news-please is an open source, easy-to-use news crawler that extracts structured information from almost any news website. It can follow recursively internal hyperlinks and read RSS feeds to fetch both most recent and also old, archived articles. You only need to provide the root URL of the news website. news-please combines the power of multiple state-of-the-art libraries and tools, such as scrapy, Newspaper, and readability. news-please also features a library mode, which allows developers to use the crawling and extraction functionality within their own program. news-please also allows to conveniently crawl and extract articles from commoncrawl.org.
- headline
- lead paragraph
- main content (textual)
- main image
- author's name
- publication date
- language
- works out of the box: install with pip, add URLs of your pages, run :-)
- run news-please conveniently with the CLI or use it as a library within your own software or to extract articles from the news archive of commoncrawl.org
- runs on your favorite Python version (2.7+ and 3+)
- stores extracted results in JSON files or ElasticSearch (you can implement other storages easily)
- simple but extensive configuration (if you want to tweak the results)
- revisions: crawl articles multiple times and track changes
- crawl and extract information given a list of article URLs.
- commoncrawl.org provides an extensive, free-to-use archive of news articles from small and major publishers world wide
- news-please enables users to conveniently download and extract articles from commoncrawl.org
- you can optionally define filter criteria, such as news publisher(s) or the date period, within which articles need to be published
- clone the news-please repository, adapt the config section in newsplease/examples/commoncrawl.py, and execute
python3 -m newsplease.examples.commoncrawl
It's super easy, we promise!
We prefer Python 3, but Python 2.7 is supported, too!
$ pip3 install news-please
You can access the core functionality of news-please, i.e. extraction of semi-structured information from one or more news articles, in your own code by using news-please in library mode. If you want to use news-please's full website extraction or continuous crawling mode (using RSS), you need to use the CLI mode as the library mode does only support single URL extraction.
from newsplease import NewsPlease
article = NewsPlease.from_url('https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/23/us/politics/cpac-stephen-bannon-reince-priebus.html?hp')
print(article.title)
A sample of an extracted article can be found here (as a JSON file).
If you want to crawl multiple articles at a time
NewsPlease.from_urls([url1, url2, ...])
or if you have a file containing all URLs (each line containing a single URL)
NewsPlease.from_file(path)
or if you have raw HTML
NewsPlease.from_html(html) # you can optionally provide the original URL of the HTML data
or if you have a WARC file (also check out our example, which provides convenient methods to filter for specific hosts and dates)
NewsPlease.from_warc(warc_record)
In library mode, news-please will attempt to download and extract information from each URL. The previously described functions are blocking, i.e., will return once news-please has attempted all URLs. The resulting list contains all successfully extracted articles.
$ news-please
news-please will then start crawling a few examples pages. To terminate the process press CTRL+C
. news-please will then shut down within 5-60 seconds. You can also press CTRL+C
twice, which will immediately kill the process (not recommended, though).
The results are stored by default in JSON files in the data
folder. In the default configuration, news-please also stores the original HTML files.
Of course, you want to crawl other websites. Simply go into the sitelist.hjson
file and add the root URLs of the news outlets' web pages of your choice.
news-please also supports export to ElasticSearch. Using Elasticsearch will also enable the versioning feature. First, enable it in the config.cfg
at the config directory, which is by default ~/news-please/config
but can also be changed with the -c
parameter to a custom location. In case the directory does not exist, a default directory will be created at the specified location.
[Scrapy]
ITEM_PIPELINES = {
'newsplease.pipeline.pipelines.ArticleMasterExtractor':100,
'newsplease.pipeline.pipelines.ElasticsearchStorage':350
}
That's it! Except, if your Elasticsearch database is not located at http://localhost:9200
, uses a different username/password or CA-certificate authentication. In these cases, you will also need to change the following.
[Elasticsearch]
host = localhost
port = 9200
...
# Credentials used for authentication (supports CA-certificates):
use_ca_certificates = False # True if authentification needs to be performed
ca_cert_path = '/path/to/cacert.pem'
client_cert_path = '/path/to/client_cert.pem'
client_key_path = '/path/to/client_key.pem'
username = 'root'
secret = 'password'
We have collected a bunch of useful information for both users and developers. As a user, you will most likely only deal with two files: sitelist.hjson
(to define sites to be crawled) and config.cfg
(probably only rarely, in case you want to tweak the configuration).
You can find more information on usage and development in our wiki! Before contacting us, please check out the wiki. If you still have questions on how to use news-please, please create a new issue on GitHub. Make sure to include information about your Python version, operating system, which version of news-please you are running, and how use news-please (installed or git clone).
This project would not have been possible without the contributions of the following students (ordered alphabetically):
- Moritz Bock
- Michael Fried
- Jonathan Hassler
- Markus Klatt
- Kevin Kress
- Sören Lachnit
- Marvin Pafla
- Franziska Schlor
- Matt Sharinghousen
- Claudio Spener
- Moritz Steinmaier
We also thank all other contributors, which you can find on the contributors' page!
If you are using news-please, please cite our paper (ResearchGate, Mendeley):
@InProceedings{Hamborg2017,
author = {{H}amborg, {F}elix and {M}euschke, {N}orman and {B}reitinger, {C}orinna and {G}ipp, {B}ela},
title = {{news-please}: {A} {G}eneric {N}ews {C}rawler and {E}xtractor},
year = {2017},
booktitle = {{P}roceedings of the 15th {I}nternational {S}ymposium of {I}nformation {S}cience},
location = {Berlin},
editor = {Gaede, Maria and Trkulja, Violeta and Petra, Vivien},
pages = {218--223},
month = {March}
}
You can find more information on this and other news projects on our website.
Do you want to contribute? Great, we are always happy for any support on this project! Just send a pull request. By contributing to this project, you agree that your contributions will be licensed under the project's license (see below). If you have questions or issues while working on the code, e.g., when implementing a new feature that you would like to have added to news-please, open an issue on GitHub and we'll be happy to help you. Please note that we usually do not have enough resources to implement features requested by users - instead we recommend to implement them yourself, and send a pull request.
The project is licensed under the Apache License 2.0. Make sure that you use news-please in compliance with applicable law. The news-please logo is courtesy of Mario Hamborg.
Copyright 2016 The news-please team