This package facilitates the clustering of similar URLs of a website.
Live demo: http://urlclustering.com
You give a (preferably long and complete) list of URLs as input e.g.:
urls = [ 'http://example.com', 'http://example.com/about', 'http://example.com/contact', 'http://example.com/cat/sports', 'http://example.com/cat/tech', 'http://example.com/cat/life', 'http://example.com/cat/politics', 'http://example.com/tag/623/tag1', 'http://example.com/tag/335/tag2', 'http://example.com/tag/671/tag3', 'http://example.com/article/?id=1', 'http://example.com/article/?id=2', 'http://example.com/article/?id=3', ]
You get a list of clusters as a result. For each cluster you get:
- a REGEX that matches all cluster URLs
- a HUMAN readable string representing the cluster
- a list with all matched cluster URLs
So for our example the result is:
REGEX: http://example.com/cat/([^/]+) HUMAN: http://example.com/cat/[...] URLS: http://example.com/cat/sports http://example.com/cat/tech http://example.com/cat/life http://example.com/cat/politics REGEX: http://example.com/tag/(\d+)/([^/]+) HUMAN: http://example.com/tag/[NUMBER]/[...] URLS: http://example.com/tag/623/tag1 http://example.com/tag/335/tag2 http://example.com/tag/671/tag3 REGEX: http://example.com/article/?\?id=(\d+) HUMAN: http://example.com/article?id=[NUMBER] URLS: http://example.com/article/?id=1 http://example.com/article/?id=2 http://example.com/article/?id=3 UNCLUSTERED URLS: http://example.com http://example.com/about http://example.com/contact
This is most useful for website analysis tools that report findings to the user. E.g. a service that crawls your website and reports page loading time may find that 10,000 pages take >2 seconds to load. Instead of listing 10,000 URLs it's better to cluster them. So the end user will see something like:
Slow pages (>2 secs): - http://example.com/ (1 URL) - http://example.com/sitemap (1 URL) - http://example.com/search?q=[...] (578 URLs) - http://example.com/tags?tag1=[...]&tag2=[...] (409 URLs) - http://example.com/article?id=[NUMBER] (7209 URLs)
URLs are grouped by domain. Only same domain URLs are clustered.
URLs are then grouped by a signature which is the number of path elements and the number of QueryString parameters & values the URL has.
Examples:
- http://ex.com/about has a signature of (1, 0)
- http://ex.com/article?123 has a signature of (1, 1)
- http://ex.com/path/to/file?par1=val1&par2=val2 has a signature of (3,4)
URLs with the same signature are inserted in a tree structure. For each part (path element or QS parameter or QS value) two nodes are created:
- One with the verbatim part.
- One with the reduced part i.e. a regex that could replace the part.
Leaf nodes hold the number of URLs that match and the number of reductions.
E.g. inserting URL http://ex.com/article?123
will create 2 top
nodes:
root 1: `article` root 2: `[^/]+`
And each top node will have two children:
child 1: `123` child 2: `\d+`
Inserting 3 URLs of the form /article/[0-9]+
would lead to a tree
like this:
`article` `[^/]+` / / \ \ / / \ \ `123` `456` `789` `\d+` `123` `456` `789` `\d+` 1 URL 1 URL 1 URL 3 URLs 1 URL 1 URL 1 URL 3 URLs 0 re 0 re 0 re 1 re 1 re 1 re 1 re 2 re
The final step is to choose the best leafs. In this case article
->
\d+
is best because it macthes all 3 URLs with 1 reduction so the
cluster returned is http://ex.com/article/[NUMBER]
Copyright (c) 2015 Dimitris Giannitsaros.
Licensed under the MIT License.