Provides an easy way to retrieve Google Page Rank, Alexa Rank, backlink counts, index counts and different types of social signals.
This project is abandoned. If you'd like to take ownership of this project, let me know.
Note: Version ~> 2.0 and ~> 3.0 used typheous internally which caused memory leak issues and failures on windows. 4.0.0 changes the implementation to use a Net::HTTP based library for better compatability.
Note: Version >= 4.1.0 no longer actively maintains compatibility with Ruby 1.8.X. It will probably still work for the time being.
Note: Version >= 4.2.0 no longer actively maintains compatibility with Ruby < 1.9.3. It will probably still work, but you may need to specify older versions for gems this library depends on in your Gemfile.
Note: Version >= 4.5.0 no longer actively maintains compatibility with Ruby < 2.0.
Check out a little web app I wrote up that uses it or look at the source.
gem install PageRankr
gem 'PageRankr'
require 'page_rankr'
Backlinks are the result of doing a search with a query like "link:www.google.com". The number of returned results indicates how many sites point to that url. If a site is not tracked then nil
is returned.
PageRankr.backlinks('www.google.com', :google, :bing) #=> {:google=>161000, :bing=>208000000}
PageRankr.backlinks('www.google.com', :yahoo) #=> {:yahoo=>256300062}
If you don't specify a search engine, then all of them are used.
# this
PageRankr.backlinks('www.google.com')
#=> {:google=>23000, :bing=>215000000, :yahoo=>250522337, :alexa=>727036}
# is equivalent to
PageRankr.backlinks('www.google.com', :google, :bing, :yahoo, :alexa)
#=> {:google=>23000, :bing=>215000000, :yahoo=>250522337, :alexa=>727036}
You can also use the alias backlink
instead of backlinks
.
Valid search engines are: :google, :bing, :yahoo, :alexa
(altavista and alltheweb now redirect to yahoo). To get this list you can do:
PageRankr.backlink_trackers #=> [:alexa, :bing, :google, :yahoo]
Indexes are the result of doing a search with a query like "site:www.google.com". The number of returned results indicates how many pages of a domain are indexed by a particular search engine. If the site is not indexed nil
is returned.
PageRankr.indexes('www.google.com', :google) #=> {:google=>4860000}
PageRankr.indexes('www.google.com', :bing) #=> {:bing=>2120000}
If you don't specify a search engine, then all of them are used.
# this
PageRankr.indexes('www.google.com')
#=> {:bing=>2120000, :google=>4860000, :yahoo => 4863000}
# is equivalent to
PageRankr.indexes('www.google.com', :google, :bing, :yahoo)
#=> {:bing=>2120000, :google=>4860000, :yahoo => 4863000}
You can also use the alias index
instead of indexes
.
Valid search engines are: :google, :bing, :yahoo
. To get this list you can do:
PageRankr.index_trackers #=> [:bing, :google, :yahoo]
Ranks are ratings assigned to specify how popular a site is. The most famous example of this is the google page rank.
PageRankr.ranks('www.google.com', :google) #=> {:google=>10}
If you don't specify a rank provider, then all of them are used.
PageRankr.ranks('www.google.com', :alexa_us, :alexa_global, :google, :moz_rank, :page_authority)
#=> {:alexa_us=>1, :alexa_global=>1, :alexa_country=>1, :google=>10, :moz_rank => 8, :page_authority => 97}
# this also gives the same result
PageRankr.ranks('www.google.com')
#=> {:alexa_us=>1, :alexa_global=>1, :alexa_country=>1, :google=>9, :moz_rank=>8, :domain_authority=>100, :page_authority=>96}
You can also use the alias rank
instead of ranks
.
Valid rank trackers are: :alexa_country, :alexa_global, :alexa_us, :google, :moz_rank, :page_authority
. To get this you can do:
PageRankr.rank_trackers #=> [:alexa_us, :alexa_global, :alexa_country, :google, :moz_rank, :domain_authority, :page_authority]
Alexa ranks are descending where 1 is the most popular. Google page ranks are in the range 0-10 where 10 is the most popular. If a site is unindexed then the rank will be nil.
Social signals are a somewhat oversimplified way of telling how popular a site or page currently is.
PageRankr.socials('www.google.com', :linked_in) #=> {:linked_in=>1001}
If you don't specify a social tracker, then all of them are used.
PageRankr.socials('www.google.com', :google, :linked_in, :pinterest, :stumbled_upon, :twitter, :vk)
#=> {:google=>10000, :linked_in=>1001, :pinterest=>75108, :stumple_upon=>255078, :twitter=>21933764, :vk=>3725}
# this also gives the same result
PageRankr.socials('www.google.com')
#=> {:google=>10000, :linked_in=>1001, :pinterest=>75108, :stumble_upon=>255078, :twitter=>21933764, :vk=>3725}
Valid social trackers are: :google, :linked_in, :pinterest, :stumble_upon, :twitter, :vk
. To get this you can do:
PageRankr.social_trackers #=> [:google, :linked_in, :pinterest, :stumble_upon, :twitter, :vk]
From versions >= 3, everything should be usable in a much more a la carte manner. If all you care about is google page rank (which I speculate is common) you can get that all by itself:
require 'page_rankr/ranks/google'
tracker = PageRankr::Ranks::Google.new("myawesomesite.com")
tracker.run #=> 2
Also, once a tracker has run three values will be accessible from it:
# The value extracted. Tracked is aliased to rank for PageRankr::Ranks, backlink for PageRankr::Backlinks, and index for PageRankr::Indexes.
tracker.tracked #=> 2
# The value extracted with the jsonpath, xpath, or regex before being cleaned.
tracker.raw #=> "2"
# The body of the response
tracker.body #=> "<html><head>..."
One of the annoying things about each of these services is that they really don't like you scraping data from them. In order to deal with this issue, they throttle traffic from a single machine. The simplest way to get around this is to use proxy machines to make the requests.
In PageRankr >= 3.2.0, this is much simpler. The first thing you'll need is a proxy service. Two are provided here. A proxy service must define a proxy
method that takes two arguments. It should return a string like http://user:[email protected]:50501
.
Once you have a proxy service, you can tell PageRankr to use it. For example:
PageRankr.proxy_service = PageRankr::ProxyServices::Random.new([
'http://user:[email protected]:50501',
'http://user:[email protected]:50501'
])
Once PageRankr knows about your proxy service, any request that is made will ask for a proxy from the proxy service. It does this by calling the proxy
method. When it calls the proxy
method, it passed the name of the tracker (e.g. :ranks_google
) and the site that is being looked up. Hopefully, this information is sufficient for you to build a much smarter proxy service than the ones provided (pull requests welcome!).
If you ever find something is broken it should now be much easier to fix it with version >= 1.3.0. For example, if the xpath used to lookup a backlink is broken, just override the method for that class to provide the correct xpath.
module PageRankr
class Backlinks
class Bing
def xpath
"//my/new/awesome/@xpath"
end
end
end
end
If you ever come across a site that provides a rank or backlinks you can hook that class up to automatically be use with PageRankr. PageRankr does this by looking up all the classes namespaced under Backlinks, Indexes, and Ranks.
require 'page_rankr/backlink'
module PageRankr
class Backlinks
class Foo
include Backlink
# This method is required
def url
"http://example.com/"
end
# This method specifies the parameters for the url. It is optional, but likely required for the class to be useful.
def params
{:q => tracked_url}
end
# You can use a method named either xpath, jsonpath, or regex with the appropriate query type
def xpath
"//backlinks/text()"
end
# Optionally, you could override the clean method if the current implementation isn't sufficient
# def clean(backlink_count)
# #do some of my own cleaning
# super(backlink_count) # strips non-digits and converts it to an integer or nil
# end
end
end
end
PageRankr::Backlinks::Foo.new("myawesomesite.com").run #=> 3
PageRankr.backlinks("myawesomesite.com", :foo)[:foo] #=> 3
Then, just make sure you require the class and PageRankr and whenever you call PageRankr.backlinks it'll be able to use your class.
- Fork the project.
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
- Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.
- Detect request throttling
Gotta give credit where credits due!
Original inspiration from:
Copyright (c) 2010 Allen Madsen. See LICENSE for details.