perldoc > WWW::RobotRules

📛 NAME

WWW::RobotRules - database of robots.txt-derived permissions

🚀 Quick Reference

Use CaseCommandDescription
Create a rules objectWWW::RobotRules->new('robot-name')Instantiates a rules object for a given robot
Parse a robots.txt file$rules->parse($url, $content)Parse the /robots.txt content fetched from a URL
Check if URL is allowed$rules->allowed($uri)Returns true if the robot may access the URL
Get/set agent name$rules->agent('name')Get/set the robot name; clears cache on change

📖 SYNOPSIS

use WWW::RobotRules;
my $rules = WWW::RobotRules->new('MOMspider/1.0');

use LWP::Simple qw(get);

{
  my $url = "http://some.place/robots.txt";
  my $robots_txt = get $url;
  $rules->parse($url, $robots_txt) if defined $robots_txt;
}

{
  my $url = "http://some.other.place/robots.txt";
  my $robots_txt = get $url;
  $rules->parse($url, $robots_txt) if defined $robots_txt;
}

# Now we can check if a URL is valid for those servers
# whose "robots.txt" files we've gotten and parsed:
if($rules->allowed($url)) {
    $c = get $url;
    ...
}

📝 DESCRIPTION

This module parses /robots.txt files as specified in "A Standard for Robot Exclusion", at <http://www.robotstxt.org/wc/norobots.html>. Webmasters can use the /robots.txt file to forbid conforming robots from accessing parts of their web site.

The parsed files are kept in a WWW::RobotRules object, and this object provides methods to check if access to a given URL is prohibited. The same WWW::RobotRules object can be used for one or more parsed /robots.txt files on any number of hosts.

The following methods are provided:

🆕 new()

$rules = WWW::RobotRules->new($robot_name)

This is the constructor for WWW::RobotRules objects. The first argument given to new() is the name of the robot.

đŸ“Ĩ parse()

$rules->parse($robot_txt_url, $content, $fresh_until)

The parse() method takes as arguments the URL that was used to retrieve the /robots.txt file, and the contents of the file.

✅ allowed()

$rules->allowed($uri)

Returns TRUE if this robot is allowed to retrieve this URL.

🤖 agent()

$rules->agent([$name])

Get/set the agent name. NOTE: Changing the agent name will clear the robots.txt rules and expire times out of the cache.

🤖 ROBOTS.TXT

The format and semantics of the "/robots.txt" file are as follows (this is an edited abstract of <http://www.robotstxt.org/wc/norobots.html>):

The file consists of one or more records separated by one or more blank lines. Each record contains lines of the form

<field-name>: <value>

The field name is case insensitive. Text after the '#' character on a line is ignored during parsing. This is used for comments. The following <field-names> can be used:

User-Agent

The value of this field is the name of the robot the record is describing access policy for. If more than one User-Agent field is present the record describes an identical access policy for more than one robot. At least one field needs to be present per record. If the value is '*', the record describes the default access policy for any robot that has not matched any of the other records.

The User-Agent fields must occur before the Disallow fields. If a record contains a User-Agent field after a Disallow field, that constitutes a malformed record. This parser will assume that a blank line should have been placed before that User-Agent field, and will break the record into two. All the fields before the User-Agent field will constitute a record, and the User-Agent field will be the first field in a new record.

Disallow

The value of this field specifies a partial URL that is not to be visited. This can be a full path, or a partial path; any URL that starts with this value will not be retrieved.

Unrecognized records are ignored.

🤖 ROBOTS.TXT EXAMPLES

The following example "/robots.txt" file specifies that no robots should visit any URL starting with "/cyberworld/map/" or "/tmp/":

User-agent: *
Disallow: /cyberworld/map/ # This is an infinite virtual URL space
Disallow: /tmp/ # these will soon disappear

This example "/robots.txt" file specifies that no robots should visit any URL starting with "/cyberworld/map/", except the robot called "cybermapper":

User-agent: *
Disallow: /cyberworld/map/ # This is an infinite virtual URL space

# Cybermapper knows where to go.
User-agent: cybermapper
Disallow:

This example indicates that no robots should visit this site further:

# go away
User-agent: *
Disallow: /

This is an example of a malformed robots.txt file.

# robots.txt for ancientcastle.example.com
# I've locked myself away.
User-agent: *
Disallow: /
# The castle is your home now, so you can go anywhere you like.
User-agent: Belle
Disallow: /west-wing/ # except the west wing!
# It's good to be the Prince...
User-agent: Beast
Disallow:

This file is missing the required blank lines between records. However, the intention is clear.

📚 SEE ALSO

LWP::RobotUA, WWW::RobotRules::AnyDBM_File

ÂŠī¸ COPYRIGHT

Copyright 1995-2009, Gisle Aas
Copyright 1995, Martijn Koster

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

WWW::RobotRules
📛 NAME 🚀 Quick Reference 📖 SYNOPSIS 📝 DESCRIPTION
🆕 new() đŸ“Ĩ parse() ✅ allowed() 🤖 agent()
🤖 ROBOTS.TXT 🤖 ROBOTS.TXT EXAMPLES 📚 SEE ALSO ÂŠī¸ COPYRIGHT

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