
    • Generate monthly recurring revenue via subscription from your customers, surpassing a one-time payment.
  • Enable sorting, filtering, and downloading of data in various formats (JSON, Excel, CSV, etc.).
  • Provide access via a REST API for seamless integration.
  • Create a polished frontend, backend, and API integration with minimal code.

How to run a UI-based scraper?

Let's run the Botasaurus Starter Template (the recommended template for greenfield Botasaurus projects), which scrapes the heading of the provided link by following these steps:

  1. Clone the Starter Template:

    git clone https://github.com/omkarcloud/botasaurus-starter my-botasaurus-project
    cd my-botasaurus-project
    
  2. Install dependencies (will take a few minutes):

    python -m pip install -r requirements.txt && python run.py install
    
  3. Run the scraper:

    python run.py
    

Your browser will automatically open up at http://localhost:3000/. Then, enter the link you want to scrape (e.g., https://www.omkar.cloud/) and click on the Run Button.

starter-scraper-demo

After some seconds, the data will be scraped. starter-scraper-demo-result

Visit http://localhost:3000/output to see all the tasks you have started.

starter-scraper-demo-tasks

Go to http://localhost:3000/about to see the rendered README.md file of the project.

starter-scraper-demo-readme

Finally, visit http://localhost:3000/api-integration to see how to access the Scraper via API.

starter-scraper-demo-api

The API Documentation is generated dynamically based on your Scraper's Inputs, Sorts, Filters, etc., and is unique to your Scraper.

So, whenever you need to run the Scraper via API, visit this tab and copy the code specific to your Scraper.

How to create a UI Scraper using Botasaurus?

Creating a UI Scraper with Botasaurus is a simple 3-step process:

  1. Create your Scraper function
  2. Add the Scraper to the Server using 1 line of code
  3. Define the input controls for the Scraper

To understand these steps, let's go through the code of the Botasaurus Starter Template that you just ran.

Step 1: Create the Scraper Function

In src/scrape_heading_task.py, we define a scraping function which basically does the following:

  1. Receives a data object and extracts the "link".
  2. Retrieves the HTML content of the webpage using the "link".
  3. Converts the HTML into a BeautifulSoup object.
  4. Locates the heading element, extracts its text content and returns it.
from botasaurus.request import request, Request
from botasaurus.soupify import soupify

@request
def scrape_heading_task(request: Request, data):
    # Navigate to the Link
    response = request.get(data["link"])

    # Create a BeautifulSoup object    
    soup = soupify(response)
    
    # Retrieve the heading element's text
    heading = soup.find('h1').get_text()

    # Save the data as a JSON file in output/scrape_heading_task.json
    return {
        "heading": heading
    }

Step 2: Add the Scraper to the Server

In backend/scrapers.py, we:

  • Import our scraping function
  • Use Server.add_scraper() to register the scraper
from botasaurus_server.server import Server
from src.scrape_heading_task import scrape_heading_task

# Add the scraper to the server
Server.add_scraper(scrape_heading_task)

Step 3: Define the Input Controls

In backend/inputs/scrape_heading_task.js we:

  • Define a getInput function that takes the controls parameter
  • Add a link input control to it
  • Use comments to enable intellisense in VSCode (Very Very Important)
/**
 * @typedef {import('../../frontend/node_modules/botasaurus-controls/dist/index').Controls} Controls
 */

/**
 * @param {Controls} controls
 */
function getInput(controls) {
    controls
        // Render a Link Input, which is required, defaults to "https://www.omkar.cloud/". 
        .link('link', { isRequired: true, defaultValue: "https://www.omkar.cloud/" })
}

Above was a simple example; below is a real-world example with multi-text, number, switch, select, section, and other controls.

/**
 * @typedef {import('../../frontend/node_modules/botasaurus-controls/dist/index').Controls} Controls
 */


/**
 * @param {Controls} controls
 */
function getInput(controls) {
    controls
        .listOfTexts('queries', {
            defaultValue: ["Web Developers in Bangalore"],
            placeholder: "Web Developers in Bangalore",
            label: 'Search Queries',
            isRequired: true
        })
        .section("Email and Social Links Extraction", (section) => {
            section.text('api_key', {
                placeholder: "2e5d346ap4db8mce4fj7fc112s9h26s61e1192b6a526af51n9",
                label: 'Email and Social Links Extraction API Key',
                helpText: 'Enter your API key to extract email addresses and social media links.',
            })
        })
        .section("Reviews Extraction", (section) => {
            section
                .switch('enable_reviews_extraction', {
                    label: "Enable Reviews Extraction"
                })
                .greaterThanOrEqualToZero('max_reviews', {
                    label: 'Max Reviews per Place (Leave empty to extract all reviews)',
                    placeholder: 20,
                    isShown: (data) => data['enable_reviews_extraction'], defaultValue: 20,
                })
                .choose('reviews_sort', {
                    label: "Sort Reviews By",
                    isRequired: true, isShown: (data) => data['enable_reviews_extraction'], defaultValue: 'newest', options: [{ value: 'newest', label: 'Newest' }, { value: 'most_relevant', label: 'Most Relevant' }, { value: 'highest_rating', label: 'Highest Rating' }, { value: 'lowest_rating', label: 'Lowest Rating' }]
                })
        })
        .section("Language and Max Results", (section) => {
            section
                .addLangSelect()
                .greaterThanOrEqualToOne('max_results', {
                    placeholder: 100,
                    label: 'Max Results per Search Query (Leave empty to extract all places)'
                })
        })
        .section("Geo Location", (section) => {
            section
                .text('coordinates', {
                    placeholder: '12.900490, 77.571466'
                })
                .greaterThanOrEqualToOne('zoom_level', {
                    label: 'Zoom Level (1-21)',
                    defaultValue: 14,
                    placeholder: 14
                })
        })
}

I encourage you to paste the above code into backend/inputs/scrape_heading_task.js and reload the page, and you will see a complex set of input controls like the image shown.

complex-input

Now, to use Botasaurus UI for adding new scrapers, remember these points:

  1. Create a backend/inputs/{your_scraping_function_name}.js file for each scraping function.
  2. Define the getInput function in the file with the necessary controls.
  3. Add comments to enable intellisense in VSCode, as you won't be able to remember all the controls.

Use this template as a starting point for new scraping function's input controls js file:

/**
 * @typedef {import('../../frontend/node_modules/botasaurus-controls/dist/index').Controls} Controls
 */

/**
 * @param {Controls} controls
 */
function getInput(controls) {
    // Define your controls here.
}

That's it! With these simple steps, you can create a fully functional UI Scraper using Botasaurus.

Later, you will learn how to add sorts and filters to make your UI Scraper even more powerful and user-friendly.

sorts-filters

What is Botasaurus, and what are its main features?

Botasaurus is an all-in-one web scraping framework designed to achieve two main goals:

  1. Provide common web scraping utilities to solve the pain points of web scraping.
  2. Offer a user interface to make it easy for your non-technical customers to run web scrapers.

To accomplish these goals, Botasaurus gives you 3 decorators:

  • @browser: For scraping web pages using a super anti-detect browser.
  • @request: For scraping web pages using lightweight and anti-detect HTTP requests.
  • @task:
    • For scraping web pages using third-party libraries like hrequests, playwright or selenium.
    • or, For running non-web scraping tasks, such as data processing (e.g., converting video to audio). Botasaurus is not limited to web scraping tasks; any Python function can be made accessible with a stunning UI and user-friendly API.

In practice, while developing with Botasaurus, you will spend most of your time in the following areas:

  • Configuring your scrapers via decorators with settings like:
    • Which proxy to use
    • How many scrapers to run in parallel, etc.
  • Writing your core web scraping logic using BeautifulSoup (bs4) or the Botasaurus Driver.

Additionally, you will utilize the following Botasaurus utilities for debugging and development:

  • bt: Mainly for writing JSON, EXCEL, and HTML temporary files, and for data cleaning.
  • Sitemap: For accessing the website's links and sitemap.
  • Minor utilities like:
    • LocalStorage: For storing scraper state.
    • soupify: For creating BeautifulSoup objects from Driver, Requests response, Driver Element, or HTML string.
    • IPUtils: For obtaining information (IP, country, etc.) about the current IP address.
    • Cache: For managing the cache.

By simply configuring these three decorators (@browser, @request, and @task) with arguments, you can easily create real-time scrapers and large-scale datasets, thus saving you countless hours that would otherwise be spent writing and debugging code from scratch.

How to use decorators in Botasaurus?

Decorators are the heart of Botasaurus. To use a decorator function, you can call it with:

  • A single item
  • A list of items

If a scraping function is given a list of items, it will sequentially call the scraping function for each data item.

For example, if you pass a list of three links to the scrape_heading_task function:

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@browser
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, link):
    driver.get(link)
    heading = driver.get_text("h1")
    return heading

scrape_heading_task(["https://www.omkar.cloud/", "https://www.omkar.cloud/blog/", "https://stackoverflow.com/"]) # <-- list of items

Then, Botasaurus will launch a new browser instance for each item, and the final results will be stored in output/scrape_heading_task.json.

list-demo

How does Botasaurus help me in debugging?

Botasaurus helps you in debugging by:

  • Easily viewing the result of the scraping function, as it is saved in output/{your_scraping_function_name}.json. Say goodbye to print statements.

scraped data

  • Bringing your attention to errors in browser mode with a beep sound and pausing the browser, allowing you to debug the error on the spot.

  • Even if an exception is raised in headless mode, it will still open the website in your default browser, making it easier to debug code in a headless browser. (Isn't it cool?)

headless-error

How to configure the Browser Decorator?

The Browser Decorator allows you to easily configure various aspects of the browser, such as:

  • Blocking images and CSS
  • Setting up proxies
  • Specifying profiles
  • Enabling headless mode
  • Using Chrome extensions
  • Selecting language

Blocking Images and CSS

Blocking images is one of the most important configurations when scraping at scale. Blocking images can significantly:

  • Speed up your web scraping tasks
  • Reduce bandwidth usage
  • And save money on proxies. (Best of All!)

For example, a page that originally takes 4 seconds and 12 MB to load might only take one second and 100 KB after blocking images and CSS.

To block images, use the block_images parameter:

@browser(
    block_images=True,
)

To block both images and CSS, use block_images_and_css:

@browser(
    block_images_and_css=True,
)    

Proxies

To use proxies, simply specify the proxy parameter:

@browser(
    proxy="http://username:password@proxy-provider-domain:port"
)    

You can also pass a list of proxies, and the proxy will be randomly selected:

@browser(
    proxy=[
        "http://username:password@proxy-provider-domain:port", 
        "http://username2:password2@proxy-provider-domain:port"
    ]
)    

Profile

Easily specify the Chrome profile using the profile option:

@browser(
    profile="pikachu"
)    

However, each Chrome profile can become very large (e.g., 100 MB) and can eat up all your computer storage.

To solve this problem, use the tiny_profile option, which is a lightweight alternative to Chrome profiles.

When creating hundreds of Chrome profiles, it is highly recommended to use the tiny_profile option because:

  • Creating 1000 Chrome profiles will take at least 100 GB, whereas 1000 tiny profiles will take up only 1 MB of storage, making tiny profiles easy to store and back up.
  • Tiny profiles are cross-platform, meaning you can create profiles on a Linux server, copy the ./profiles folder to a Windows PC, and easily run them.

Under the hood, tiny profiles persist cookies from visited websites, making them extremely lightweight (around 1 KB) while providing the same session persistence.

Here's how to use the tiny profile:

@browser(
    tiny_profile=True, 
    profile="pikachu",
)    

Headless Mode

Enable headless mode with headless=True:

@browser(
    headless=True
)    

Note that using headless mode makes the bot much easier to detect by services like Cloudflare and Datadome. So, use headless mode only when scraping websites that are not protected by Cloudflare, Datadome or similar services.

Chrome Extensions

Botasaurus allows the use of ANY Chrome Extension with just 1 line of code. The example below shows how to use the AdBlocker Chrome Extension:

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver
from chrome_extension_python import Extension

@browser(
    extensions=[
        Extension(
            "https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/adblock-%E2%80%94-best-ad-blocker/gighmmpiobklfepjocnamgkkbiglidom"
        )
    ],
)
def scrape_while_blocking_ads(driver: Driver, data):
    driver.prompt()

scrape_while_blocking_ads()

In some cases, an extension may require additional configuration, such as API keys or credentials. For such scenarios, you can create a custom extension. Learn more about creating and configuring custom extensions here.

Language

Specify the language using the lang option:

from botasaurus.lang import Lang

@browser(
    lang=Lang.Hindi,
)

User Agent and Window Size

To give you the best anti-detection, Botasaurus does not change browser fingerprints by default, because Bot detectors can easily detect bots by running CSS tests to detect mismatches between the provided user agent and the actual user agent.

However, if you need fingerprinting, use the user_agent and window_size options:

from botasaurus.user_agent import UserAgent
from botasaurus.window_size import WindowSize

@browser(
    user_agent=UserAgent.RANDOM,
    window_size=WindowSize.RANDOM,
)

When working with profiles, you want the fingerprints to remain consistent. You don't want the user's user agent to be Chrome 106 on the first visit and then become Chrome 102 on the second visit.

So, when using profiles, use the HASHED option to generate a consistent user agent and window size based on the profile's hash:

from botasaurus.user_agent import UserAgent
from botasaurus.window_size import WindowSize

@browser(
    user_agent=UserAgent.HASHED,
    window_size=WindowSize.HASHED,
)

Wait for Complete Page Load

By default, Botasaurus waits for all page resources (DOM, JavaScript, CSS, images, etc.) to load before calling your scraping function with the driver.

However, sometimes the DOM is ready, but JavaScript, images, etc., take forever to load.

In such cases, you can set wait_for_complete_page_load to False to interact with the DOM as soon as the HTML is parsed and the DOM is ready:

@browser(
    wait_for_complete_page_load=False,
)

Reuse Driver

Consider the following example:

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@browser
def scrape_data(driver: Driver, link):
    driver.get(link)

scrape_data(["https://www.omkar.cloud/", "https://www.omkar.cloud/blog/", "https://stackoverflow.com/"])

If you run this code, the browser will be recreated on each page visit, which is inefficient.

list-demo-omkar

To solve this problem, use the reuse_driver option which is great for cases like:

  • Scraping a large number of links and reusing the same browser instance for all page visits.
  • Running your scraper in a cloud server to scrape data on demand, without recreating Chrome on each request.

Here's how to use reuse_driver which will reuse the same Chrome instance for visiting each link.

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@browser(
    reuse_driver=True
)
def scrape_data(driver: Driver, link):
    driver.get(link)

scrape_data(["https://www.omkar.cloud/", "https://www.omkar.cloud/blog/", "https://stackoverflow.com/"])

Result list-demo-reuse-driver.gif


Also, by default, whenever the program ends or is canceled, Botasaurus smartly closes any open Chrome instances, leaving no instances running in the background.

In rare cases, you may want to explicitly close the Chrome instance. For such scenarios, you can use the .close() method on the scraping function:

scrape_data.close()

This will close any Chrome instances that remain open after the scraping function ends.

How to Configure the Browser's Chrome Profile, Language, and Proxy Dynamically Based on Data Parameters?

The decorators in Botasaurus are really flexible, allowing you to pass a function that can derive the browser configuration based on the data item parameter. This is particularly useful when working with multiple Chrome profiles.

You can dynamically configure the browser's Chrome profile and proxy using decorators in two ways:

  1. Using functions to extract configuration values from data:

    • Define functions to extract the desired configuration values from the data parameter.
    • Pass these functions as arguments to the @browser decorator.

    Example:

    from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver
    
    def get_profile(data):
        return data["profile"]
    
    def get_proxy(data):
        return data["proxy"]
    
    @browser(profile=get_profile, proxy=get_proxy)
    def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, data):
        profile, proxy = driver.config.profile, driver.config.proxy
        print(profile, proxy)
        return profile, proxy
    
    data = [
        {"profile": "pikachu", "proxy": "http://142.250.77.228:8000"},
        {"profile": "shinchan", "proxy": "http://142.250.77.229:8000"},
    ]
    
    scrape_heading_task(data)
    
  2. Directly passing configuration values when calling the decorated function:

    • Pass the profile and proxy values directly as arguments to the decorated function when calling it.

    Example:

    from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver
    
    @browser
    def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, data):
        profile, proxy = driver.config.profile, driver.config.proxy
        print(profile, proxy)
        return profile, proxy
    
    scrape_heading_task(
        profile='pikachu',  # Directly pass the profile
        proxy="http://142.250.77.228:8000",  # Directly pass the proxy
    )
    

PS: Most Botasaurus decorators allow passing functions to derive configurations from data parameters. Check the decorator's argument type hint to see if it supports this functionality.

What are some common methods in Botasaurus Driver?

Botasaurus Driver provides several handy methods for web automation tasks such as:

  • Navigate to URLs:

    driver.get("https://www.example.com")
    driver.google_get("https://www.example.com")  # Use Google as the referer [Recommended]
    driver.get_via("https://www.example.com", referer="https://duckduckgo.com/")  # Use custom referer
    driver.get_via_this_page("https://www.example.com")  # Use current page as referer
    
  • For finding elements:

    from botasaurus.browser import Wait
    search_results = driver.select(".search-results", wait=Wait.SHORT)  # Wait for up to 4 seconds for the element to be present, return None if not found
    search_results = driver.wait_for_element(".search-results", wait=Wait.LONG)  # Wait for up to 8 seconds for the element to be present, raise exception if not found
    hello_mom = driver.get_element_with_exact_text("Hello Mom", wait=Wait.VERY_LONG)  # Wait for up to 16 seconds for an element having the exact text "Hello Mom"
    
  • Interact with elements:

    driver.type("input[name='username']", "john_doe")  # Type into an input field
    driver.click("button.submit")  # Clicks an element
    element = driver.select("button.submit")
    element.click()  # Click on an element
    
  • Retrieve element properties:

    header_text = driver.get_text("h1")  # Get text content
    error_message = driver.get_element_containing_text("Error: Invalid input")
    image_url = driver.select("img.logo").get_attribute("src")  # Get attribute value
    
  • Work with parent-child elements:

    parent_element = driver.select(".parent")
    child_element = parent_element.select(".child")
    child_element.click()  # Click child element
    
  • Execute JavaScript:

    result = driver.run_js("return document.title")
    text_content = element.run_js("(el) => el.textContent")
    
  • Working with iframes:

    driver.get("https://www.g2.com/products/github/reviews.html?page=5&product_id=github")
    iframe = driver.select_iframe("#turnstile-wrapper iframe")
    text_content = iframe.select("body label").text
    
  • Miscellaneous:

    form.type("input[name='password']", "secret_password")  # Type into a form field
    container.is_element_present(".button")  # Check element presence
    page_html = driver.page_html  # Current page HTML
    driver.select(".footer").scroll_into_view()  # Scroll element into view
    driver.close()  # Close the browser
    

How Can I Pause the Browser to Inspect Website when Developing the Scraper?

To pause the scraper and wait for user input before proceeding, use driver.prompt():

driver.prompt()

How do I configure authenticated proxies with SSL in Botasaurus?

Proxy providers like BrightData, IPRoyal, and others typically provide authenticated proxies in the format "http://username:password@proxy-provider-domain:port". For example, "http://greyninja:awesomepassword@geo.iproyal.com:12321".

However, if you use an authenticated proxy with a library like seleniumwire to scrape a Cloudflare protected website like G2.com, you are GUARANTEED to be blocked because you are using a non-SSL connection.

To verify this, run the following code:

First, install the necessary packages:

python -m pip install selenium_wire chromedriver_autoinstaller_fix

Then, execute this Python script:

from seleniumwire import webdriver
from chromedriver_autoinstaller_fix import install

# Define the proxy
proxy_options = {
    'proxy': {
        'http': 'http://username:password@proxy-provider-domain:port', # TODO: Replace with your own proxy
        'https': 'http://username:password@proxy-provider-domain:port', # TODO: Replace with your own proxy
    }
}

# Install and set up the driver
driver_path = install()
driver = webdriver.Chrome(driver_path, seleniumwire_options=proxy_options)

# Navigate to the desired URL
link = 'https://www.g2.com/products/github/reviews'
driver.get("https://www.google.com/")
driver.execute_script(f'window.location.href = "{link}"')

# Prompt for user input
input("Press Enter to exit...")

# Clean up
driver.quit()

You will DEFINITELY be blocked:

blocked

However, using proxies with Botasaurus solves this issue. See the difference by running the following code:

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@browser(proxy="http://username:password@proxy-provider-domain:port") # TODO: Replace with your own proxy 
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, data):
    driver.google_get("https://www.g2.com/products/github/reviews")
    driver.prompt()

scrape_heading_task()    

Result: not blocked

Important Note: To run the code above, you will need Node.js installed.

Why am I getting a socket connection error when using a proxy to access a website?

Certain proxy providers may block access to specific websites. To determine if this is the case, run the following code:

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@browser(proxy="http://username:password@proxy-provider-domain:port")  # TODO: Replace with your own proxy
def visit_ipinfo(driver: Driver, data):
    driver.get("https://ipinfo.io/")
    driver.prompt()

visit_ipinfo()

If you can successfully access the ipinfo website but not the website you're attempting to scrape, it means the proxy provider is blocking access to that particular website.

In such situations, the only solution is to switch to a different proxy provider.

Some good proxy providers we personally use are:

  • For Rotating Datacenter Proxies: BrightData Datacenter Proxies, which cost around $0.6 per GB on a pay-as-you-go basis. No KYC is required.
  • For Rotating Residential Proxies: IPRoyal Royal Residential Proxies, which cost around $7 per GB on a pay-as-you-go basis. No KYC is required.

It's worth noting that BrightData will block certain websites.

Note: We are not affiliated with any of the above proxy providers.

Which country should I choose when using proxies for web scraping?

The United States is often the best choice because:

  • The United States has a highly developed internet infrastructure and is home to numerous data centers, ensuring faster internet speeds.
  • Most global companies host their websites in the US, so using a US proxy will result in faster scraping speeds.

Should I use a proxy for web scraping?

ONLY IF you encounter IP blocks.

Sadly, most scrapers unnecessarily use proxies, even when they are not needed. Everything seems like a nail when you have a hammer.

We have personally scraped hundreds of thousands of bot-protected pages using the @browser module on our home Wi-Fi without any issues.

So, as a best practice scrape using the @browser module on your home Wi-Fi first. Only resort to proxies when you encounter IP blocks.

This practice will save you a considerable amount of time (as proxies are really slow) and money (as proxies are expensive as well).

How to configure the Request Decorator?

The Request Decorator is used to make humane requests. Under the hood, to make anti-detect requests, it:

  • Uses browser-like headers in the correct order.
  • Makes a browser-like connection with correct ciphers.
  • Uses google.com referer by default to make it appear as if the user has clicked on a link on google.com to visit the page.

The Request Decorator allows you to configure 2 custom options:

  • Setting up proxies
  • Using Stealth Mode

Proxy

The usage is exactly the same as with the Browser Decorator.

@request(
    proxy="http://username:password@proxy-provider-domain:port"
)    

Stealth Mode

When facing a Connection Challenge (where you need to make a browser-like connection), the normal request mode will be detected by Bot Detectors like Cloudflare.

For such cases, you should use the stealth mode as follows, which will easily solve the connection challenge:

from botasaurus.request import request, Request

@request(use_stealth=True)
def scrape_heading_task(request: Request, data):
    response = request.get('https://www.g2.com/products/github/reviews')
    print(response.status_code) # Status Code will be 200!
    return response.text

scrape_heading_task()

What Options Can I Configure in all 3 Decorators?

All 3 decorators allow you to configure the following options:

  • Parallel Execution:
  • Caching Results
  • Passing Common Metadata
  • Asynchronous Queues
  • Asynchronous Execution
  • Handling Crashes
  • Configuring Output
  • Exception Handling

Let's dive into each of these options and in later sections we will see their real-world applications.

parallel

The parallel option allows you to scrape data in parallel by launching multiple browser/request/task instances simultaneously. This can significantly speed up the scraping process.

Run the example below to see parallelization in action:

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@browser(parallel=3, data=["https://www.omkar.cloud/", "https://www.omkar.cloud/blog/", "https://stackoverflow.com/"])
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, link):
    driver.get(link)
    heading = driver.get_text('h1')
    return heading

scrape_heading_task()    

cache

The cache option enables caching of web scraping results to avoid re-scraping the same data. This can significantly improve performance and reduce redundant requests.

Run the example below to see how caching works:

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@browser(cache=True, data=["https://www.omkar.cloud/", "https://www.omkar.cloud/blog/", "https://stackoverflow.com/"])
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, link):
    driver.get(link)
    heading = driver.get_text('h1')
    return heading

print(scrape_heading_task())
print(scrape_heading_task())  # Data will be fetched from cache immediately 

Note: Caching is one of the most important features of Botasaurus.

metadata

The metadata option allows you to pass common information shared across all data items. This can include things like API keys, browser cookies, or any other data that remains constant throughout the scraping process.

It is commonly used with caching to exclude details like API keys and browser cookies from the cache key.

Here's an example of how to use the metadata option:

from botasaurus.task import task

@task()
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, data, metadata):
    print("metadata:", metadata)
    print("data:", data)

data = [
    {"profile": "pikachu", "proxy": "http://142.250.77.228:8000"},
    {"profile": "shinchan", "proxy": "http://142.250.77.229:8000"},
]
scrape_heading_task(
  data, 
  metadata={"api_key": "BDEC26..."}
)

async_queue

In the world of web scraping, there are only two types of scrapers:

  1. Dataset Scrapers: These extract data from websites and store it as datasets. Companies like Bright Data use them to build datasets for Crunchbase, Indeed, etc.

  2. Real-time Scrapers: These fetch data from sources in real-time, like SERP APIs that provide Google and DuckDuckGo search results.

When building real-time scrapers, speed is paramount because customers are waiting for requests to complete. The async_queue feature is incredibly useful in such cases.

async_queue allows you to run scraping tasks asynchronously in a queue and gather the results using the .get() method.

A great use case for async_queue is scraping Google Maps. Instead of scrolling through the list of places and then scraping the details of each place sequentially, you can use async_queue to:

  1. Scroll through the list of places.
  2. Simultaneously make HTTP requests to scrape the details of each place in the background.

By executing the scrolling and requesting tasks concurrently, you can significantly speed up the scraper.

Run the code below to see browser scrolling and request scraping happening concurrently (really cool, must try!):

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver, AsyncQueueResult
from botasaurus.request import request, Request
import json

def extract_title(html):
    return json.loads(
        html.split(";window.APP_INITIALIZATION_STATE=")[1].split(";window.APP_FLAGS")[0]
    )[5][3][2][1]

@request(
    parallel=5,
    async_queue=True,
    use_stealth=True,
    max_retry=5,
)
def scrape_place_title(request: Request, link, metadata):
    cookies = metadata["cookies"]
    html = request.get(link, cookies=cookies, timeout=12).text
    title = extract_title(html)
    print("Title:", title)
    return title

def has_reached_end(driver):
    return driver.select('p.fontBodyMedium > span > span') is not None

def extract_links(driver):
    return driver.get_all_links('[role="feed"] > div > div > a')

@browser()
def scrape_google_maps(driver: Driver, link):
    driver.google_get(link, accept_google_cookies=True)  # accepts google cookies popup

    scrape_place_obj: AsyncQueueResult = scrape_place_title()  # initialize the async queue for scraping places
    cookies = driver.get_cookies_dict()  # get the cookies from the driver

    while True:
        links = extract_links(driver)  # get the links to places
        scrape_place_obj.put(links, metadata={"cookies": cookies})  # add the links to the async queue for scraping

        print("scrolling")
        driver.scroll_to_bottom('[role="feed"]')  # scroll to the bottom of the feed

        if has_reached_end(driver):  # we have reached the end, let's break buddy
            break

    results = scrape_place_obj.get()  # get the scraped results from the async queue
    return results

scrape_google_maps("https://www.google.com/maps/search/web+developers+in+bangalore")

run_async

Similarly, the run_async option allows you to execute scraping tasks asynchronously, enabling concurrent execution.

Similar to async_queue, you can use the .get() method to retrieve the results of an asynchronous task.

Code Example:

from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver
from time import sleep

@browser(run_async=True)
def scrape_heading(driver: Driver, data):
    sleep(5)
    return {}

if __name__ == "__main__":
    result1 = scrape_heading()  # Launches asynchronously
    result2 = scrape_heading()  # Launches asynchronously

    result1.get()  # Wait for the first result
    result2.get()  # Wait for the second result

close_on_crash

The close_on_crash option determines the behavior of the scraper when an exception occurs:

  • If set to False (default):
    • The scraper will make a beep sound and pause the browser.
    • This makes debugging easier by keeping the browser open at the point of the crash.
    • Use this setting during development and testing.
  • If set to True:
    • The scraper will close the browser and continue with the rest of the data items.
    • This is suitable for production environments when you are confident that your scraper is robust.
    • Use this setting to avoid interruptions and ensure the scraper processes all data items.
from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@browser(
    close_on_crash=False  # Determines whether the browser is paused (default: False) or closed when an error occurs
)
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, data):
    raise Exception("An error occurred during scraping.")

scrape_heading_task()  

output and output_formats

By default, Botasaurus saves the result of scraping in the output/{your_scraping_function_name}.json file. Let's learn about various ways to configure the output.

  1. Change Output Filename: Use the output parameter in the decorator to specify a custom filename for the output.
from botasaurus.task import task

@task(output="my-output")
def scrape_heading_task(data): 
    return {"heading": "Hello, Mom!"}

scrape_heading_task()
  1. Disable Output: If you don't want any output to be saved, set output to None.
from botasaurus.task import task

@task(output=None)
def scrape_heading_task(data): 
    return {"heading": "Hello, Mom!"}

scrape_heading_task()
  1. Dynamically Write Output: To dynamically write output based on data and result, pass a function to the output parameter:
from botasaurus.task import task

def write_output(data, result):
    bt.write_json(result, 'data')
    bt.write_excel(result, 'data')

@task(output=write_output)  
def scrape_heading_task(data): 
    return {"heading": "Hello, Mom!"}

scrape_heading_task()

4.Save Outputs in Multiple Formats: Use the output_formats parameter to save outputs in different formats like JSON and EXCEL.

from botasaurus.task import task

@browser(output_formats=[bt.Formats.JSON, bt.Formats.EXCEL])  
def scrape_heading_task(data): 
    return {"heading": "Hello, Mom!"}

scrape_heading_task()

PRO TIP: When delivering data to customers, provide the dataset in JSON and Excel formats. Avoid CSV unless the customer asks, because Microsoft Excel has a hard time rendering CSV files with nested JSON.

CSV vs Excel csv-vs-excel

Exception Handling Options

Botasaurus provides various exception handling options to make your scrapers more robust:

  • max_retry: By default, any failed task is not retried. You can specify the maximum number of times to retry scraping when an error occurs using the max_retry option.
  • retry_wait: Specifies the waiting time between retries.
  • raise_exception: By default, Botasaurus does not raise an exception when an error occurs during scraping, because let's say you are keeping your PC running overnight to scrape 10,000 links. If one link fails, you really don't want to stop the entire scraping process, and ruin your morning by seeing an unfinished dataset.
  • must_raise_exceptions: Specifies exceptions that must be raised, even if raise_exception is set to False.
  • create_error_logs: Determines whether error logs should be created when exceptions occur. In production, when scraping hundreds of thousands of links, it's recommended to set create_error_logs to False to avoid using computational resources for creating error logs.
@browser(
    raise_exception=True,  # Raise an exception and halt the scraping process when an error occurs
    max_retry=5,  # Retry scraping a failed task a maximum of 5 times
    retry_wait=10,  # Wait for 10 seconds before retrying a failed task
    must_raise_exceptions=[CustomException],  # Definitely raise CustomException, even if raise_exception is set to False
    create_error_logs=False  # Disable the creation of error logs to optimize scraper performance
)
def scrape_heading_task(driver: Driver, data):
  # ...

What are some examples of common web scraping utilities provided by Botasaurus that make scraping easier?

bt Utility

The bt utility provides helper functions for:

  • Writing and reading JSON, EXCEL, and CSV files
  • Data cleaning

Some key functions are:

  • bt.write_json and bt.read_json: Easily write and read JSON files.
from botasaurus import bt

data = {"name": "Amit", "age": 30}
bt.write_json(data, "output")
loaded_data = bt.read_json("output")
  • bt.write_excel and bt.read_excel: Easily write and read EXCEL files.
from botasaurus import bt

data = {"name": "Amit", "age": 30}
bt.write_excel(data, "output")
loaded_data = bt.read_excel("output")
  • bt.write_csv and bt.read_csv: Easily write and read CSV files.
from botasaurus import bt

data = {"name": "Amit", "age": 30}
bt.write_csv(data, "output")
loaded_data = bt.read_csv("output")
  • bt.write_html and bt.read_html: Write HTML content to a file.
from botasaurus import bt

html_content = "<html><body><h1>Hello, Mom!</h1></body></html>"
bt.write_html(html_content, "output")
  • bt.write_temp_json, bt.write_temp_csv, bt.write_temp_html: Write temporary JSON, CSV, or HTML files for debugging purposes.
from botasaurus import bt

data = {"name": "Amit", "age": 30}
bt.write_temp_json(data)
bt.write_temp_csv(data)
bt.write_temp_html("<html><body><h1>Hello, Mom!</h1></body></html>")
  • Data cleaning functions like bt.extract_numbers, bt.extract_links, bt.remove_html_tags, and more.
text = "The price is $19.99 and the website is https://www.example.com"
numbers = bt.extract_numbers(text)  # [19.99]
links = bt.extract_links(text)  # ["https://www.example.com"]

Local Storage Utility

The Local Storage utility allows you to store and retrieve key-value pairs, which can be useful for maintaining state between scraper runs.

Here's how to use it:

from botasaurus.local_storage import LocalStorage

LocalStorage.set_item("credits_used", 100)
print(LocalStorage.get_item("credits_used", 0))

soupify Utility

The soupify utility creates a BeautifulSoup object from a Driver, Requests response, Driver Element, or HTML string.

from botasaurus.soupify import soupify
from botasaurus.request import request, Request
from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver

@request
def get_heading_from_request(req: Request, data):
   """
   Get the heading of a web page using the request object.
   """
   response = req.get("https://www.example.com")
   soup = soupify(response)
   heading = soup.find("h1").text
   print(f"Page Heading: {heading}")

@browser
def get_heading_from_driver(driver: Driver, data):
   """
   Get the heading of a web page using the driver object.
   """
   driver.get("https://www.example.com")

   # Get the heading from the entire page
   page_soup = soupify(driver)
   page_heading = page_soup.find("h1").text
   print(f"Heading from Driver's Soup: {page_heading}")

   # Get the heading from the body element
   body_soup = soupify(driver.select("body"))
   body_heading = body_soup.find("h1").text
   print(f"Heading from Element's Soup: {body_heading}")

# Call the functions
get_heading_from_request()
get_heading_from_driver()

IP Utils

IP Utils provide functions to get information about the current IP address, such as the IP itself, country, ISP, and more:

from botasaurus.ip_utils import IPUtils

# Get the current IP address
current_ip = IPUtils.get_ip()
print(current_ip)
# Output: 47.31.226.180

# Get detailed information about the current IP address
ip_info = IPUtils.get_ip_info()
print(ip_info)
# Output: {
#     "ip": "47.31.226.180",
#     "country": "IN",
#     "region": "Delhi",
#     "city": "Delhi",
#     "postal": "110001",
#     "coordinates": "28.6519,77.2315",
#     "latitude": "28.6519",
#     "longitude": "77.2315",
#     "timezone": "Asia/Kolkata",
#     "org": "AS55836 Reliance Jio Infocomm Limited"
# }

Cache Utility

The Cache utility in Botasaurus allows you to manage cached data for your scraper. You can put, get, has, remove, and clear cache data.

Basic Usage

from botasaurus.task import task
from botasaurus.cache import Cache

# Example scraping function
@task
def scrape_data(data):
    # Your scraping logic here
    return {"processed": data}

# Sample data for scraping
input_data = {"key": "value"}

# Adding data to the cache
Cache.put('scrape_data', input_data, scrape_data(input_data))

# Checking if data is in the cache
if Cache.has('scrape_data', input_data):
    # Retrieving data from the cache
    cached_data = Cache.get('scrape_data', input_data)
    print(f"Cached data: {cached_data}")

# Removing specific data from the cache
Cache.remove('scrape_data', input_data)

# Clearing the complete cache for the scrape_data function
Cache.clear('scrape_data')

Advanced Usage for large-scale scraping projects

Count Cached Items

You can count the number of items cached for a particular function, which can serve as a scraping progress bar.

from botasaurus.cache import Cache

Cache.print_cached_items_count('scraping_function')

Filter Cached/Uncached Items

You can filter items that have been cached or not cached for a particular function.

from botasaurus.cache import Cache

all_items = ['1', '2', '3', '4', '5']

# Get items that are cached
cached_items = Cache.filter_items_in_cache('scraping_function', all_items)
print(cached_items)

# Get items that are not cached
uncached_items = Cache.filter_items_not_in_cache('scraping_function', all_items)
print(uncached_items)

Delete Cache The cache for a function is stored in the cache/{your_scraping_function_name}/ folder. To delete the cache, simply delete that folder.

delete-cache

Delete Specific Items

You can delete specific items from the cache for a particular function.

from botasaurus.cache import Cache

all_items = ['1', '2', '3', '4', '5']
deleted_count = Cache.delete_items('scraping_function', all_items)
print(f"Deleted {deleted_count} items from the cache.")

Delete Items by Filter

In some cases, you may want to delete specific items from the cache based on a condition. For example, if you encounter honeypots (mock HTML served to dupe web scrapers) while scraping a website, you may want to delete those items from the cache.

def should_delete_item(item, result):
    if 'Honeypot Item' in result:
        return True  # Delete the item
    return False  # Don't delete the item

all_items = ['1', '2', '3', '4', '5']
# List of items to iterate over, it is fine if the list contains items which have not been cached, as they will be simply ignored.
Cache.delete_items_by_filter('scraping_function', all_items, should_delete_item)

Importantly, be cautious and first use delete_items_by_filter on a small set of items which you want to be deleted. Here's an example:

from botasaurus import bt
from botasaurus.cache import Cache

def should_delete_item(item, result):
    # TODO: Update the logic
    if 'Honeypot Item' in result:
        return True # Delete the item
    return False # Don't delete the item

test_items = ['1', '2'] # TODO: update with target items
scraping_function_name = 'scraping_function' # TODO:  update with target scraping function name
Cache.delete_items_by_filter(scraping_function_name, test_items, should_delete_item)

for item in test_items:
    if Cache.has(scraping_function_name, item):
        bt.prompt(f"Item {item} was not deleted. Please review the logic of the should_delete_item function.")

How to Extract Links from a Sitemap?

In web scraping, it is a common use case to scrape product pages, blogs, etc. But before scraping these pages, you need to get the links to these pages.

Many developers unnecessarily increase their work by writing code to visit each page one by one and scrape links, which they could have easily obtained by just looking at the Sitemap.

The Botasaurus Sitemap Module makes this process easy as cake by allowing you to get all links or sitemaps using:

  • The homepage URL (e.g., https://www.omkar.cloud/)
  • A direct sitemap link (e.g., https://www.omkar.cloud/sitemap.xml)
  • A .gz compressed sitemap

For example, if you're an Angel Investor seeking innovative tech startups, G2 is an ideal platform where companies showcase their products. You can run the following code to fetch over 160K+ product links from G2:

from botasaurus import *
from botasaurus.sitemap import Sitemap, Filters, Extractors

links = (
    Sitemap("https://www.g2.com/sitemaps/sitemap_index.xml.gz")
    .filter(Filters.first_segment_equals("products"))
    .extract(Extractors.extract_link_upto_second_segment())
    .links()
)
bt.write_temp_json(links)

Output:

g2-sitemap-links.png

Or, let's say you're in the mood for some reading and looking for good stories. The following code will get you over 1000+ stories from moralstories26.com:

from botasaurus import *
from botasaurus.sitemap import Sitemap, Filters

links = (
    Sitemap("https://moralstories26.com/")
    .filter(
        Filters.has_exactly_1_segment(),
        Filters.first_segment_not_equals(
            ["about", "privacy-policy", "akbar-birbal", "animal", "education", "fables", "facts", "family", "famous-personalities", "folktales", "friendship", "funny", "heartbreaking", "inspirational", "life", "love", "management", "motivational", "mythology", "nature", "quotes", "spiritual", "uncategorized", "zen"]
        ),
    )
    .links()
)

bt.write_temp_json(links)

Output:

moralstories26-sitemap-links.png

Also, before scraping a site, it's useful to identify the available sitemaps. This can be easily done with the following code:

from botasaurus import *
from botasaurus.sitemap import Sitemap

sitemaps = Sitemap("https://www.omkar.cloud/").sitemaps()
bt.write_temp_json(sitemaps)

Output:

omkar-sitemap-links.png

To ensure your scrapers run super fast, we cache the Sitemap, but you may want to periodically refresh the cache. To do so, delete the cache/sitemap folder. delete-sitemaps-cache

What is the best way to use caching in Botasaurus?

Sadly, when using caching, most developers write a scraping function that scrapes the HTML and extracts the data from the HTML in the same function, like this:

from botasaurus.request import request, Request
from botasaurus.soupify import soupify

@request
def scrape_heading_task(request: Request, data):
    # Navigate to the Link
    response = request.get(data["link"])
    
    # Create a BeautifulSoup object
    soup = soupify(response)
    
    # Retrieve the heading element's text
    heading = soup.find('h1').get_text()
    
    # Save the data as a JSON file in output/scrape_heading_task.json
    return {"heading": heading}

data_items = [
    "https://www.omkar.cloud/",
    "https://www.omkar.cloud/blog/",
    "https://stackoverflow.com/",
]

scrape_heading_task(data_items)

Now, let's say, after 50% of the dataset has been scraped, what if:

  • Your customer wants to add another data point (which is very likely), or
  • One of your BeautifulSoup selectors happens to be flaky and needs to be updated (which is super likely)?

In such cases, you will have to scrape all the pages again, which is painful as it will take a lot of time and incur high proxy costs.

To resolve this issue, you can:

  1. Write a function that only scrapes and caches the HTML.
  2. Write a separate function that calls the HTML scraping function, extracts data using BeautifulSoup, and caches the result.

Here's a practical example:

from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
from botasaurus.task import task
from botasaurus.request import request, Request
from botasaurus.soupify import soupify

@request(cache=True)
def scrape_html(request: Request, url):
    # Scrape the HTML and cache it
    html = request.get(url).text
    return html

def extract_data(soup: BeautifulSoup):
    # Extract the heading from the HTML
    heading = soup.find("h1").get_text()
    return {"heading": heading}

# Cache the scrape_heading task as well
@task(cache=True)
def scrape_heading(url):
    # Call the scrape_html function to get the cached HTML
    html = scrape_html(url)
    # Extract data from the HTML using the extract_data function
    return extract_data(soupify(html))

data_items = [
    "https://www.omkar.cloud/",
    "https://www.omkar.cloud/blog/",
    "https://stackoverflow.com/",
]

scrape_heading(data_items)

With this approach:

  • If you need to add data points or fix BeautifulSoup bugs, delete the cache/scrape_heading folder and re-run the scraper. delete-cache
  • You only need to re-run the BeautifulSoup extraction, not the entire HTML scraping, saving time and proxy costs. Yahoo!

PRO TIP: This approach also makes your extract_data code easier and faster to test, like this:

from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
from botasaurus import bt

def extract_data(soup: BeautifulSoup):
    heading = soup.find('h1').get_text()
    return {"heading": heading}

if __name__ == '__main__':
    html = bt.read_html('test')  # Saved Test Page
    result = extract_data(bt.soupify(html))
    bt.write_temp_json(result)

What are the recommended settings for each decorator to build a production-ready scraper in Botasaurus?

For websites with minimal bot protection, use the Request module.

Here's a template for creating production-ready datasets using the Request module:

from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
from botasaurus.task import task
from botasaurus.request import request, Request
from botasaurus.soupify import soupify

@request(
    # use_stealth=True, # Uncomment to use stealth mode
    # proxy='http://username:password@datacenter-proxy-domain:proxy-port', # Uncomment to use Proxy ONLY if you face IP blocking
    cache=True,

    parallel=40, # Run 40 requests in parallel, which is a good default
    max_retry=20, # Retry up to 20 times, which is a good default

    output=None,

    close_on_crash=True,
    raise_exception=True,
    create_error_logs=False,
)
def scrape_html(request: Request, url):
    # Scrape the HTML and cache it
    html = request.get(url).text
    return html

def extract_data(soup: BeautifulSoup):
    # Extract the heading from the HTML
    heading = soup.find("h1").get_text()
    return {"heading": heading}

# Cache the scrape_heading task as well
@task(
    cache=True,
    close_on_crash=True,
    create_error_logs=False,
)
def scrape_heading(url):
    # Call the scrape_html function to get the cached HTML
    html = scrape_html(url)
    # Extract data from the HTML using the extract_data function
    return extract_data(soupify(html))

data_items = [
    "https://www.omkar.cloud/",
    "https://www.omkar.cloud/blog/",
    "https://stackoverflow.com/",
]

scrape_heading(data_items)

For scraping bot-protected websites (e.g., by Cloudflare), use the Browser module.

Here's a template for creating production-ready datasets using the Browser module:

from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
from botasaurus.task import task
from botasaurus.browser import browser, Driver
from botasaurus.soupify import soupify

@browser(
    # proxy='http://username:password@datacenter-proxy-domain:proxy-port', # Uncomment to use Proxy ONLY if you face IP blocking

    # block_images_and_css=True, # Uncomment to block images and CSS, which can speed up scraping
    # wait_for_complete_page_load=False, # Uncomment to proceed once the DOM (Document Object Model) is loaded, without waiting for all resources to finish loading. This is recommended for faster scraping of Server Side Rendered (HTML) pages. eg: https://www.g2.com/products/jenkins/reviews.html

    cache=True,
    max_retry=5,  # Retry up to 5 times, which is a good default

    reuse_driver= True, # Reuse the same driver for all tasks
    
    output=None,

    close_on_crash=True,
    raise_exception=True,
    create_error_logs=False,
)
def scrape_html(driver: Driver, url):
    # Scrape the HTML and cache it
    driver.google_get(
        url,
        bypass_cloudflare=True,  # delete this line if the website you're accessing is not protected by Cloudflare
    )
    return driver.page_html

def extract_data(soup: BeautifulSoup):
    # Extract the heading from the HTML
    heading = soup.select_one('.product-head__title [itemprop="name"]').get_text()
    return {"heading": heading}

# Cache the scrape_heading task as well
@task(
    cache=True,
    close_on_crash=True,
    create_error_logs=False,
)
def scrape_heading(url):
    # Call the scrape_html function to get the cached HTML
    html = scrape_html(url)
    # Extract data from the HTML using the extract_data function
    return extract_data(soupify(html))

data_items = [
    "https://www.g2.com/products/stack-overflow-for-teams/reviews?page=8",
    "https://www.g2.com/products/jenkins/reviews?page=19",
]

scrape_heading(data_items)

What Are Some Tips for accessing Bot Protected sites?

  • Use google_get, use google_get, and use google_get!
  • Don't use headless mode, it makes your scraper easily detectable by most bot detection systems.
  • Don't use Proxies, instead use your home Wi-Fi connection, even when scraping hundreds of thousands of pages.

How Do I Close All Running Chrome Instances?

While developing a scraper, multiple browser instances may remain open in the background (because of interrupting it with CTRL + C). This situation can cause your computer to hang.

Many Chrome processes running in Task Manager

To prevent your PC from hanging, you can run the following command to close all Chrome instances:

python -m close_chrome

How to Run Scraper in Docker?

To run a Scraper in Docker, use the Botasaurus Starter Template, which includes the necessary Dockerfile and Docker Compose configurations.

Use the following commands to clone the Botasaurus Starter Template, build a Docker image from it, and execute the scraper within a Docker environment.

git clone https://github.com/omkarcloud/botasaurus-starter my-botasaurus-project
cd my-botasaurus-project
docker-compose build && docker-compose up

How to Run Scraper in Gitpod?

Running a scraper in Gitpod offers several benefits:

  • Allows your scraper to use a powerful 8-core machine with 1000 Mbps internet speed
  • Makes it easy to showcase your scraper to customers without them having to install anything, by simply sharing the Gitpod machine link

In this example, we will run the Botasaurus Starter template in Gitpod:

  1. First, visit this link and sign up using your GitHub account.

    Screenshot (148)

  2. Once signed up, open the starter project in Gitpod.

    gp-continue

  3. In the terminal, run the following command:

    python run.py
    
  4. You will see a popup notification with the heading "A service is available on port 3000". In the popup notification, click the "Open Browser" button to open the UI Dashboard in your browser

    open-browser.png

  5. Now, you can press the Run button to get the results.

    starter-photo.png

Note: Gitpod is not suitable for long-running tasks, as the environment will automatically shut down after a short period of inactivity. Use your local machine or a cloud VM for long-running scrapers.

How to Run Scraper in Virtual Machine?

To run your scraper in a Virtual Machine, we will:

  • Create a static IP
  • Create a VM with that IP
  • SSH into the VM
  • Install the scraper

Now, follow these steps to run your scraper in a Virtual Machine:

  1. Create a Google Cloud Account if you don't have one. You will receive $300 credit to use for 3 months. Select-your-billing-country

  2. Click the Cloud Shell button. A terminal will open up. click-cloud-shell-btn

  3. Run the following commands in the terminal:

    python -m pip install bota
    python -m bota create-ip
    

    You will be asked for a VM name. Enter any name you like, such as "pikachu".

    Name: pikachu

    Then, you will be asked for the region for the scraper. Press Enter to go with the default, which is "us-central1", as most global companies host their websites in the US.

    Region: Default

    Install bota

  4. Now, visit this link and create a deployment from Google Click to Deploy with the following settings:

    zone: us-central1-a # Use the zone from the region you selected in the previous step.
    Series: N1
    Machine Type: n1-standard-2 (2 vCPU, 1 core, 7.5 GB memory)
    Network Interface [External IP]: pikachu-ip # Use the IP name you created in the previous step.
    

    deploy-node

  5. Visit this link and click the SSH button to SSH into the VM. ssh-vm

  6. Now, run the following commands in the terminal, then wait for 5 minutes for the installation to complete:

    curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/omkarcloud/botasaurus/master/vm-scripts/install-scraper.sh | bash -s -- https://github.com/omkarcloud/botasaurus-starter
    

    install-scraper Note: If you are using a different repo, replace https://github.com/omkarcloud/botasaurus-starter with your repo URL. That's it! You have successfully launched the Scraper in a Virtual Machine. When the previous commands are done, you will see a link to your scraper. Visit it to run your scraper.

vm-success

How to delete the scraper and avoid incurring charges?

If you are deleting a custom scraper you deployed, please ensure you have downloaded the results from it.

Next, follow these steps to delete the scraper:

  1. Delete the static IP by running the following command:

    python -m bota delete-ip
    

    You will be asked for the name of the VM you created in the first step. Enter the name and press Enter.

    Delete IP

    Note: If you forgot the name of the IP, you can also delete all the IPs by running python -m bota delete-all-ips.

  2. Go to Deployment Manager and delete your deployment.

    Delete deployment

That's it! You have successfully deleted the scraper in the Virtual Machine.

Thanks

  • Kudos to the Apify Team for creating the got-scraping and proxy-chain libraries. The implementation of stealth Anti Detect Requests and SSL-based Proxy Authentication wouldn't have been possible without their groundbreaking work on got-scraping and proxy-chain.
  • Shout out to ultrafunkamsterdam for creating nodriver, which inspired the creation of Botasaurus Driver.
  • A special thanks to Cloudflare, DataDome, Imperva, and all bot detectors. Had you not been there, we wouldn't be either 😅.
  • Finally, a humongous thank you for choosing Botasaurus.

Love It? Star It! ⭐

Become one of our amazing stargazers by giving us a star ⭐ on GitHub!

It's just one click, but it means the world to me.

Stargazers for @omkarcloud/botasaurus

Disclaimer for Botasaurus Project

By using Botasaurus, you agree to comply with all applicable local and international laws related to data scraping, copyright, and privacy. The developers of Botasaurus are not responsible for any misuse of this software. It is the sole responsibility of the user to ensure adherence to all relevant laws regarding data scraping, copyright, and privacy, and to use Botasaurus in an ethical and legal manner.

We take the concerns of the Botasaurus Project very seriously. For any inquiries or issues, please contact Chetan Jain at chetan@omkar.cloud. We will take prompt and necessary action in response to your emails.

Made with ❤️ in Mastastic Bharat 🇮🇳 - Vande Mataram

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