- Downloader Middleware
- Activating a downloader middleware
- Writing your own downloader middleware
- Built-in downloader middleware reference
- CookiesMiddleware
- DefaultHeadersMiddleware
- DownloadTimeoutMiddleware
- HttpAuthMiddleware
- HttpCacheMiddleware
- HttpCompressionMiddleware
- HttpProxyMiddleware
- RedirectMiddleware
- MetaRefreshMiddleware
- RetryMiddleware
- RobotsTxtMiddleware
- Implementing support for a new parser
- DownloaderStats
- UserAgentMiddleware
- AjaxCrawlMiddleware
Downloader Middleware
The downloader middleware is a framework of hooks into Scrapy’s request/response processing. It’s a light, low-level system for globally altering Scrapy’s requests and responses.
Activating a downloader middleware
To activate a downloader middleware component, add it to the DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES
setting, which is a dict whose keys are the middleware class paths and their values are the middleware orders.
Here’s an example:
DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES = {
'myproject.middlewares.CustomDownloaderMiddleware': 543,
}
The DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES
setting is merged with the DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES_BASE
setting defined in Scrapy (and not meant to be overridden) and then sorted by order to get the final sorted list of enabled middlewares: the first middleware is the one closer to the engine and the last is the one closer to the downloader. In other words, the process_request()
method of each middleware will be invoked in increasing middleware order (100, 200, 300, …) and the process_response()
method of each middleware will be invoked in decreasing order.
To decide which order to assign to your middleware see the DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES_BASE
setting and pick a value according to where you want to insert the middleware. The order does matter because each middleware performs a different action and your middleware could depend on some previous (or subsequent) middleware being applied.
If you want to disable a built-in middleware (the ones defined in DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES_BASE
and enabled by default) you must define it in your project’s DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES
setting and assign None
as its value. For example, if you want to disable the user-agent middleware:
DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES = {
'myproject.middlewares.CustomDownloaderMiddleware': 543,
'scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.useragent.UserAgentMiddleware': None,
}
Finally, keep in mind that some middlewares may need to be enabled through a particular setting. See each middleware documentation for more info.
Writing your own downloader middleware
Each downloader middleware is a Python class that defines one or more of the methods defined below.
The main entry point is the from_crawler
class method, which receives a Crawler
instance. The Crawler
object gives you access, for example, to the settings.
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.``DownloaderMiddleware
Note
Any of the downloader middleware methods may also return a deferred.
process_request
(request, spider)This method is called for each request that goes through the download middleware.
process_request()
should either: returnNone
, return aResponse
object, return aRequest
object, or raiseIgnoreRequest
.If it returns
None
, Scrapy will continue processing this request, executing all other middlewares until, finally, the appropriate downloader handler is called the request performed (and its response downloaded).If it returns a
Response
object, Scrapy won’t bother calling any otherprocess_request()
orprocess_exception()
methods, or the appropriate download function; it’ll return that response. Theprocess_response()
methods of installed middleware is always called on every response.If it returns a
Request
object, Scrapy will stop calling process_request methods and reschedule the returned request. Once the newly returned request is performed, the appropriate middleware chain will be called on the downloaded response.If it raises an
IgnoreRequest
exception, theprocess_exception()
methods of installed downloader middleware will be called. If none of them handle the exception, the errback function of the request (Request.errback
) is called. If no code handles the raised exception, it is ignored and not logged (unlike other exceptions).
process_response
(request, response, spider)process_response()
should either: return aResponse
object, return aRequest
object or raise aIgnoreRequest
exception.If it returns a
Response
(it could be the same given response, or a brand-new one), that response will continue to be processed with theprocess_response()
of the next middleware in the chain.If it returns a
Request
object, the middleware chain is halted and the returned request is rescheduled to be downloaded in the future. This is the same behavior as if a request is returned fromprocess_request()
.If it raises an
IgnoreRequest
exception, the errback function of the request (Request.errback
) is called. If no code handles the raised exception, it is ignored and not logged (unlike other exceptions).
process_exception
(request, exception, spider)Scrapy calls
process_exception()
when a download handler or aprocess_request()
(from a downloader middleware) raises an exception (including anIgnoreRequest
exception)process_exception()
should return: eitherNone
, aResponse
object, or aRequest
object.If it returns
None
, Scrapy will continue processing this exception, executing any otherprocess_exception()
methods of installed middleware, until no middleware is left and the default exception handling kicks in.If it returns a
Response
object, theprocess_response()
method chain of installed middleware is started, and Scrapy won’t bother calling any otherprocess_exception()
methods of middleware.If it returns a
Request
object, the returned request is rescheduled to be downloaded in the future. This stops the execution ofprocess_exception()
methods of the middleware the same as returning a response would.
from_crawler
(cls, crawler)If present, this classmethod is called to create a middleware instance from a
Crawler
. It must return a new instance of the middleware. Crawler object provides access to all Scrapy core components like settings and signals; it is a way for middleware to access them and hook its functionality into Scrapy.Parameters
crawler (
Crawler
object) – crawler that uses this middleware
Built-in downloader middleware reference
This page describes all downloader middleware components that come with Scrapy. For information on how to use them and how to write your own downloader middleware, see the downloader middleware usage guide.
For a list of the components enabled by default (and their orders) see the DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES_BASE
setting.
CookiesMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.cookies.``CookiesMiddleware
[source]
This middleware enables working with sites that require cookies, such as those that use sessions. It keeps track of cookies sent by web servers, and sends them back on subsequent requests (from that spider), just like web browsers do.
Caution
When non-UTF8 encoded byte sequences are passed to a Request
, the CookiesMiddleware
will log a warning. Refer to Advanced customization to customize the logging behaviour.
Caution
Cookies set via the Cookie
header are not considered by the CookiesMiddleware. If you need to set cookies for a request, use the Request.cookies
parameter. This is a known current limitation that is being worked on.
The following settings can be used to configure the cookie middleware:
Multiple cookie sessions per spider
There is support for keeping multiple cookie sessions per spider by using the cookiejar
Request meta key. By default it uses a single cookie jar (session), but you can pass an identifier to use different ones.
For example:
for i, url in enumerate(urls):
yield scrapy.Request(url, meta={'cookiejar': i},
callback=self.parse_page)
Keep in mind that the cookiejar
meta key is not “sticky”. You need to keep passing it along on subsequent requests. For example:
def parse_page(self, response):
# do some processing
return scrapy.Request("http://www.example.com/otherpage",
meta={'cookiejar': response.meta['cookiejar']},
callback=self.parse_other_page)
COOKIES_ENABLED
Default: True
Whether to enable the cookies middleware. If disabled, no cookies will be sent to web servers.
Notice that despite the value of COOKIES_ENABLED
setting if Request.
meta['dont_merge_cookies']
evaluates to True
the request cookies will not be sent to the web server and received cookies in Response
will not be merged with the existing cookies.
For more detailed information see the cookies
parameter in Request
.
COOKIES_DEBUG
Default: False
If enabled, Scrapy will log all cookies sent in requests (i.e. Cookie
header) and all cookies received in responses (i.e. Set-Cookie
header).
Here’s an example of a log with COOKIES_DEBUG
enabled:
2011-04-06 14:35:10-0300 [scrapy.core.engine] INFO: Spider opened
2011-04-06 14:35:10-0300 [scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.cookies] DEBUG: Sending cookies to: <GET http://www.diningcity.com/netherlands/index.html>
Cookie: clientlanguage_nl=en_EN
2011-04-06 14:35:14-0300 [scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.cookies] DEBUG: Received cookies from: <200 http://www.diningcity.com/netherlands/index.html>
Set-Cookie: JSESSIONID=B~FA4DC0C496C8762AE4F1A620EAB34F38; Path=/
Set-Cookie: ip_isocode=US
Set-Cookie: clientlanguage_nl=en_EN; Expires=Thu, 07-Apr-2011 21:21:34 GMT; Path=/
2011-04-06 14:49:50-0300 [scrapy.core.engine] DEBUG: Crawled (200) <GET http://www.diningcity.com/netherlands/index.html> (referer: None)
[...]
DefaultHeadersMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.defaultheaders.``DefaultHeadersMiddleware
[source]
This middleware sets all default requests headers specified in the DEFAULT_REQUEST_HEADERS
setting.
DownloadTimeoutMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.downloadtimeout.``DownloadTimeoutMiddleware
[source]
This middleware sets the download timeout for requests specified in the DOWNLOAD_TIMEOUT
setting or download_timeout
spider attribute.
Note
You can also set download timeout per-request using download_timeout
Request.meta key; this is supported even when DownloadTimeoutMiddleware is disabled.
HttpAuthMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.httpauth.``HttpAuthMiddleware
[source]
This middleware authenticates all requests generated from certain spiders using Basic access authentication (aka. HTTP auth).
To enable HTTP authentication from certain spiders, set the http_user
and http_pass
attributes of those spiders.
Example:
from scrapy.spiders import CrawlSpider
class SomeIntranetSiteSpider(CrawlSpider):
http_user = 'someuser'
http_pass = 'somepass'
name = 'intranet.example.com'
# .. rest of the spider code omitted ...
HttpCacheMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.httpcache.``HttpCacheMiddleware
[source]
This middleware provides low-level cache to all HTTP requests and responses. It has to be combined with a cache storage backend as well as a cache policy.
Scrapy ships with three HTTP cache storage backends:
You can change the HTTP cache storage backend with the HTTPCACHE_STORAGE
setting. Or you can also implement your own storage backend.
Scrapy ships with two HTTP cache policies:
You can change the HTTP cache policy with the HTTPCACHE_POLICY
setting. Or you can also implement your own policy.
You can also avoid caching a response on every policy using dont_cache
meta key equals True
.
Dummy policy (default)
class scrapy.extensions.httpcache.``DummyPolicy
[source]
This policy has no awareness of any HTTP Cache-Control directives. Every request and its corresponding response are cached. When the same request is seen again, the response is returned without transferring anything from the Internet.
The Dummy policy is useful for testing spiders faster (without having to wait for downloads every time) and for trying your spider offline, when an Internet connection is not available. The goal is to be able to “replay” a spider run exactly as it ran before.
RFC2616 policy
class scrapy.extensions.httpcache.``RFC2616Policy
[source]
This policy provides a RFC2616 compliant HTTP cache, i.e. with HTTP Cache-Control awareness, aimed at production and used in continuous runs to avoid downloading unmodified data (to save bandwidth and speed up crawls).
What is implemented:
Do not attempt to store responses/requests with
no-store
cache-control directive setDo not serve responses from cache if
no-cache
cache-control directive is set even for fresh responsesCompute freshness lifetime from
max-age
cache-control directiveCompute freshness lifetime from
Expires
response headerCompute freshness lifetime from
Last-Modified
response header (heuristic used by Firefox)Compute current age from
Age
response headerCompute current age from
Date
headerRevalidate stale responses based on
Last-Modified
response headerRevalidate stale responses based on
ETag
response headerSet
Date
header for any received response missing itSupport
max-stale
cache-control directive in requests
This allows spiders to be configured with the full RFC2616 cache policy, but avoid revalidation on a request-by-request basis, while remaining conformant with the HTTP spec.
Example:
Add Cache-Control: max-stale=600
to Request headers to accept responses that have exceeded their expiration time by no more than 600 seconds.
See also: RFC2616, 14.9.3
What is missing:
Pragma: no-cache
support https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.9.1Vary
header support https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec13.html#sec13.6Invalidation after updates or deletes https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec13.html#sec13.10
… probably others ..
Filesystem storage backend (default)
class scrapy.extensions.httpcache.``FilesystemCacheStorage
[source]
File system storage backend is available for the HTTP cache middleware.
Each request/response pair is stored in a different directory containing the following files:
request_body
- the plain request bodyrequest_headers
- the request headers (in raw HTTP format)response_body
- the plain response bodyresponse_headers
- the request headers (in raw HTTP format)meta
- some metadata of this cache resource in Pythonrepr()
format (grep-friendly format)pickled_meta
- the same metadata inmeta
but pickled for more efficient deserialization
The directory name is made from the request fingerprint (see scrapy.utils.request.fingerprint
), and one level of subdirectories is used to avoid creating too many files into the same directory (which is inefficient in many file systems). An example directory could be:
/path/to/cache/dir/example.com/72/72811f648e718090f041317756c03adb0ada46c7
DBM storage backend
class scrapy.extensions.httpcache.``DbmCacheStorage
[source]
A DBM storage backend is also available for the HTTP cache middleware.
By default, it uses the dbm
, but you can change it with the HTTPCACHE_DBM_MODULE
setting.
Writing your own storage backend
You can implement a cache storage backend by creating a Python class that defines the methods described below.
class scrapy.extensions.httpcache.``CacheStorage
open_spider
(spider)This method gets called after a spider has been opened for crawling. It handles the
open_spider
signal.Parameters
spider (
Spider
object) – the spider which has been opened
close_spider
(spider)This method gets called after a spider has been closed. It handles the
close_spider
signal.Parameters
spider (
Spider
object) – the spider which has been closed
retrieve_response
(spider, request)Return response if present in cache, or
None
otherwise.
store_response
(spider, request, response)Store the given response in the cache.
In order to use your storage backend, set:
HTTPCACHE_STORAGE
to the Python import path of your custom storage class.
HTTPCache middleware settings
The HttpCacheMiddleware
can be configured through the following settings:
HTTPCACHE_ENABLED
Default: False
Whether the HTTP cache will be enabled.
HTTPCACHE_EXPIRATION_SECS
Default: 0
Expiration time for cached requests, in seconds.
Cached requests older than this time will be re-downloaded. If zero, cached requests will never expire.
HTTPCACHE_DIR
Default: 'httpcache'
The directory to use for storing the (low-level) HTTP cache. If empty, the HTTP cache will be disabled. If a relative path is given, is taken relative to the project data dir. For more info see: Default structure of Scrapy projects.
HTTPCACHE_IGNORE_HTTP_CODES
Default: []
Don’t cache response with these HTTP codes.
HTTPCACHE_IGNORE_MISSING
Default: False
If enabled, requests not found in the cache will be ignored instead of downloaded.
HTTPCACHE_IGNORE_SCHEMES
Default: ['file']
Don’t cache responses with these URI schemes.
HTTPCACHE_STORAGE
Default: 'scrapy.extensions.httpcache.FilesystemCacheStorage'
The class which implements the cache storage backend.
HTTPCACHE_DBM_MODULE
Default: 'dbm'
The database module to use in the DBM storage backend. This setting is specific to the DBM backend.
HTTPCACHE_POLICY
Default: 'scrapy.extensions.httpcache.DummyPolicy'
The class which implements the cache policy.
HTTPCACHE_GZIP
Default: False
If enabled, will compress all cached data with gzip. This setting is specific to the Filesystem backend.
HTTPCACHE_ALWAYS_STORE
Default: False
If enabled, will cache pages unconditionally.
A spider may wish to have all responses available in the cache, for future use with Cache-Control: max-stale
, for instance. The DummyPolicy caches all responses but never revalidates them, and sometimes a more nuanced policy is desirable.
This setting still respects Cache-Control: no-store
directives in responses. If you don’t want that, filter no-store
out of the Cache-Control headers in responses you feed to the cache middleware.
HTTPCACHE_IGNORE_RESPONSE_CACHE_CONTROLS
Default: []
List of Cache-Control directives in responses to be ignored.
Sites often set “no-store”, “no-cache”, “must-revalidate”, etc., but get upset at the traffic a spider can generate if it actually respects those directives. This allows to selectively ignore Cache-Control directives that are known to be unimportant for the sites being crawled.
We assume that the spider will not issue Cache-Control directives in requests unless it actually needs them, so directives in requests are not filtered.
HttpCompressionMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.httpcompression.``HttpCompressionMiddleware
[source]
This middleware allows compressed (gzip, deflate) traffic to be sent/received from web sites.
This middleware also supports decoding brotli-compressed as well as zstd-compressed responses, provided that brotlipy or zstandard is installed, respectively.
HttpCompressionMiddleware Settings
COMPRESSION_ENABLED
Default: True
Whether the Compression middleware will be enabled.
HttpProxyMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.httpproxy.``HttpProxyMiddleware
[source]
This middleware sets the HTTP proxy to use for requests, by setting the proxy
meta value for Request
objects.
Like the Python standard library module urllib.request
, it obeys the following environment variables:
http_proxy
https_proxy
no_proxy
You can also set the meta key proxy
per-request, to a value like http://some_proxy_server:port
or http://username:password@some_proxy_server:port
. Keep in mind this value will take precedence over http_proxy
/https_proxy
environment variables, and it will also ignore no_proxy
environment variable.
RedirectMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.redirect.``RedirectMiddleware
[source]
This middleware handles redirection of requests based on response status.
The urls which the request goes through (while being redirected) can be found in the redirect_urls
Request.meta
key.
The reason behind each redirect in redirect_urls
can be found in the redirect_reasons
Request.meta
key. For example: [301, 302, 307, 'meta refresh']
.
The format of a reason depends on the middleware that handled the corresponding redirect. For example, RedirectMiddleware
indicates the triggering response status code as an integer, while MetaRefreshMiddleware
always uses the 'meta refresh'
string as reason.
The RedirectMiddleware
can be configured through the following settings (see the settings documentation for more info):
If Request.meta
has dont_redirect
key set to True, the request will be ignored by this middleware.
If you want to handle some redirect status codes in your spider, you can specify these in the handle_httpstatus_list
spider attribute.
For example, if you want the redirect middleware to ignore 301 and 302 responses (and pass them through to your spider) you can do this:
class MySpider(CrawlSpider):
handle_httpstatus_list = [301, 302]
The handle_httpstatus_list
key of Request.meta
can also be used to specify which response codes to allow on a per-request basis. You can also set the meta key handle_httpstatus_all
to True
if you want to allow any response code for a request.
RedirectMiddleware settings
REDIRECT_ENABLED
Default: True
Whether the Redirect middleware will be enabled.
REDIRECT_MAX_TIMES
Default: 20
The maximum number of redirections that will be followed for a single request. After this maximum, the request’s response is returned as is.
MetaRefreshMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.redirect.``MetaRefreshMiddleware
[source]
This middleware handles redirection of requests based on meta-refresh html tag.
The MetaRefreshMiddleware
can be configured through the following settings (see the settings documentation for more info):
This middleware obey REDIRECT_MAX_TIMES
setting, dont_redirect
, redirect_urls
and redirect_reasons
request meta keys as described for RedirectMiddleware
MetaRefreshMiddleware settings
METAREFRESH_ENABLED
Default: True
Whether the Meta Refresh middleware will be enabled.
METAREFRESH_IGNORE_TAGS
Default: []
Meta tags within these tags are ignored.
Changed in version 2.0: The default value of METAREFRESH_IGNORE_TAGS
changed from ['script', 'noscript']
to []
.
METAREFRESH_MAXDELAY
Default: 100
The maximum meta-refresh delay (in seconds) to follow the redirection. Some sites use meta-refresh for redirecting to a session expired page, so we restrict automatic redirection to the maximum delay.
RetryMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.retry.``RetryMiddleware
[source]
A middleware to retry failed requests that are potentially caused by temporary problems such as a connection timeout or HTTP 500 error.
Failed pages are collected on the scraping process and rescheduled at the end, once the spider has finished crawling all regular (non failed) pages.
The RetryMiddleware
can be configured through the following settings (see the settings documentation for more info):
If Request.meta
has dont_retry
key set to True, the request will be ignored by this middleware.
RetryMiddleware Settings
RETRY_ENABLED
Default: True
Whether the Retry middleware will be enabled.
RETRY_TIMES
Default: 2
Maximum number of times to retry, in addition to the first download.
Maximum number of retries can also be specified per-request using max_retry_times
attribute of Request.meta
. When initialized, the max_retry_times
meta key takes higher precedence over the RETRY_TIMES
setting.
RETRY_HTTP_CODES
Default: [500, 502, 503, 504, 522, 524, 408, 429]
Which HTTP response codes to retry. Other errors (DNS lookup issues, connections lost, etc) are always retried.
In some cases you may want to add 400 to RETRY_HTTP_CODES
because it is a common code used to indicate server overload. It is not included by default because HTTP specs say so.
RobotsTxtMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.robotstxt.``RobotsTxtMiddleware
[source]
This middleware filters out requests forbidden by the robots.txt exclusion standard.
To make sure Scrapy respects robots.txt make sure the middleware is enabled and the ROBOTSTXT_OBEY
setting is enabled.
The ROBOTSTXT_USER_AGENT
setting can be used to specify the user agent string to use for matching in the robots.txt file. If it is None
, the User-Agent header you are sending with the request or the USER_AGENT
setting (in that order) will be used for determining the user agent to use in the robots.txt file.
This middleware has to be combined with a robots.txt parser.
Scrapy ships with support for the following robots.txt parsers:
Protego (default)
You can change the robots.txt parser with the ROBOTSTXT_PARSER
setting. Or you can also implement support for a new parser.
If Request.meta
has dont_obey_robotstxt
key set to True the request will be ignored by this middleware even if ROBOTSTXT_OBEY
is enabled.
Parsers vary in several aspects:
Language of implementation
Supported specification
Support for wildcard matching
Usage of length based rule: in particular for
Allow
andDisallow
directives, where the most specific rule based on the length of the path trumps the less specific (shorter) rule
Performance comparison of different parsers is available at the following link.
Protego parser
Based on Protego:
implemented in Python
is compliant with Google’s Robots.txt Specification
supports wildcard matching
uses the length based rule
Scrapy uses this parser by default.
RobotFileParser
Based on RobotFileParser
:
is Python’s built-in robots.txt parser
is compliant with Martijn Koster’s 1996 draft specification
lacks support for wildcard matching
doesn’t use the length based rule
It is faster than Protego and backward-compatible with versions of Scrapy before 1.8.0.
In order to use this parser, set:
ROBOTSTXT_PARSER
toscrapy.robotstxt.PythonRobotParser
Reppy parser
Based on Reppy:
is a Python wrapper around Robots Exclusion Protocol Parser for C++
is compliant with Martijn Koster’s 1996 draft specification
supports wildcard matching
uses the length based rule
Native implementation, provides better speed than Protego.
In order to use this parser:
Install Reppy by running
pip install reppy
Set
ROBOTSTXT_PARSER
setting toscrapy.robotstxt.ReppyRobotParser
Robotexclusionrulesparser
Based on Robotexclusionrulesparser:
implemented in Python
is compliant with Martijn Koster’s 1996 draft specification
supports wildcard matching
doesn’t use the length based rule
In order to use this parser:
Install Robotexclusionrulesparser by running
pip install robotexclusionrulesparser
Set
ROBOTSTXT_PARSER
setting toscrapy.robotstxt.RerpRobotParser
Implementing support for a new parser
You can implement support for a new robots.txt parser by subclassing the abstract base class RobotParser
and implementing the methods described below.
class scrapy.robotstxt.``RobotParser
[source]
abstract
allowed
(url, user_agent)[source]Return
True
ifuser_agent
is allowed to crawlurl
, otherwise returnFalse
.
abstract classmethod
from_crawler
(crawler, robotstxt_body)[source]Parse the content of a robots.txt file as bytes. This must be a class method. It must return a new instance of the parser backend.
Parameters
crawler (
Crawler
instance) – crawler which made the requestrobotstxt_body (bytes) – content of a robots.txt file.
DownloaderStats
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.stats.``DownloaderStats
[source]
Middleware that stores stats of all requests, responses and exceptions that pass through it.
To use this middleware you must enable the DOWNLOADER_STATS
setting.
UserAgentMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.useragent.``UserAgentMiddleware
[source]
Middleware that allows spiders to override the default user agent.
In order for a spider to override the default user agent, its user_agent
attribute must be set.
AjaxCrawlMiddleware
class scrapy.downloadermiddlewares.ajaxcrawl.``AjaxCrawlMiddleware
[source]
Middleware that finds ‘AJAX crawlable’ page variants based on meta-fragment html tag. See https://developers.google.com/search/docs/ajax-crawling/docs/getting-started for more info.
Note
Scrapy finds ‘AJAX crawlable’ pages for URLs like 'http://example.com/!#foo=bar'
even without this middleware. AjaxCrawlMiddleware is necessary when URL doesn’t contain '!#'
. This is often a case for ‘index’ or ‘main’ website pages.
AjaxCrawlMiddleware Settings
AJAXCRAWL_ENABLED
Default: False
Whether the AjaxCrawlMiddleware will be enabled. You may want to enable it for broad crawls.
HttpProxyMiddleware settings
HTTPPROXY_ENABLED
Default: True
Whether or not to enable the HttpProxyMiddleware
.
HTTPPROXY_AUTH_ENCODING
Default: "latin-1"
The default encoding for proxy authentication on HttpProxyMiddleware
.