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Médias (91)
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GetID3 - Boutons supplémentaires
9 avril 2013, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
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Core Media Video
4 avril 2013, par
Mis à jour : Juin 2013
Langue : français
Type : Video
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The pirate bay depuis la Belgique
1er avril 2013, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
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Bug de détection d’ogg
22 mars 2013, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : français
Type : Video
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Exemple de boutons d’action pour une collection collaborative
27 février 2013, par
Mis à jour : Mars 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
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Exemple de boutons d’action pour une collection personnelle
27 février 2013, par
Mis à jour : Février 2013
Langue : English
Type : Image
Autres articles (85)
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Personnaliser en ajoutant son logo, sa bannière ou son image de fond
5 septembre 2013, parCertains thèmes prennent en compte trois éléments de personnalisation : l’ajout d’un logo ; l’ajout d’une bannière l’ajout d’une image de fond ;
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MediaSPIP v0.2
21 juin 2013, parMediaSPIP 0.2 est la première version de MediaSPIP stable.
Sa date de sortie officielle est le 21 juin 2013 et est annoncée ici.
Le fichier zip ici présent contient uniquement les sources de MediaSPIP en version standalone.
Comme pour la version précédente, il est nécessaire d’installer manuellement l’ensemble des dépendances logicielles sur le serveur.
Si vous souhaitez utiliser cette archive pour une installation en mode ferme, il vous faudra également procéder à d’autres modifications (...) -
Le profil des utilisateurs
12 avril 2011, parChaque utilisateur dispose d’une page de profil lui permettant de modifier ses informations personnelle. Dans le menu de haut de page par défaut, un élément de menu est automatiquement créé à l’initialisation de MediaSPIP, visible uniquement si le visiteur est identifié sur le site.
L’utilisateur a accès à la modification de profil depuis sa page auteur, un lien dans la navigation "Modifier votre profil" est (...)
Sur d’autres sites (10496)
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Revision 53614 : On revient sur http://zone.spip.org/trac/spip-zone/changeset/52807 (Paolo ...
18 octobre 2011, par kent1@… — LogOn revient sur http://zone.spip.org/trac/spip-zone/changeset/52807 (Paolo et Fil) ... solution pérenne à trouver
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Anomalie #2374 (Fermé) : request url too long
17 octobre 2011, par Ben .la solution : define(’_CACHE_CONTEXTES_AJAX’,true) ; dans le mes_options.php duplicate #2123
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Method For Crawling Google
28 mai 2011, par Multimedia Mike — Big DataI wanted to crawl Google in order to harvest a large corpus of certain types of data as yielded by a certain search term (we’ll call it “term” for this exercise). Google doesn’t appear to offer any API to automatically harvest their search results (why would they ?). So I sat down and thought about how to do it. This is the solution I came up with.
FAQ
Q : Is this legal / ethical / compliant with Google’s terms of service ?
A : Does it look like I care ? Moving right along…Manual Crawling Process
For this exercise, I essentially automated the task that would be performed by a human. It goes something like this :- Search for “term”
- On the first page of results, download each of the 10 results returned
- Click on the next page of results
- Go to step 2, until Google doesn’t return anymore pages of search results
Google returns up to 1000 results for a given search term. Fetching them 10 at a time is less than efficient. Fortunately, the search URL can easily be tweaked to return up to 100 results per page.
Expanding Reach
Problem : 1000 results for the “term” search isn’t that many. I need a way to expand the search. I’m not aiming for relevancy ; I’m just searching for random examples of some data that occurs around the internet.My solution for this is to refine the search using the “site” wildcard. For example, you can ask Google to search for “term” at all Canadian domains using “site :.ca”. So, the manual process now involves harvesting up to 1000 results for every single internet top level domain (TLD). But many TLDs can be more granular than that. For example, there are 50 sub-domains under .us, one for each state (e.g., .ca.us, .ny.us). Those all need to be searched independently. Same for all the sub-domains under TLDs which don’t allow domains under the main TLD, such as .uk (search under .co.uk, .ac.uk, etc.).
Another extension is to combine “term” searches with other terms that are likely to have a rich correlation with “term”. For example, if “term” is relevant to various scientific fields, search for “term” in conjunction with various scientific disciplines.
Algorithmically
My solution is to create an SQLite database that contains a table of search seeds. Each seed is essentially a “site :” string combined with a starting index.Each TLD and sub-TLD is inserted as a searchseed record with a starting index of 0.
A script performs the following crawling algorithm :
- Fetch the next record from the searchseed table which has not been crawled
- Fetch search result page from Google
- Scrape URLs from page and insert each into URL table
- Mark the searchseed record as having been crawled
- If the results page indicates there are more results for this search, insert a new searchseed for the same seed but with a starting index 100 higher
Digging Into Sites
Sometimes, Google notes that certain sites are particularly rich sources of “term” and offers to let you search that site for “term”. This basically links to another search for ‘term site:somesite”. That site gets its own search seed and the program might harvest up to 1000 URLs from that site alone.Harvesting the Data
Armed with a database of URLs, employ the following algorithm :- Fetch a random URL from the database which has yet to be downloaded
- Try to download it
- For goodness sake, have a mechanism in place to detect whether the download process has stalled and automatically kill it after a certain period of time
- Store the data and update the database, noting where the information was stored and that it is already downloaded
This step is easy to parallelize by simply executing multiple copies of the script. It is useful to update the URL table to indicate that one process is already trying to download a URL so multiple processes don’t duplicate work.
Acting Human
A few factors here :- Google allegedly doesn’t like automated programs crawling its search results. Thus, at the very least, don’t let your script advertise itself as an automated program. At a basic level, this means forging the User-Agent : HTTP header. By default, Python’s urllib2 will identify itself as a programming language. Change this to a well-known browser string.
- Be patient ; don’t fire off these search requests as quickly as possible. My crawling algorithm inserts a random delay of a few seconds in between each request. This can still yield hundreds of useful URLs per minute.
- On harvesting the data : Even though you can parallelize this and download data as quickly as your connection can handle, it’s a good idea to randomize the URLs. If you hypothetically had 4 download processes running at once and they got to a point in the URL table which had many URLs from a single site, the server might be configured to reject too many simultaneous requests from a single client.
Conclusion
Anyway, that’s just the way I would (and did) do it. What did I do with all the data ? That’s a subject for a different post.