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scrapy-zyte-api

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Scrapy plugin for Zyte API.

Requirements

  • Python 3.7+
  • Scrapy 2.0.1+

Installation

pip install scrapy-zyte-api

Configuration

To enable this plugin:

  • Set the http and https keys in the DOWNLOAD_HANDLERS Scrapy setting to "scrapy_zyte_api.ScrapyZyteAPIDownloadHandler".
  • Add "scrapy_zyte_api.ScrapyZyteAPIDownloaderMiddleware" to the DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES Scrapy setting with any value, e.g. 1000.
  • Set the REQUEST_FINGERPRINTER_CLASS Scrapy setting to "scrapy_zyte_api.ScrapyZyteAPIRequestFingerprinter".
  • Set the TWISTED_REACTOR Scrapy setting to "twisted.internet.asyncioreactor.AsyncioSelectorReactor".
  • Set your Zyte API key as either the ZYTE_API_KEY Scrapy setting or as an environment variable of the same name.

For example, in the settings.py file of your Scrapy project:

DOWNLOAD_HANDLERS = {
    "http": "scrapy_zyte_api.ScrapyZyteAPIDownloadHandler",
    "https": "scrapy_zyte_api.ScrapyZyteAPIDownloadHandler",
}
DOWNLOADER_MIDDLEWARES = {
    "scrapy_zyte_api.ScrapyZyteAPIDownloaderMiddleware": 1000,
}
REQUEST_FINGERPRINTER_CLASS = "scrapy_zyte_api.ScrapyZyteAPIRequestFingerprinter"
TWISTED_REACTOR = "twisted.internet.asyncioreactor.AsyncioSelectorReactor"
ZYTE_API_KEY = "YOUR_API_KEY"

The ZYTE_API_ENABLED setting, which is True by default, can be set to False to disable this plugin.

Usage

You can send requests through Zyte API in one of the following ways:

Zyte API response parameters are mapped into Scrapy response parameters where possible. See Response mapping for details.

Using transparent mode

Set the ZYTE_API_TRANSPARENT_MODE Scrapy setting to True to handle Scrapy requests as follows:

  • By default, requests are sent through Zyte API with automatically-mapped parameters. See Sending requests with automatically-mapped parameters for details about automatic request parameter mapping.

    You do not need to set the zyte_api_automap request meta key to True, but you can set it to a dictionary to extend your Zyte API request parameters.

  • Requests with the zyte_api request meta key set to a dict are sent through Zyte API with manually-defined parameters. See Sending requests with manually-defined parameters.
  • Requests with the zyte_api_automap request meta key set to False are not sent through Zyte API.

For example:

import scrapy


class SampleQuotesSpider(scrapy.Spider):
    name = "sample_quotes"
    start_urls = ["https://quotes.toscrape.com/"]

    custom_settings = {
        "ZYTE_API_TRANSPARENT_MODE": True,
    }

    def parse(self, response):
        print(response.text)
        # "<html>…</html>"

Sending requests with manually-defined parameters

To send a Scrapy request through Zyte API with manually-defined parameters, define your Zyte API parameters in the zyte_api key in Request.meta as a dict.

The only exception is the url parameter, which should not be defined as a Zyte API parameter. The value from Request.url is used automatically.

For example:

import scrapy


class SampleQuotesSpider(scrapy.Spider):
    name = "sample_quotes"

    def start_requests(self):
        yield scrapy.Request(
            url="https://quotes.toscrape.com/",
            meta={
                "zyte_api": {
                    "browserHtml": True,
                }
            },
        )

    def parse(self, response):
        print(response.text)
        # "<html>…</html>"

Note that response headers are necessary for raw response decoding. When defining parameters manually and requesting httpResponseBody extraction, remember to also request httpResponseHeaders extraction:

import scrapy


class SampleQuotesSpider(scrapy.Spider):
    name = "sample_quotes"

    def start_requests(self):
        yield scrapy.Request(
            url="https://quotes.toscrape.com/",
            meta={
                "zyte_api": {
                    "httpResponseBody": True,
                    "httpResponseHeaders": True,
                }
            },
        )

    def parse(self, response):
        print(response.text)
        # "<html>…</html>"

To learn more about Zyte API parameters, see the data extraction usage and API reference pages of the Zyte API documentation.

Sending requests with automatically-mapped parameters

To send a Scrapy request through Zyte API letting Zyte API parameters be automatically chosen based on the parameters of that Scrapy request, set the zyte_api_automap key in Request.meta to True.

For example:

import scrapy


class SampleQuotesSpider(scrapy.Spider):
    name = "sample_quotes"

    def start_requests(self):
        yield scrapy.Request(
            url="https://quotes.toscrape.com/",
            meta={
                "zyte_api_automap": True,
            },
        )

    def parse(self, response):
        print(response.text)
        # "<html>…</html>"

See also Using transparent mode and Automated request parameter mapping.

Response mapping

Zyte API responses are mapped with one of the following classes:

  • scrapy_zyte_api.responses.ZyteAPITextResponse, a subclass of scrapy.http.TextResponse, is used to map text responses, i.e. responses with browserHtml or responses with both httpResponseBody and httpResponseHeaders with a text body (e.g. plain text, HTML, JSON).
  • scrapy_zyte_api.responses.ZyteAPIResponse, a subclass of scrapy.http.Response, is used to map any other response.

Zyte API response parameters are mapped into response class attributes where possible:

  • url becomes response.url.
  • statusCode becomes response.status.
  • httpResponseHeaders and experimental.responseCookies become response.headers.
  • experimental.responseCookies is also mapped into the request cookiejar.
  • browserHtml and httpResponseBody are mapped into both response.text (str) and response.body (bytes).

    If none of these parameters were present, e.g. if the only requested output was screenshot, response.text and response.body would be empty.

    If a future version of Zyte API supported requesting both outputs on the same request, and both parameters were present, browserHtml would be the one mapped into response.text and response.body.

Both response classes have a raw_api_response attribute that contains a dict with the complete, raw response from Zyte API, where you can find all Zyte API response parameters, including those that are not mapped into other response class atttributes.

For example, for a request for httpResponseBody and httpResponseHeaders, you would get:

def parse(self, response):
    print(response.url)
    # "https://quotes.toscrape.com/"
    print(response.status)
    # 200
    print(response.headers)
    # {b"Content-Type": [b"text/html"], …}
    print(response.text)
    # "<html>…</html>"
    print(response.body)
    # b"<html>…</html>"
    print(response.raw_api_response)
    # {
    #     "url": "https://quotes.toscrape.com/",
    #     "statusCode": 200,
    #     "httpResponseBody": "PGh0bWw+4oCmPC9odG1sPg==",
    #     "httpResponseHeaders": […],
    # }

For a request for screenshot, on the other hand, the response would look as follows:

def parse(self, response):
    print(response.url)
    # "https://quotes.toscrape.com/"
    print(response.status)
    # 200
    print(response.headers)
    # {}
    print(response.text)
    # ""
    print(response.body)
    # b""
    print(response.raw_api_response)
    # {
    #     "url": "https://quotes.toscrape.com/",
    #     "statusCode": 200,
    #     "screenshot": "iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUh…",
    # }
    from base64 import b64decode
    print(b64decode(response.raw_api_response["screenshot"]))
    # b'\x89PNG\r\n\x1a\n\x00\x00\x00\r…'

Automated request parameter mapping

When you enable automated request parameter mapping, be it through transparent mode (see Using transparent mode) or for a specific request (see Sending requests with automatically-mapped parameters), Zyte API parameters are chosen as follows by default:

  • Request.url becomes url, same as in requests with manually-defined parameters.
  • If Request.method is something other than "GET", it becomes httpRequestMethod.
  • Request.headers become customHttpRequestHeaders.
  • Request.body becomes httpRequestBody.
  • If the ZYTE_API_EXPERIMENTAL_COOKIES_ENABLED Scrapy setting is True, the COOKIES_ENABLED Scrapy setting is True (default), and provided request metadata does not set dont_merge_cookies to True:
    • experimental.responseCookies is set to True.
    • Cookies from the request cookie jar become experimental.requestCookies.

      All cookies from the cookie jar are set, regardless of their cookie domain. This is because Zyte API requests may involve requests to different domains (e.g. when following cross-domain redirects, or during browser rendering).

      If the cookies to be set exceed the limit defined in the ZYTE_API_MAX_COOKIES setting (100 by default), a warning is logged, and only as many cookies as the limit allows are set for the target request. To silence this warning, set experimental.requestCookies manually, e.g. to an empty dict. Alternatively, if Zyte API starts supporting more than 100 request cookies, update the ZYTE_API_MAX_COOKIES setting accordingly.

      If you are using a custom downloader middleware to handle request cookiejars, you can point the ZYTE_API_COOKIE_MIDDLEWARE setting to its import path to make scrapy-zyte-api work with it. The downloader middleware is expected to have a jars property with the same signature as in the built-in Scrapy downloader middleware for cookie handling.

  • httpResponseBody and httpResponseHeaders are set to True.

    This is subject to change without prior notice in future versions of scrapy-zyte-api, so please account for the following:

    • If you are requesting a binary resource, such as a PDF file or an image file, set httpResponseBody to True explicitly in your requests:

      Request(
          url="https://toscrape.com/img/zyte.png",
          meta={
              "zyte_api_automap": {"httpResponseBody": True},
          },
      )

      In the future, we may stop setting httpResponseBody to True by default, and instead use a different, new Zyte API parameter that only works for non-binary responses (e.g. HMTL, JSON, plain text).

    • If you need to access response headers, be it through response.headers or through response.raw_api_response["httpResponseHeaders"], set httpResponseHeaders to True explicitly in your requests:

      Request(
          url="https://toscrape.com/",
          meta={
              "zyte_api_automap": {"httpResponseHeaders": True},
          },
      )

      At the moment we request response headers because some response headers are necessary to properly decode the response body as text. In the future, Zyte API may be able to handle this decoding automatically, so we would stop setting httpResponseHeaders to True by default.

For example, the following Scrapy request:

Request(
    method="POST"
    url="https://httpbin.org/anything",
    headers={"Content-Type": "application/json"},
    body=b'{"foo": "bar"}',
    cookies={"a": "b"},
)

Results in a request to the Zyte API data extraction endpoint with the following parameters:

{
    "customHttpRequestHeaders": [
        {
            "name": "Content-Type",
            "value": "application/json"
        }
    ],
    "experimental": {
        "requestCookies": [
            {
                "name": "a",
                "value": "b",
                "domain": ""
            }
        ],
        "responseCookies": true
    },
    "httpResponseBody": true,
    "httpResponseHeaders": true,
    "httpRequestBody": "eyJmb28iOiAiYmFyIn0=",
    "httpRequestMethod": "POST",
    "url": "https://httpbin.org/anything"
}

You may set the zyte_api_automap key in Request.meta to a dict of Zyte API parameters to extend or override choices made by automated request parameter mapping.

Setting browserHtml or screenshot to True unsets httpResponseBody and httpResponseHeaders, and makes Request.headers become requestHeaders instead of customHttpRequestHeaders. For example, the following Scrapy request:

Request(
    url="https://quotes.toscrape.com",
    headers={"Referer": "https://example.com/"},
    meta={"zyte_api_automap": {"browserHtml": True}},
)

Results in a request to the Zyte API data extraction endpoint with the following parameters:

{
    "browserHtml": true,
    "experimental": {
        "responseCookies": true
    },
    "requestHeaders": {"referer": "https://example.com/"},
    "url": "https://quotes.toscrape.com"
}

When mapping headers, headers not supported by Zyte API are excluded from the mapping by default. Use the following Scrapy settings to change which headers are included or excluded from header mapping:

  • ZYTE_API_SKIP_HEADERS determines headers that must not be mapped as customHttpRequestHeaders, and its default value is:

    ["User-Agent"]
  • ZYTE_API_BROWSER_HEADERS determines headers that can be mapped as requestHeaders. It is a dict, where keys are header names and values are the key that represents them in requestHeaders. Its default value is:

    {"Referer": "referer"}

To maximize support for potential future changes in Zyte API, automated request parameter mapping allows some parameter values and parameter combinations that Zyte API does not currently support, and may never support:

  • Request.method becomes httpRequestMethod even for unsupported httpRequestMethod values, and even if httpResponseBody is unset.
  • You can set customHttpRequestHeaders or requestHeaders to True to force their mapping from Request.headers in scenarios where they would not be mapped otherwise.

    Conversely, you can set customHttpRequestHeaders or requestHeaders to False to prevent their mapping from Request.headers.

  • Request.body becomes httpRequestBody even if httpResponseBody is unset.
  • You can set httpResponseBody to False (which unsets the parameter), and not set browserHtml or screenshot to True. In this case, Request.headers is mapped as requestHeaders.
  • You can set httpResponseBody to True and also set browserHtml or screenshot to True. In this case, Request.headers is mapped both as customHttpRequestHeaders and as requestHeaders, and browserHtml is used as the Scrapy response body.

Setting default parameters

Often the same configuration needs to be used for all Zyte API requests. For example, all requests may need to set the same geolocation, or the spider only uses browserHtml requests.

The following settings allow you to define Zyte API parameters to be included in all requests:

For example, if you set ZYTE_API_DEFAULT_PARAMS to {"geolocation": "US"} and zyte_api to {"browserHtml": True}, {"url: "…", "geolocation": "US", "browserHtml": True} is sent to Zyte API.

Parameters in these settings are merged with request-specific parameters, with request-specific parameters taking precedence.

ZYTE_API_DEFAULT_PARAMS has no effect on requests that use automated request parameter mapping, and ZYTE_API_AUTOMAP_PARAMS has no effect on requests that use manually-defined parameters.

When using transparent mode (see Using transparent mode), be careful of which parameters you define through ZYTE_API_AUTOMAP_PARAMS. In transparent mode, all Scrapy requests go through Zyte API, even requests that Scrapy sends automatically, such as those for robots.txt files when ROBOTSTXT_OBEY is True, or those for sitemaps when using a sitemap spider. Certain parameters, like browserHtml or screenshot, are not meant to be used for every single request.

Customizing the retry policy

API requests are retried automatically using the default retry policy of python-zyte-api.

API requests that exceed retries are dropped. You cannot manage API request retries through Scrapy downloader middlewares.

Use the ZYTE_API_RETRY_POLICY setting or the zyte_api_retry_policy request meta key to override the default python-zyte-api retry policy with a custom retry policy.

A custom retry policy must be an instance of tenacity.AsyncRetrying.

Scrapy settings must be picklable, which retry policies are not, so you cannot assign retry policy objects directly to the ZYTE_API_RETRY_POLICY setting, and must use their import path string instead.

When setting a retry policy through request meta, you can assign the zyte_api_retry_policy request meta key either the retry policy object itself or its import path string. If you need your requests to be serializable, however, you may also need to use the import path string.

For example, to also retry HTTP 521 errors the same as HTTP 520 errors, you can subclass RetryFactory as follows:

# project/retry_policies.py
from tenacity import retry_if_exception, RetryCallState
from zyte_api.aio.errors import RequestError
from zyte_api.aio.retry import RetryFactory

def is_http_521(exc: BaseException) -> bool:
    return isinstance(exc, RequestError) and exc.status == 521

class CustomRetryFactory(RetryFactory):

    retry_condition = (
        RetryFactory.retry_condition
        | retry_if_exception(is_http_521)
    )

    def wait(self, retry_state: RetryCallState) -> float:
        if is_http_521(retry_state.outcome.exception()):
            return self.temporary_download_error_wait(retry_state=retry_state)
        return super().wait(retry_state)

    def stop(self, retry_state: RetryCallState) -> bool:
        if is_http_521(retry_state.outcome.exception()):
            return self.temporary_download_error_stop(retry_state)
        return super().stop(retry_state)

CUSTOM_RETRY_POLICY = CustomRetryFactory().build()

# project/settings.py
ZYTE_API_RETRY_POLICY = "project.retry_policies.CUSTOM_RETRY_POLICY"

Stats

Stats from python-zyte-api are exposed as Scrapy stats with the scrapy-zyte-api prefix.

Request fingerprinting

The request fingerprinter class of this plugin ensures that Scrapy 2.7 and later generate unique request fingerprints for Zyte API requests based on some of their parameters.

For example, a request for browserHtml and a request for screenshot with the same target URL are considered different requests. Similarly, requests with the same target URL but different actions are also considered different requests.

Zyte API parameters that affect request fingerprinting

The request fingerprinter class of this plugin generates request fingerprints for Zyte API requests based on the following Zyte API parameters:

  • url (canonicalized)

    For URLs that include a URL fragment, like https://example.com#foo, URL canonicalization keeps the URL fragment if browserHtml or screenshot are enabled.

  • Request attribute parameters (httpRequestBody, httpRequestMethod)
  • Output parameters (browserHtml, httpResponseBody, httpResponseHeaders, screenshot)
  • Rendering option parameters (actions, javascript, screenshotOptions)
  • geolocation

The following Zyte API parameters are not taken into account for request fingerprinting:

  • Request header parameters (customHttpRequestHeaders, requestHeaders)
  • Metadata parameters (echoData, jobId)
  • Experimental parameters (experimental)

Changing the fingerprinting of non-Zyte-API requests

You can assign a request fingerprinter class to the ZYTE_API_FALLBACK_REQUEST_FINGERPRINTER_CLASS Scrapy setting to configure a custom request fingerprinter class to use for requests that do not go through Zyte API:

ZYTE_API_FALLBACK_REQUEST_FINGERPRINTER_CLASS = "custom.RequestFingerprinter"

By default, requests that do not go through Zyte API use the default request fingerprinter class of the installed Scrapy version.

Request fingerprinting before Scrapy 2.7

If you have a Scrapy version older than Scrapy 2.7, Zyte API parameters are not taken into account for request fingerprinting. This can cause some Scrapy components, like the filter of duplicate requests or the HTTP cache extension, to interpret 2 different requests as being the same.

To avoid most issues, use automated request parameter mapping, either through transparent mode or setting zyte_api_automap to True in Request.meta, and then use Request attributes instead of Request.meta as much as possible. Unlike Request.meta, Request attributes do affect request fingerprints in Scrapy versions older than Scrapy 2.7.

For requests that must have the same Request attributes but should still be considered different, such as browser-based requests with different URL fragments, you can set dont_filter to True on Request.meta to prevent the duplicate filter of Scrapy to filter any of them out. For example:

yield Request(
    "https://toscrape.com#1",
    meta={"zyte_api_automap": {"browserHtml": True}},
    dont_filter=True,
)
yield Request(
    "https://toscrape.com#2",
    meta={"zyte_api_automap": {"browserHtml": True}},
    dont_filter=True,
)

Note, however, that for other Scrapy components, like the HTTP cache extensions, these 2 requests would still be considered identical.

Logging request parameters

Set the ZYTE_API_LOG_REQUESTS setting to True to enable the logging of debug messages that indicate the JSON object sent on every extract request to Zyte API.

For example:

Sending Zyte API extract request: {"url": "https://example.com", "httpResponseBody": true}

The ZYTE_API_LOG_REQUESTS_TRUNCATE, 64 by default, determines the maximum length of any string value in the logged JSON object, excluding object keys. To disable truncation, set it to 0.

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