WWW::RobotRules(3)

NAME

WWW::RobotsRules - Parse robots.txt files

SYNOPSIS

require WWW::RobotRules;
my $robotsrules = new WWW::RobotRules 'MOMspider/1.0';

use LWP::Simple qw(get);

$url = "http://some.place/robots.txt";
my $robots_txt = get $url;
$robotsrules->parse($url, $robots_txt);

$url = "http://some.other.place/robots.txt";
my $robots_txt = get $url;
$robotsrules->parse($url, $robots_txt);

# Now we are able to check if a URL is  valid  for  those
servers that
# we have obtained and parsed "robots.txt" files for.
if($robotsrules->allowed($url)) {
    $c = get $url;
    ...
}

DESCRIPTION

This module parses a /robots.txt file as specified in "A Standard for Robot Exclusion", described in
<http://info.webcrawler.com/mak/pro
jects/robots/norobots.html> Webmasters can use the
/robots.txt file to disallow conforming robots access to parts of their web site.

The parsed file is kept in the WWW::RobotRules object, and
this object provides methods to check if access to a given
URL is prohibited. The same WWW::RobotRules object can
parse multiple /robots.txt files.

The following methods are provided:

$rules = WWW::RobotRules->new($robot_name)
This is the constructor for WWW::RobotRules objects.
The first argument given to new() is the name of the
robot.
$rules->parse($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 con tents of the file.
$rules->allowed($uri)
Returns TRUE if this robot is allowed to retrieve this
URL.
$rules->agent([$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://info.webcrawler.com/mak/pro
jects/robots/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 not matched any of
the other records.
Disallow
The value of this field specifies a partial URL that is
not to be visited. This can be a full path, or a par
tial path; any URL that starts with this value will not
be retrieved

ROBOTS.TXT EXAMPLES

The following example "/robots.txt" file specifies that no
robots should visit any URL starting with "/cyber
world/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: /

SEE ALSO

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