This package provides a class to crawl links on a website. Under the hood Guzzle promises are used to crawl multiple urls concurrently.
Because the crawler can execute JavaScript, it can crawl JavaScript rendered sites. Under the hood Chrome and Puppeteer are used to power this feature.
Spatie is a webdesign agency in Antwerp, Belgium. You'll find an overview of all our open source projects on our website.
This package can be installed via Composer:
composer require spatie/crawler
The crawler can be instantiated like this
use Spatie\Crawler\Crawler;
Crawler::create()
->setCrawlObserver(<class that extends \Spatie\Crawler\CrawlObserver>)
->startCrawling($url);
The argument passed to setCrawlObserver
must be an object that extends the \Spatie\Crawler\CrawlObserver
abstract class:
namespace Spatie\Crawler;
use GuzzleHttp\Exception\RequestException;
use Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface;
use Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface;
abstract class CrawlObserver
{
/**
* Called when the crawler will crawl the url.
*
* @param \Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface $url
*/
public function willCrawl(UriInterface $url)
{
}
/**
* Called when the crawler has crawled the given url successfully.
*
* @param \Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface $url
* @param \Psr\Http\Message\ResponseInterface $response
* @param \Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface|null $foundOnUrl
*/
abstract public function crawled(
UriInterface $url,
ResponseInterface $response,
?UriInterface $foundOnUrl = null
);
/**
* Called when the crawler had a problem crawling the given url.
*
* @param \Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface $url
* @param \GuzzleHttp\Exception\RequestException $requestException
* @param \Psr\Http\Message\UriInterface|null $foundOnUrl
*/
abstract public function crawlFailed(
UriInterface $url,
RequestException $requestException,
?UriInterface $foundOnUrl = null
);
/**
* Called when the crawl has ended.
*/
public function finishedCrawling() {
}
}
You can set multiple observers with setCrawlObservers
:
Crawler::create()
->setCrawlObservers([
<class that extends \Spatie\Crawler\CrawlObserver>,
<class that extends \Spatie\Crawler\CrawlObserver>,
...
])
->startCrawling($url);
Alternatively you can set multiple observers one by one with addCrawlObserver
:
Crawler::create()
->addCrawlObserver(<class that extends \Spatie\Crawler\CrawlObserver>)
->addCrawlObserver(<class that extends \Spatie\Crawler\CrawlObserver>)
->addCrawlObserver(<class that extends \Spatie\Crawler\CrawlObserver>)
->startCrawling($url);
By default, the crawler will not execute JavaScript. This is how you can enable the execution of JavaScript:
Crawler::create()
->executeJavaScript()
...
In order to make it possible to get the body html after the javascript has been executed, this package depends on our Browsershot package. This package uses Puppeteer under the hood. Here are some pointers on how to install it on your system.
Browsershot will make an educated guess as to where its dependencies are installed on your system.
By default, the Crawler will instantiate a new Browsershot instance. You may find the need to set a custom created instance using the setBrowsershot(Browsershot $browsershot)
method.
Crawler::create()
->setBrowsershot($browsershot)
->executeJavaScript()
...
Note that the crawler will still work even if you don't have the system dependencies required by Browsershot.
These system dependencies are only required if you're calling executeJavaScript()
.
You can tell the crawler not to visit certain urls by using the setCrawlProfile
-function. That function expects
an object that extends Spatie\Crawler\CrawlProfile
:
/*
* Determine if the given url should be crawled.
*/
public function shouldCrawl(UriInterface $url): bool;
This package comes with three CrawlProfiles
out of the box:
CrawlAllUrls
: this profile will crawl all urls on all pages including urls to an external site.CrawlInternalUrls
: this profile will only crawl the internal urls on the pages of a host.CrawlSubdomains
: this profile will only crawl the internal urls and its subdomains on the pages of a host.
By default, the crawler will respect robots data. It is possible to disable these checks like so:
Crawler::create()
->ignoreRobots()
...
Robots data can come from either a robots.txt
file, meta tags or response headers.
More information on the spec can be found here: http://www.robotstxt.org/.
Parsing robots data is done by our package spatie/robots-txt.
To improve the speed of the crawl the package concurrently crawls 10 urls by default. If you want to change that number you can use the setConcurrency
method.
Crawler::create()
->setConcurrency(1) //now all urls will be crawled one by one
By default, the crawler continues until it has crawled every page of the supplied URL. If you want to limit the amount of urls the crawler should crawl you can use the setMaximumCrawlCount
method.
// stop crawling after 5 urls
Crawler::create()
->setMaximumCrawlCount(5)
By default, the crawler continues until it has crawled every page of the supplied URL. If you want to limit the depth of the crawler you can use the setMaximumDepth
method.
Crawler::create()
->setMaximumDepth(2)
Most html pages are quite small. But the crawler could accidentally pick up on large files such as PDFs and MP3s. To keep memory usage low in such cases the crawler will only use the responses that are smaller than 2 MB. If, when streaming a response, it becomes larger than 2 MB, the crawler will stop streaming the response. An empty response body will be assumed.
You can change the maximum response size.
// let's use a 3 MB maximum.
Crawler::create()
->setMaximumResponseSize(1024 * 1024 * 3)
In some cases you might get rate-limited when crawling too agressively. To circumvent this, you can use the setDelayBetweenRequests()
method to add a pause between every request. This value is expressed in miliseconds.
Crawler::create()
->setDelayBetweenRequests(150) // After every page crawled, the crawler will wait for 150ms
When crawling a site the crawler will put urls to be crawled in a queue. By default, this queue is stored in memory using the built-in CollectionCrawlQueue
.
When a site is very large you may want to store that queue elsewhere, maybe a database. In such cases, you can write your own crawl queue.
A valid crawl queue is any class that implements the Spatie\Crawler\CrawlQueue\CrawlQueue
-interface. You can pass your custom crawl queue via the setCrawlQueue
method on the crawler.
Crawler::create()
->setCrawlQueue(<implementation of \Spatie\Crawler\CrawlQueue\CrawlQueue>)
Please see CHANGELOG for more information what has changed recently.
Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.
To run the tests you'll have to start the included node based server first in a separate terminal window.
cd tests/server
npm install
./start_server.sh
With the server running, you can start testing.
vendor/bin/phpunit
If you discover any security related issues, please email freek@spatie.be instead of using the issue tracker.
You're free to use this package, but if it makes it to your production environment we highly appreciate you sending us a postcard from your hometown, mentioning which of our package(s) you are using.
Our address is: Spatie, Samberstraat 69D, 2060 Antwerp, Belgium.
We publish all received postcards on our company website.
Spatie is a webdesign agency based in Antwerp, Belgium. You'll find an overview of all our open source projects on our website.
Does your business depend on our contributions? Reach out and support us on Patreon. All pledges will be dedicated to allocating workforce on maintenance and new awesome stuff.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.