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MailWebsiteChanges

Python script to keep track of website changes; sends email notifications on updates and/or also provides an RSS feed

To specify which parts of a website should be monitored, XPath selectors (e.g. "//h1"), CSS selectors (e.g. "h1"), and regular expressions can be used (just choose the tools you like!).

MailWebsiteChanges is related to PageMonitor for Chrome and AlertBox / Check4Change for Firefox. However, instead of living in your web browser, you can run it independently from command line / bash and install it as a simple cron job running on your linux server.

This is Open Source -- so please contribute eagerly! ;-)

Configuration

Configuration can be done by creating a config.py file (just place this file in the program folder): Some examples:

Website definitions


sites = [

          {'shortname': 'mywebsite1',
           'uri': 'http://www.mywebsite1.com/info',
           'contentcss': 'div'},

          {'shortname': 'mywebsite2',
           'uri': 'http://www.mywebsite2.com/info',
           'contentxpath': '//*[contains(concat(\' \', normalize-space(@class), \' \'), \' news-list-container \')]',
           'titlexpath': '//title'},

          {'shortname': 'mywebsite3',
           'uri': 'http://www.mywebsite3.com/info',
           'type': 'text',
           'contentregex': 'Version\"\:\d*\.\d*'}

]

  • parameters:

    • shortname
      short name of the entry, used as an identifier when sending email notifications
    • uri
      URI of the website; If the scheme of the uri is 'cmd://', the string is interpreted as a command and the standard output (stdout) is parsed.
    • type (optional; default: 'html')
      content type, e.g., 'xml'/'html'/'text'.
    • contentxpath / titlexpath (optional)
      XPath expression for the content/title sections to extract. If you prefer, you could use contentcss/titlecss instead.
    • contentcss / titlecss (optional)
      CSS expression for the content/title sections to extract. This is ignored if there is a corresponding XPath definition.
    • contentregex / titleregex (optional)
      Regular expression. If XPath/CSS selector is defined, the regular expression is applied afterwards.
    • encoding (optional; default: 'utf-8')
      Character encoding of the website, e.g., 'utf-8' or 'iso-8859-1'.
    • receiver (optional) Overwrites global receiver specification.
  • We collect some XPath/CSS snippets at this place: Snippet collection - please feel free to add your own definitions!

  • The --dry-run="shortname" option might be useful in order to validate and fine-tune a definition.

  • If you would like to keep the data stored in a different place than the working directory, you can include something like this:

   
  os.chdir('/path/to/data/directory')
   
  

Mail settings


enableMailNotifications = True   #enable/disable notification messages; if set to False, only send error messages
subjectPostfix = 'A website has been updated!'

sender = 'me@mymail.com'
smtphost = 'mysmtpprovider.com'
useTLS = True
smtpport = 587
smtpusername = sender
smtppwd = 'mypassword'
receiver = 'me2@mymail.com'   # set to '' to also disable notifications in case of errors (not recommended)

RSS Feeds

If you prefer to use the RSS feature, you just have to specify the path of the feed file which should be generated by the script (e.g., rssfile = 'feed.xml') and then point your webserver to that file. You can also invoke the mwcfeedserver.py script which implements a very basic webserver.

 
enableRSSFeed = True   #enable/disable RSS feed

rssfile = 'feed.xml'
maxFeeds = 100
 

Program execution

To setup a job that periodically runs the script, simply attach something like this to your /etc/crontab:

 
0 8-22/2    * * *   root	/usr/bin/python3 /usr/bin/mwc
 

This will run the script every two hours between 8am and 10pm.

If you prefer invoking the script with an alternate configuration files, simply pass the name of the configuration file as an argument, e.g., for my_alternate_config.py, use mwc --config=my_alternate_config.

Requirements

Requires Python 3, lxml, and cssselect. For Ubuntu 12.04, type:

  • sudo apt-get install python3 python3-dev python3-setuptools libxml2 libxslt1.1 libxml2-dev libxslt1-dev python-libxml2 python-libxslt1
  • sudo easy_install3 pip
  • sudo pip-3.2 install lxml cssselect

For Ubuntu 14.04, type:

  • sudo apt-get install python3-lxml python3-pip
  • sudo pip3 install cssselect

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Python script to keep track of website changes (or changes of parts of websites); sends email notifications on updates

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