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Checks the provenance of a URL in the Wayback machine

Project description

Give waybackprov a URL and it will summarize which Internet Archive collections have archived the URL. This kind of information can sometimes provide insight about why a particular web resource or set of web resources were archived from the web.

Install

pip install waybackprov

Basic Usage

To check a particular URL here's how it works:

% waybackprov https://twitter.com/EPAScottPruitt
364 https://archive.org/details/focused_crawls
306 https://archive.org/details/edgi_monitor
151 https://archive.org/details/www3.epa.gov
 60 https://archive.org/details/epa.gov4
 47 https://archive.org/details/epa.gov5
...

The first column contains the number of crawls for a particular URL, and the second column contains the URL for the Internet Archive collection that added it.

Time

By default waybackprov will only look at the current year. If you would like it to examine a range of years use the --start and --end options:

% waybackprov --start 2016 --end 2018 https://twitter.com/EPAScottPruitt

Multiple Pages

If you would like to look at all URLs at a particular URL prefix you can use the --prefix option:

% waybackprov --prefix https://twitter.com/EPAScottPruitt

This will use the Internet Archive's CDX API to also include URLs that are extensions of the URL you supply, so it would include for example:

https://twitter.com/EPAScottPruitt/status/1309839080398339

But it can also include things you may not want, such as:

https://twitter.com/EPAScottPruitt/status/1309839080398339/media/1

To further limit the URLs use the --match parameter to specify a regular expression only check particular URLs. Further specifying the URLs you are interested in is highly recommended since it prevents lots of lookups for CSS, JavaScript and image files that are components of the resource that was initially crawled.

% waybackprov --prefix --match 'status/\d+$' https://twitter.com/EPAScottPruitt

Collections

One thing to remember when interpreting this data is that collections can contain other collections. For example the edgi_monitor collection is a sub-collection of focused_crawls.

If you use the --collapse option only the most specific collection will be reported for a given crawl. So if coll1 is part of coll2 which is part of coll3, only coll1 will be reported instead of coll1, coll2 and coll3. This does involve collection metadata lookups at the Internet Archive API, so it does slow performance significantly.

JSON and CSV

If you would rather see the raw data as JSON or CSV use the --format option. When you use either of these formats you will see the metadata for each crawl, rather than a summary.

Log

If you would like to see detailed information about what waybackprov is doing use the --log option to supply the a file path to log to:

% waybackprov --log waybackprov.log https://example.com/

Test

If you would like to test it first install pytest and then:

pytest test.py

Project details


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