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What

This is a robots.txt exclusion protocol implementation for Go language (golang).

Build

To build and run tests run go test in source directory.

Contribute

Warm welcome.

  • If desired, add your name in README.rst, section Who.
  • Run script/test && script/clean && echo ok
  • You can ignore linter warnings, but everything else must pass.
  • Send your change as pull request or just a regular patch to current maintainer (see section Who).

Thank you.

Usage

As usual, no special installation is required, just

import "github.com/temoto/robotstxt"

run go get and you're ready.

1. Parse

First of all, you need to parse robots.txt data. You can do it with functions FromBytes(body []byte) (*RobotsData, error) or same for `string`:

robots, err := robotstxt.FromBytes([]byte("User-agent: *\nDisallow:"))
robots, err := robotstxt.FromString("User-agent: *\nDisallow:")

As of 2012-10-03, FromBytes is the most efficient method, everything else is a wrapper for this core function.

There are few convenient constructors for various purposes:

* FromResponse(*http.Response) (*RobotsData, error) to init robots data from HTTP response. It does not call `response.Body.Close()`:

robots, err := robotstxt.FromResponse(resp)
resp.Body.Close()
if err != nil {
    log.Println("Error parsing robots.txt:", err.Error())
}

* FromStatusAndBytes(statusCode int, body []byte) (*RobotsData, error) or FromStatusAndString if you prefer to read bytes (string) yourself. Passing status code applies following logic in line with Google's interpretation of robots.txt files:

  • status 2xx -> parse body with FromBytes and apply rules listed there.
  • status 4xx -> allow all (even 401/403, as recommended by Google).
  • other (5xx) -> disallow all, consider this a temporary unavailability.

2. Query

Parsing robots.txt content builds a kind of logic database, which you can query with (r *RobotsData) TestAgent(url, agent string) (bool).

Explicit passing of agent is useful if you want to query for different agents. For single agent users there is an efficient option: RobotsData.FindGroup(userAgent string) returns a structure with .Test(path string) method and .CrawlDelay time.Duration.

Simple query with explicit user agent. Each call will scan all rules.

allow := robots.TestAgent("/", "FooBot")

Or query several paths against same user agent for performance.

group := robots.FindGroup("BarBot")
group.Test("/")
group.Test("/download.mp3")
group.Test("/news/article-2012-1")

Who

Honorable contributors (in undefined order):

  • Ilya Grigorik (igrigorik)
  • Martin Angers (PuerkitoBio)
  • Micha Gorelick (mynameisfiber)

Initial commit and other: Sergey Shepelev temotor@gmail.com

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