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A tool for monitoring webpages for updates
urlwatch is intended to help you watch changes in webpages and get notified (via email, in your terminal or with a custom-written reporter class) of any changes. The change notification will include the URL that has changed and a unified diff of what has changed.
urlwatch 2 requires:
- Python 3.3 or newer
- PyYAML
- minidb
- requests
- keyring
- appdirs
- chump (for Pushover support)
- pushbullet.py (for Pushbullet support)
The dependencies can be installed with (add --user
to install to $HOME
):
python3 -m pip install pyyaml minidb requests keyring appdirs
For optional pushover support the chump package is required:
python3 -m pip install chump
For optional pushbullet support the pushbullet.py package is required:
python3 -m pip install pushbullet.py
For optional support for the "browser" job kind, Requests-HTML is needed:
python3 -m pip install requests-html
For unit tests, you also need to install pycodestyle:
python3 -m pip install pycodestyle
Migration from urlwatch 1.x should be automatic on first start. Here is a quick rundown of changes in 2.0:
- URLs are stored in a YAML file now, with direct support for specifying names for jobs, different job kinds, directly applying filters, selecting the HTTP request method, specifying POST data as dictionary and much more
- The cache directory has been replaced with a SQLite 3 database file
"cache.db" in minidb format, storing all change history (use
--gc-cache
to remove old changes if you don't need them anymore) for further analysis - The hooks mechanism has been replaced with support for creating new job kinds by subclassing, new filters (also by subclassing) as well as new reporters (pieces of code that put the results somewhere, for example the default installation contains the "stdout" reporter that writes to the console and the "email" reporter that can send HTML and text e-mails)
- A configuration file - urlwatch.yaml - has been added for specifying user preferences instead of having to supply everything via the command line
- Start
urlwatch
to migrate your old data or start fresh - Use
urlwatch --edit
to customize your job list - Use
urlwatch --edit-config
if you want to set up e-mail sending - Use
urlwatch --edit-hooks
if you want to write custom subclasses - Add
urlwatch
to your crontab (crontab -e
)
Quickly adding new URLs to the job list from the command line:
urlwatch --add url=http://example.org,name=Example
You can pick only a given HTML element with the built-in filter, for
example to extract <div id="something">.../<div>
from a page, you
can use the following in your urls.yaml:
url: http://example.org/
filter: element-by-id:something
Also, you can chain filters, so you can run html2text on the result:
url: http://example.net/
filter: element-by-id:something,html2text
The example urls.yaml file also demonstrates the use of built-in filters, here 3 filters are used: html2text, line-grep and whitespace removal to get just a certain info field from a webpage:
url: https://thp.io/2008/urlwatch/
filter: html2text,grep:Current.*version,strip
For most cases, this means that you can specify a filter chain in your urls.yaml page without requiring a custom hook where previously you would have needed to write custom filtering code in Python.
If you want to extract only the body tag you can use this filer:
url: https://thp.io/2008/urlwatch/
filter: element-by-tag:body
You can configure urlwatch to send real time notifications about changes
via Pushover(https://pushover.net/). To enable this, ensure you have the
chump python package installed (see DEPENDENCIES). Then edit your config
(urlwatch --edit-config
) and enable pushover. You will also need to add
to the config your Pushover user key and a unique app key (generated by
registering urlwatch as an application on your Pushover account(https://pushover.net/apps/build)
Pushbullet notification are configured similarly to Pushover (see above). You'll need to add to the config your Pushbullet Access Token, which you can generate at https://www.pushbullet.com/#settings
Telegram notifications are configured using the Telegram Bot API. For this, you'll need a Bot API token and a chat id (see https://core.telegram.org/bots). Sample configuration:
telegram:
bot_token: '999999999:3tOhy2CuZE0pTaCtszRfKpnagOG8IQbP5gf' # your bot api token
chat_id: '88888888' # the chat id where the messages should be sent
enabled: true
If the webpage you are trying to watch runs client-side JavaScript to render the page, Requests-HTML can now be used to render the page in a headless Chromium instance first and then use the HTML of the resulting page.
Use the browser
kind in the configuration and the navigate
key to set the
URL to retrieve. note that the normal url
job keys are not supported
for the browser
job types at the moment, for example:
kind: browser
name: "A Page With JavaScript"
navigate: http://example.org/
You need to configure your GMail account to allow for "less secure" (password-based) apps to login:
- Go to https://myaccount.google.com/
- Click on "Sign-in & security"
- Scroll all the way down to "Allow less secure apps" and enable it
Now, start the configuration editor: urlwatch --edit-config
These are the keys you need to configure (see #158):
report/email/enabled
:true
report/email/from
:[email protected]
(edit accordingly)report/email/method
:smtp
report/email/smtp/host
:smtp.gmail.com
report/email/smtp/keyring
:true
report/email/smtp/port
:587
report/email/smtp/starttls
:true
report/email/to
: The e-mail address you want to send reports to
Now, for setting the password, it's not stored in the config file, but in your
keychain. To store the password, run: urlwatch --smtp-login
and enter your
password.
Website: https://thp.io/2008/urlwatch/
E-Mail: [email protected]