settings.yml:
* outgoing.networks:
* can contains network definition
* propertiers: enable_http, verify, http2, max_connections, max_keepalive_connections,
keepalive_expiry, local_addresses, support_ipv4, support_ipv6, proxies, max_redirects, retries
* retries: 0 by default, number of times searx retries to send the HTTP request (using different IP & proxy each time)
* local_addresses can be "192.168.0.1/24" (it supports IPv6)
* support_ipv4 & support_ipv6: both True by default
see https://github.com/searx/searx/pull/1034
* each engine can define a "network" section:
* either a full network description
* either reference an existing network
* all HTTP requests of engine use the same HTTP configuration (it was not the case before, see proxy configuration in master)
When initing engines a "SearxEngineResponseException" is logged very verbose,
including full traceback information:
ERROR:searx.engines:yggtorrent engine: Fail to initialize
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "share/searx/searx/engines/__init__.py", line 293, in engine_init
init_fn(get_engine_from_settings(engine_name))
File "share/searx/searx/engines/yggtorrent.py", line 42, in init
resp = http_get(url, allow_redirects=False)
File "share/searx/searx/poolrequests.py", line 197, in get
return request('get', url, **kwargs)
File "share/searx/searx/poolrequests.py", line 190, in request
raise_for_httperror(response)
File "share/searx/searx/raise_for_httperror.py", line 60, in raise_for_httperror
raise_for_captcha(resp)
File "share/searx/searx/raise_for_httperror.py", line 43, in raise_for_captcha
raise_for_cloudflare_captcha(resp)
File "share/searx/searx/raise_for_httperror.py", line 30, in raise_for_cloudflare_captcha
raise SearxEngineCaptchaException(message='Cloudflare CAPTCHA', suspended_time=3600 * 24 * 15)
searx.exceptions.SearxEngineCaptchaException: Cloudflare CAPTCHA, suspended_time=1296000
For SearxEngineResponseException this is not needed. Those types of exceptions
can be a normal use case. E.g. for CAPTCHA errors like shown in the example
above. It should be enough to log a warning for such issues:
WARNING:searx.engines:yggtorrent engine: Fail to initialize // Cloudflare CAPTCHA, suspended_time=1296000
closes: #2612
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
Bing has a list of regions that it supports and some of these regions
may have more than one possible language.
In some cases, like Switzerland, these languages are always shown as
options, so there is no issue. But in other cases, like Andorra, Bing
will only show one language at the time, either the region's default or
the request's language if the latter is supported by that region.
For example, if the HTTP request is in French, Andorra will appear as
fr-AD but if the same page is requested in any other language Andorra
will appear as ca-AD.
This is specially a problem when Bing assumes that the request is in
English because it overrides enough language codes to make several major
languages like Arabic dissappear from the languages.py file.
To avoid that issue, I set the Accept-Language header to a language
that's only supported in one region to hopefully avoid these overrides.
The language_support variable is set to True by default,
and set to False in only 5 engines.
Except the documentation and the /config URL, this variable is not used.
This commit remove the variable definition in the engines, and
set value according to supported_languages length: False when the length is 0,
True otherwise.
Close#2485
see searx.search.processors.abstract.EngineProcessor
First the method searx call the get_params method.
If the return value is not None, then the searx call the method search.
check HTTP response:
* detect some comme CAPTCHA challenge (no solving). In this case the engine is suspended for long a time.
* otherwise raise HTTPError as before
the check is done in poolrequests.py (was before in search.py).
update qwant, wikipedia, wikidata to use raise_for_httperror instead of raise_for_status
Xpath engine and results template changed to account for the fact that
archive.org doesn't cache .onions, though some onion engines migth have
their own cache.
Disabled by default. Can be enabled by setting the SOCKS proxies to
wherever Tor is listening and setting using_tor_proxy as True.
Requires Tor and updating packages.
To avoid manually adding the timeout on each engine, you can set
extra_proxy_timeout to account for Tor's (or whatever proxy used) extra
time.
and some other exceptions:
* KeyboardInterrupt
* SystemExit
* RuntimeError
* SystemError
* ImportError: an engine with an unmet dependency will stop everything.
A new option is added to engines to hide error messages from users. It
is called `display_error_messages` and by default it is set to `True`.
If it is set to `False` error messages do not show up on the UI.
Keep in mind that engines are still suspended if needed regardless of
this setting.
Closes#1828
Add match_language function in utils to match any user given
language code with a list of engine's supported languages.
Also add language_aliases dict on each engine to translate
standard language codes into the custom codes used by the engine.
SearX currently doesn't start up when run with Python 3 as it tries to parse the
settings.yml file with ASCII codecs.
There are similar problems with engines_languages.json and currencies.json
Python 3 requires that files with Unicode characters be read with a 'b' flag.
This also works with Python 2 and hence can be integrated into the main source
code.
Tested with the latest Python 3.6.4rc1 on Debian unstable.
Signed-off-by: Joseph Nuthalapati <njoseph@thoughtworks.com>
The timeouts in settings.yml is about the total time (not only the HTTP request but also the prepare the request and parsing the response)
It was more or less the case before since the threaded_requests function ignores the thread after the timeout even the HTTP request is ended.
New / changed stats :
* page_load_time : record the HTTP request time
* page_load_count: the number of HTTP request
* engine_time : the execution total time of an engine
* engine_time_count : the number of "engine_time" measure
The avg response times in the preferences are the engine response time (engine_load_time / engine_load_count)
To sum up :
* Search.search() filters the engines that can't process the request
* Search.search() call search_multiple_requests function
* search_multiple_requests creates one thread per engine, each thread runs the search_one_request function
* search_one_request calls the request function, make the HTTP request, calls the response function, extends the result_container
* search_multiple_requests waits for the the thread to finish (or timeout)