goodbots verifies the IP addresses of respectful crawlers like Googlebot by performing reverse dns and forward dns lookups.
- Given an IP address (ex.
66.249.87.225
) - It performs a reverse dns lookup to get a hostname (ex.
crawl-66-249-87-225.googlebot.com
) - Then does a forward dns lookup on the hostname to get an IP (ex.
66.249.87.225
) - It compares the 1st IP to the 2nd IP
- If they match, goodbots outputs the IP and hostname
In search engine optimization (SEO), it is common to analyze a site's access logs (aka bot logs). Often there are various requests by spoofed user-agents pretending to be official search engine crawlers like Googlebot. In order to have an accurate understanding of the site's crawl rate, we want to verify the IP address of the various crawlers.
Clone the repo:
git clone git@github.com:eywu/goodbots.git
Change to the /cmd/goodbots
directory:
cd goodbots/cmd/goodbots
Build the binary/executable main.go
file:
go build
If you've built the main.go
file that comes with goodbots above, you can simply feed goodbots IPs via standard-in
.
Test a single IP
echo "203.208.60.1" | ./goodbots
Test a range of IPs with prips command line tool
prips 203.208.40.1 203.208.80.1 | ./goodbots
Test a list of IPs from a text or csv file
./goodbots < ip-list.txt
note: The CSV or text file expects only an IP on its own line.
Example:
66.249.87.224
203.208.23.146
203.208.23.126
203.208.60.227
goodbots prints to standard-out
with tab (\t) delimiters, so you can capture the output with an output redirect.
Example Output
203.208.60.1 crawl-203-208-60-1.googlebot.com
66.249.85.123 google-proxy-66-249-85-123.google.com
66.249.87.12 rate-limited-proxy-66-249-87-12.google.com
66.249.85.224 google-proxy-66-249-85-224.google.com
Save verified bot IPs provide in a file name ip-list.txt
to a filed named saved-results.tsv
./goodbots < ip-list.txt > saved-results.tsv
goodbots randomly selects a different public DNS resolver for each DNS lookup to reduce the chances of being blocked or throttled by your DNS provider if you have lots of IPs to verify.
It uses these DNS providers:
- CloudFlare Public DNS
- 1.1.1.1
- 1.0.0.1
- Google Public DNS
- 8.8.8.8
- 8.8.4.4
- Open DNS
- 208.67.222.222
- 208.67.220.220
- Quad9 DNS (⛔ not supported yet)
9.9.9.9149.112.112.112
Currently verifying the domain name is a little imprecise. goodbots looks for just the domain name to match and does NOT match the TLD.
Future improvements will test for more precise domains based on the crawlers specifications.
- googlebot
- .googlebot.
- .google.
- msnbot
- .msn.
- bingbot
- .msn.
- pinterest
- .pinterest.
- yandex
- .yandex.
- baidu
- .baidu.
- coccoc
- .coccoc.
By default we only set the concurrency of requests to 10. If you want to speed up the work, you can increase that
number by modifying the main.go
file before building the binary/executable.
In building goodbots, we created a general purpose function for simply resolving the hostnames of any IP address.
In main.go
you can uncomment the line that calls ResolveNames()
and comment out the GoodBots()
function call.
This will not perform a forward DNS lookup to verify the hostname resolves to the same IP address. Additionally, it will output errors to the TSV output when it encounters IPs that error out when requesting the hostname.
➜ goodbots git:(main) ✗ prips -i 50 66.100.0.0 66.200.0.0 | ./goodbots
66.100.0.50 (error) lookup 50.0.100.66.in-addr.arpa. on 192.168.1.1:53: no such host
...
66.100.1.144 (error) lookup 144.1.100.66.in-addr.arpa. on 192.168.1.1:53: no such host
66.100.0.150 WebGods
66.100.0.250 (error) lookup 250.0.100.66.in-addr.arpa. on 192.168.1.1:53: no such host
...
66.100.4.76 (error) lookup 76.4.100.66.in-addr.arpa. on 192.168.1.1:53: no such host
66.100.4.126 mail.esai.com
Suggestions from others
via John Murch
- Generate bad bot list for blacklist usage
- Track search engine bot list over time to see changes
- Google Documentation on Verifying Googlebot
- Google published IP ranges for Google API + services h/t Michael Stapelberg
- DuckDuckGo published IPs
- Facebook published IP ranges
Written in Golang Gopher courtesy of Gopherize.me