Differences between revisions 33 and 34
Revision 33 as of 2012-01-04 11:58:44
Size: 6853
Editor: 81
Comment: Update links to Universal Feed Parser project pages
Revision 34 as of 2012-08-03 07:49:49
Size: 7144
Editor: inf
Comment: wiki restore 2013-01-23
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 1: Line 1:
#pragma section-numbers off
#acl Known:read,write All:read
Line 6: Line 4:
Line 7: Line 6:

Line 8: Line 9:
 * [[http://codeboje.de/blog/archives/Feeds-and-python-II.html]] - Short articles about using Universal Feed Parser  * http://codeboje.de/blog/archives/Feeds-and-python-II.html - Short articles about using Universal Feed Parser
Line 11: Line 13:

Line 13: Line 17:
 * SpycyRoll - I don't know much about - this is an ''aggregator,'' and perhaps other stuff as well  * [[SpycyRoll|SpycyRoll]] - I don't know much about - this is an ''aggregator,'' and perhaps other stuff as well
Line 16: Line 20:
Line 18: Line 23:
Feed Parser is an awesome RSS reader.
It is now hosted on Google Code & Sourceforge - [[http://code.google.com/p/feedparser/|Universal Feed Parser on Google Code]] ([[http://sourceforge.net/projects/feedparser/|Project Page on SourceForge]]).

Feed Parser is an awesome RSS reader. It is now hosted on Google Code & Sourceforge - [[http://code.google.com/p/feedparser/|Universal Feed Parser on Google Code]] ([[http://sourceforge.net/projects/feedparser/|Project Page on SourceForge]]).
Line 23: Line 29:
Line 25: Line 32:
{{{
#!python






{{{#!python
Line 35: Line 47:
You now have the RSS feed data for the Python``Info wiki!

You now have the RSS feed data for the PythonInfo wiki!
Line 39: Line 54:
Of particular interest:   || {{{feed[ "bozo" ]}}} || {{{1}}} if the feed data isn't well-formed XML. ||
|| {{{feed[ "url" ]}}} || URL of the feed's RSS feed ||
|| {{{feed[ "version" ]}}} || version of the RSS feed ||
|| {{{feed[ "channel" ][ "title" ] }}} || {{{"PythonInfo Wiki"}}} - Title of the Feed. ||
|| {{{feed[ "channel" ][ "description" ]}}} || {{{"RecentChanges at PythonInfo Wiki."}}} - Description of the Feed ||
|| {{{feed[ "channel" ][ "link" ]}}} || Link to RecentChanges - Web page associated with the feed. ||
|| {{{feed[ "channel" ][ "wiki_interwiki" ]}}} || {{{"Python``Info"}}} - For wiki, the wiki's preferred InterWiki moniker. ||
|| {{{feed[ "items" ]}}} || A gigantic list of all of the Recent``Changes items. ||

Of particular interest:



||{{{feed[ 
"bozo" ]}}} ||{{{1}}} if the feed data isn't well-formed XML. ||
||{{{feed[ "url" ]}}} ||URL of the feed's RSS feed ||
||{{{feed[ "version" ]}}} ||version of the RSS feed ||
||{{{feed[ "channel" ][ "title" ] }}} ||{{{"PythonInfo Wiki"}}} - Title of the Feed. ||
||{{{feed[ "channel" ][ "description" ]}}} ||{{{"RecentChanges at PythonInfo Wiki."}}} - Description of the Feed ||
||{{{feed[ "channel" ][ "link" ]}}} ||Link to [[RecentChanges|RecentChanges]] - Web page associated with the feed. ||
||{{{feed[ "channel" ][ "wiki_interwiki" ]}}} ||{{{"Python``Info"}}} - For wiki, the wiki's preferred [[InterWiki|InterWiki]] moniker. ||
||{{{feed[ "items" ]}}} ||A gigantic list of all of the RecentChanges items. ||



Line 52: Line 74:
|| {{{item[ "date" ]}}} || {{{"2004-02-13T22:28:23+08:00"}}} - ISO 8601 date ||
|| {{{item[ "date_parsed" ]}}} || {{{(2004,02,13,14,28,23,4,44,0)}}} ||
|| {{{item[ "title" ]}}} || title for item ||
|| {{{item[ "summary" ]}}} || change summary ||
|| {{{item[ "link" ]}}} || URL to the page ||
|| {{{item[ "wiki_diff" ]}}} || for wiki, a link to the diff for the page ||
|| {{{item[ "wiki_history" ]}}} || for wiki, a link to the page history ||


||{{{item[ "date" ]}}} ||
{{{"2004-02-13T22:28:23+08:00"}}} - ISO 8601 date ||
||{{{item[ "date_parsed" ]}}} ||{{{(2004,02,13,14,28,23,4,44,0)}}} ||
||{{{item[ "title" ]}}} ||title for item ||
||{{{item[ "summary" ]}}} ||change summary ||
||{{{item[ "link" ]}}} ||URL to the page ||
||{{{item[ "wiki_diff" ]}}} ||for wiki, a link to the diff for the page ||
||{{{item[ "wiki_history" ]}}} ||for wiki, a link to the page history ||



Line 62: Line 90:
Line 64: Line 93:
Line 66: Line 96:
{{{
#!python






{{{#!python
Line 78: Line 113:

Line 80: Line 117:
{{{
#!python






{{{#!python
Line 87: Line 129:
...and sort them, by SortingListsOfDictionaries:

{{{
#!python


...and sort them, by [[SortingListsOfDictionaries|SortingListsOfDictionaries]]:







{{{#!python
Line 92: Line 141:
sorted_entries = sorted_entries.reverse() # for most recent entries first
}}}
sorted_entries.reverse() # for most recent entries first
}}}

Line 97: Line 148:
Line 99: Line 151:
LionKimbro
[[
LionKimbro|LionKimbro]]
Line 102: Line 156:
Line 106: Line 161:
Line 108: Line 164:
Getting the "author"/"contributor" out of most ModWiki RSS feeds with the feedparser module is a bit confusing as of now. Right now (feedparser 3.3), it goes into the "rdf_value" attribute of the entry.
Getting the "author"/"contributor" out of most [[ModWiki|ModWiki]] RSS feeds with the feedparser module is a bit confusing as of now. Right now (feedparser 3.3), it goes into the "rdf_value" attribute of the entry.
Line 112: Line 170:


Line 114: Line 175:
  RawDog is a ready made aggregator if you don't want to write your own.
.
[[RawDog|RawDog]] is a ready made aggregator if you don't want to write your own.

Line 118: Line 183:
Line 120: Line 186:
In particular: I wrote the code because I needed a MoinMoin macro that aggregated RSS feeds.
In particular: I wrote the code because I needed a [[MoinMoin|MoinMoin]] macro that aggregated RSS feeds.
Line 124: Line 192:
That said, RawDog ''is'' Python, and it ''is'' using Feed Parser, so I've linked it at the bottom of the page.

-- LionKimbro <<DateTime(2004-12-27T08:44:40Z)>>

That said, [[RawDog|RawDog]] ''is'' Python, and it ''is'' using Feed Parser, so I've linked it at the bottom of the page.


-- [[LionKimbro|LionKimbro]] 2004-12-27 08:44:40
Line 130: Line 201:


Line 132: Line 206:
  Usually, such performance is not necessary, unless you have thousands of feeds to retrieve every hour. If you have less than a few hundred feeds an hour to retrieve, one a time is probably better - why peak out your processor/bandwidth?  
 .
Usually, such performance is not necessary, unless you have thousands of feeds to retrieve every hour. If you have less than a few hundred feeds an hour to retrieve, one a time is probably better - why peak out your processor/bandwidth?
Line 136: Line 212:
Line 138: Line 215:
  Other things to help you be polite:
    * try and retrieve things a few times a day or week.  don't request hourly updates unless you need them.
    * avoid updates on the hour or half hour.  Try a random time into the hour, like 27 or 33 or whatever, or poll at an interval like 693 minutes rather than 600, so that only rarely do you poll sites near the hour boundry.  It is problematic for sites to get polled by hundreds of aggregators on the hour.
    * be sure to use HttpConditionalGetRequests and honour content-expires response flags
    * be sure to support HttpCompression in the responses.

 .
Other things to help you be polite:
  * try and retrieve things a few times a day or week. don't request hourly updates unless you need them.
  * avoid updates on the hour or half hour. Try a random time into the hour, like 27 or 33 or whatever, or poll at an interval like 693 minutes rather than 600, so that only rarely do you poll sites near the hour boundry. It is problematic for sites to get polled by hundreds of aggregators on the hour.
  * be sure to use [[HttpConditionalGetRequests|HttpConditionalGetRequests]] and honour content-expires response flags
  * be sure to support [[HttpCompression|HttpCompression]] in the responses.

Line 146: Line 226:
Line 148: Line 229:
Line 150: Line 232:
-- LionKimbro <<DateTime(2004-12-27T08:44:40Z)>>

------------------

Can someone please give a sample of how FeedParser works along with Future Threads to make an RSS AGGREGATOR.

-- [[LionKimbro|LionKimbro]] 2004-12-27 08:44:40


----------




Can someone please give a sample of how [[FeedParser|FeedParser]] works along with Future Threads to make an RSS AGGREGATOR.
Line 159: Line 247:
----  ----

Python RSS Code

Articles:

Libraries:

Feed Parser

Feed Parser is an awesome RSS reader. It is now hosted on Google Code & Sourceforge - Universal Feed Parser on Google Code (Project Page on SourceForge).

Universal Feed Parser documentation.

Download it, and then start a Python prompt in the same directory.

   1 import feedparser
   2 
   3 python_wiki_rss_url = "http://www.python.org/cgi-bin/moinmoin/" \
   4                       "RecentChanges?action=rss_rc"
   5 
   6 feed = feedparser.parse( python_wiki_rss_url )

You now have the RSS feed data for the PythonInfo wiki!

Take a look at it; There's a lot of data there.

Of particular interest:

feed[ "bozo" ]

1 if the feed data isn't well-formed XML.

feed[ "url" ]

URL of the feed's RSS feed

feed[ "version" ]

version of the RSS feed

feed[ "channel" ][ "title" ] 

"PythonInfo Wiki" - Title of the Feed.

feed[ "channel" ][ "description" ]

"RecentChanges at PythonInfo Wiki." - Description of the Feed

feed[ "channel" ][ "link" ]

Link to RecentChanges - Web page associated with the feed.

feed[ "channel" ][ "wiki_interwiki" ]

"Python``Info" - For wiki, the wiki's preferred InterWiki moniker.

feed[ "items" ]

A gigantic list of all of the RecentChanges items.

For each item in feed["items"], we have:

item[ "date" ]

"2004-02-13T22:28:23+08:00" - ISO 8601 date

item[ "date_parsed" ]

(2004,02,13,14,28,23,4,44,0)

item[ "title" ]

title for item

item[ "summary" ]

change summary

item[ "link" ]

URL to the page

item[ "wiki_diff" ]

for wiki, a link to the diff for the page

item[ "wiki_history" ]

for wiki, a link to the page history

Aggregating Feeds with Feed Parser

If you're pulling down a lot of feeds, and aggregating them:

First, you may want to use Future threads to pull down your feeds. That way, you can send out 5 requests immediately, and wait for them all to come back at once, rather than sending out a request, waiting for it to come in, send out another request, wait for it to come back in, etc., etc.,.

   1 from future import Future
   2 
   3 hit_list = [ "http://...", "...", "..." ] # list of feeds to pull down
   4 
   5 # pull down all feeds
   6 future_calls = [Future(feedparser.parse,rss_url) for rss_url in hit_list]
   7 # block until they are all in
   8 feeds = [future_obj() for future_obj in future_calls]

Now that you have your feeds, extract all the entries.

   1 entries = []
   2 for feed in feeds:
   3     entries.extend( feed[ "items" ] )

...and sort them, by SortingListsOfDictionaries:

   1 sorted_entries = sorted(entries, key=lambda entry: entry["date_parsed"])
   2 sorted_entries.reverse() # for most recent entries first

Congratulations! You've aggregated a bunch of changes!

Contributors

LionKimbro

  • RawDog is an RSS aggregator written in Python & using Feed Parser

  • Feedjack Planet like Feed aggregator using Universal Feed Parser and the django webframework

Discussion

Getting the "author"/"contributor" out of most ModWiki RSS feeds with the feedparser module is a bit confusing as of now. Right now (feedparser 3.3), it goes into the "rdf_value" attribute of the entry.


I'm moving the following out of the main text:

  • RawDog is a ready made aggregator if you don't want to write your own.

Are you concerned that I'm encouraging people to reduplicate efforts, making aggregator after aggregator after aggregator?

That's not the case; there are good reasons to write aggregators yet.

In particular: I wrote the code because I needed a MoinMoin macro that aggregated RSS feeds.

I imagine that there are other good reasons to write aggregating code.

That said, RawDog is Python, and it is using Feed Parser, so I've linked it at the bottom of the page.

-- LionKimbro 2004-12-27 08:44:40


Next, I moved this out of the main text:

  • Usually, such performance is not necessary, unless you have thousands of feeds to retrieve every hour. If you have less than a few hundred feeds an hour to retrieve, one a time is probably better - why peak out your processor/bandwidth?

This makes sense if you're just writing a client aggregator for reading blogs. But if you're compiling parts of a web page, then you want to generate a response within 20 seconds, not 3 minutes.

Similarly, I'm removing:

  • Other things to help you be polite:
    • try and retrieve things a few times a day or week. don't request hourly updates unless you need them.
    • avoid updates on the hour or half hour. Try a random time into the hour, like 27 or 33 or whatever, or poll at an interval like 693 minutes rather than 600, so that only rarely do you poll sites near the hour boundry. It is problematic for sites to get polled by hundreds of aggregators on the hour.
    • be sure to use HttpConditionalGetRequests and honour content-expires response flags

    • be sure to support HttpCompression in the responses.

Maybe there's some other page on some other wiki where this belongs. I don't think that space is here.

I'm mainly concerned here with giving an example of how the RSS library works, the kinds of things you can do with it, how to combine it's use with the Futures module.

This isn't really about writing aggregators.

-- LionKimbro 2004-12-27 08:44:40


Can someone please give a sample of how FeedParser works along with Future Threads to make an RSS AGGREGATOR.

Manasa


RssLibraries (last edited 2014-05-08 00:46:56 by DaleAthanasias)

Unable to edit the page? See the FrontPage for instructions.