A standalone version of the readability library used for Firefox Reader View.
To parse a document, you must create a new Readability
object from a DOM document object, and then call parse()
. Here's an example:
var article = new Readability(document).parse();
This article
object will contain the following properties:
title
: article titlecontent
: HTML string of processed article contentlength
: length of an article, in charactersexcerpt
: article description, or short excerpt from the contentbyline
: author metadatadir
: content direction
If you're using Readability on the web, you will likely be able to use a document
reference
from elsewhere (e.g. fetched via XMLHttpRequest, in a same-origin <iframe>
you have access to, etc.).
Readability's parse()
works by modifying the DOM. This removes some elements in the web page.
You could avoid this by passing the clone of the document
object while creating a Readability
object.
var documentClone = document.cloneNode(true);
var article = new Readability(documentClone).parse();
In node.js, you won't generally have a DOM document object. To obtain one, you can use external
libraries like jsdom. While this repository contains a parser of
its own (JSDOMParser
), that is restricted to reading XML-compatible markup and therefore we do
not recommend it for general use.
If you're using jsdom
to create a DOM object, you should ensure that the page doesn't run (page)
scripts (avoid fetching remote resources etc.) as well as passing it the page's URI as the url
property of the options
object you pass the JSDOM
constructor.
var JSDOM = require('jsdom').JSDOM;
var doc = new JSDOM("<body>Here's a bunch of text</body>", {
url: "https://www.example.com/the-page-i-got-the-source-from",
});
let reader = new Readability(doc.window.document);
let article = reader.parse();
It's a quick-and-dirty way of figuring out if it's plausible that the contents of a given document are suitable for processing with Readability. It is likely to produce both false positives and false negatives. The reason it exists is to avoid bogging down a time-sensitive process (like loading and showing the user a webpage) with the complex logic in the core of Readability. Improvements to its logic (while not deteriorating its performance) are very welcome.
If you're going to use Readability with untrusted input (whether in HTML or DOM form), we strongly recommend you use a sanitizer library like DOMPurify to avoid script injection when you use the output of Readability. We would also recommend using CSP to add further defense-in-depth restrictions to what you allow the resulting content to do. The Firefox integration of reader mode uses both of these techniques itself. Sanitizing unsafe content out of the input is explicitly not something we aim to do as part of Readability itself - there are other good sanitizer libraries out there, use them!
For outstanding issues, see the issue list in this repo, as well as this bug list.
Any changes to Readability.js itself should be reviewed by an appropriate Firefox/toolkit peer, such as @gijsk, since these changes will be merged to mozilla-central and shipped in Firefox.
To test local changes to Readability.js, you can use the automated tests. There's a node script to help you create new ones.
Please run eslint as a first check that your changes are valid JS and adhere to our style guidelines.
To run the test suite:
$ mocha test/test-*.js
To run a specific test page by its name:
$ mocha test/test-*.js -g 001
To run the test suite in TDD mode:
$ mocha test/test-*.js -w
Combo time:
$ mocha test/test-*.js -w -g 001
Benchmarks for all test pages:
$ npm run perf
Reference benchmark:
$ npm run perf-reference
Copyright (c) 2010 Arc90 Inc
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.