The Perl Toolchain Summit needs more sponsors. If your company depends on Perl, please support this very important event.
# $Id: RobotUA.pm,v 1.13 1998/01/06 09:59:08 aas Exp $

package LWP::RobotUA;

require LWP::UserAgent;
@ISA = qw(LWP::UserAgent);
$VERSION = sprintf("%d.%02d", q$Revision: 1.13 $ =~ /(\d+)\.(\d+)/);

require WWW::RobotRules;
require HTTP::Request;
require HTTP::Response;

use Carp ();
use LWP::Debug ();
use HTTP::Status ();
use HTTP::Date qw(time2str);
use strict;

=head1 NAME

LWP::RobotUA - A class for Web Robots

=head1 SYNOPSIS

  require LWP::RobotUA;
  $ua = new LWP::RobotUA 'my-robot/0.1', 'me@foo.com';
  $ua->delay(10);  # be very nice, go slowly
  ...
  # just use it just like a normal LWP::UserAgent
  $res = $ua->request($req);

=head1 DESCRIPTION

This class implements a user agent that is suitable for robot
applications.  Robots should be nice to the servers they visit.  They
should consult the F<robots.txt> file to ensure that they are welcomed
and they should not send too frequent requests.

But, before you consider writing a robot take a look at
<URL:http://info.webcrawler.com/mak/projects/robots/robots.html>.

When you use a I<LWP::RobotUA> as your user agent, then you do not
really have to think about these things yourself.  Just send requests
as you do when you are using a normal I<LWP::UserAgent> and this
special agent will make sure you are nice.

=head1 METHODS

The LWP::RobotUA is a sub-class of LWP::UserAgent and implements the
same methods. In addition the following methods are provided:

=over 4

=cut


#
# Additional attributes in addition to those found in LWP::UserAgent:
#
# $self->{'delay'}    Required delay between request to the same
#                     server in minutes.
#
# $self->{'rules'}     A WWW::RobotRules object
#


=item $ua = LWP::RobotUA->new($agent_name, $from, [$rules])

Your robot's name and the mail address of the human responsible for
the robot (i.e. you) is required by the constructor.

Optionally it allows you to specify the I<WWW::RobotRules> object to
use.

=cut

sub new
{
    my($class,$name,$from,$rules) = @_;

    Carp::croak('LWP::RobotUA name required') unless $name;
    Carp::croak('LWP::RobotUA from address required') unless $from;

    my $self = new LWP::UserAgent;
    $self = bless $self, $class;

    $self->{'delay'} = 1;   # minutes
    $self->{'agent'} = $name;
    $self->{'from'}  = $from;
    $self->{'use_sleep'} = 1;

    if ($rules) {
	$rules->agent($name);
	$self->{'rules'} = $rules;
    } else {
	$self->{'rules'} = new WWW::RobotRules $name;
    }

    $self;
}


=item $ua->delay([$minutes])

Set the minimum delay between requests to the same server.  The
default is 1 minute.

=item $ua->use_sleep([$boolean])

Get/set a value indicating wether the UA should sleep() if request
arrive to fast (before $ua->delay minutes has passed).  The default is
TRUE.  If this value is FALSE then an internal SERVICE_UNAVAILABLE
response will be generated.  It will have an Retry-After header that
indicate when it is OK to send another request to this server.

=cut

sub delay     { shift->_elem('delay',     @_); }
sub use_sleep { shift->_elem('use_sleep', @_); }

sub agent
{
    my $self = shift;
    my $old = $self->SUPER::agent(@_);
    if (@_) {
	# Changing our name means to start fresh
	$self->{'rules'}->agent($self->{'agent'}); 
    }
    $old;
}


=item $ua->rules([$rules])

Set/get which I<WWW::RobotRules> object to use. 

=cut

sub rules {
    my $self = shift;
    my $old = $self->_elem('rules', @_);
    $self->{'rules'}->agent($self->{'agent'}) if @_;
    $old;
}


=item $ua->no_visits($netloc)

Returns the number of documents fetched from this server host. Yes I
know, this method should probably have been named num_visits() or
something like that :-(

=cut

sub no_visits
{
    my($self, $netloc) = @_;
    $self->{'rules'}->no_visits($netloc);
}

*host_count = \&no_visits;  # backwards compatibility with LWP-5.02


=item $ua->host_wait($netloc)

Returns the number of seconds (from now) you must wait before you can
make a new request to this host.

=cut

sub host_wait
{
    my($self, $netloc) = @_;
    return undef unless defined $netloc;
    my $last = $self->{'rules'}->last_visit($netloc);
    if ($last) {
	my $wait = int($self->{'delay'} * 60 - (time - $last));
	$wait = 0 if $wait < 0;
	return $wait;
    }
    return 0;
}


sub simple_request
{
    my($self, $request, $arg, $size) = @_;

    LWP::Debug::trace('()');

    # Do we try to access a new server?
    my $allowed = $self->{'rules'}->allowed($request->url);

    if ($allowed < 0) {
	LWP::Debug::debug("Host is not visited before, or robots.txt expired.");
	# fetch "robots.txt"
	my $robot_url = $request->url->clone;
	$robot_url->path("robots.txt");
	$robot_url->params(undef);
	$robot_url->query(undef);
	LWP::Debug::debug("Requesting $robot_url");

	# make access to robot.txt legal since this will be a recursive call
	$self->{'rules'}->parse($robot_url, ""); 

	my $robot_req = new HTTP::Request 'GET', $robot_url;
	my $robot_res = $self->request($robot_req);
	my $fresh_until = $robot_res->fresh_until;
	if ($robot_res->is_success) {
	    LWP::Debug::debug("Parsing robot rules");
	    $self->{'rules'}->parse($robot_url, $robot_res->content, 
				    $fresh_until);
	} else {
	    LWP::Debug::debug("No robots.txt file found");
	    $self->{'rules'}->parse($robot_url, "", $fresh_until);
	}

	# recalculate allowed...
	$allowed = $self->{'rules'}->allowed($request->url);
    }

    # Check rules
    unless ($allowed) {
	return new HTTP::Response
	  &HTTP::Status::RC_FORBIDDEN, 'Forbidden by robots.txt';
    }

    my $netloc = $request->url->netloc;
    my $wait = $self->host_wait($netloc);

    if ($wait) {
	LWP::Debug::debug("Must wait $wait seconds");
	if ($self->{'use_sleep'}) {
	    sleep($wait)
	} else {
	    my $res = new HTTP::Response
	      &HTTP::Status::RC_SERVICE_UNAVAILABLE, 'Please, slow down';
	    $res->header('Retry-After', time2str(time + $wait));
	    return $res;
	}
    }

    # Perform the request
    my $res = $self->SUPER::simple_request($request, $arg, $size);

    $self->{'rules'}->visit($netloc);

    $res;
}


=item $ua->as_string

Returns a text that describe the state of the UA.
Mainly useful for debugging.

=cut

sub as_string
{
    my $self = shift;
    my @s;
    push(@s, "Robot: $self->{'agent'} operated by $self->{'from'}  [$self]");
    push(@s, "    Minimum delay: " . int($self->{'delay'}*60) . "s");
    push(@s, "    Will sleep if too early") if $self->{'use_sleep'};
    push(@s, "    Rules = $self->{'rules'}");
    join("\n", @s, '');
}

1;

=back

=head1 SEE ALSO

L<LWP::UserAgent>, L<WWW::RobotRules>

=head1 COPYRIGHT

Copyright 1996-1997 Gisle Aas.

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

=cut