NAME
HTML::Detergent - Clean the gunk off an HTML document
VERSION
Version 0.03
SYNOPSIS
use HTML::Detergent;
my $scrubber = HTML::Detergent->new($config);
# $input can be a string, GLOB reference, or XML::LibXML::Document
my $doc = $scrubber->process($input, $uri);
DESCRIPTION
HTML::Detergent is for isolating the main content of an HTML page,
stripping it of navigation, visual design, and other ancillary content.
The main purpose of this module is to aid in the migration of web
content from one content management system to another. It is also useful
for preparing HTML resources for automated content inventories.
The module currently has no heuristics for determining the main content
of a page. It works instead by assuming prior knowledge of the layout,
given in the configuration by an XPath expression that uniquely isolates
the container node. That node is then lifted into a new document, along
with the contents of the "
", and returned by the "process" method.
To accommodate multiple layouts on a site, the module can be initialized
to match multiple XPath expressions. If further processing is necessary,
an expression can be associated with an XSLT stylesheet, which is
assumed to produce an entire document, thus overriding the default
behaviour.
After the new document is generated and before it is returned by
"process", it is possible to inject "" and "" elements into
the "". This enables the inclusion of metadata and the
re-association of the main content with links that represent aspects of
the page which have been removed (e.g. navigation, copyright statement,
etc.). In addition, if the page's URI is supplied to the "process"
method, the "" element is either added or rewritten to reflect it,
and the URI attributes in the body are rewritten relative to the base.
Otherwise they are left alone.
The document returned is an XML::LibXML::Document object using the XHTML
namespace, "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml", but does not profess to
validate against any particular schema. If DTD declarations (including
the empty "" recommended in HTML5) are desired, they can
be added on afterward. Likewise, the object can be converted from XML
into HTML using "toStringHTML" in XML::LibXML::Document.
METHODS
new %CONFIG | \%CONFIG | $CONFIG
Initialize the processor, either with a list of configuration
parameters, a HASH reference thereof, or an HTML::Detergent::Config
object. Below are the valid parameters:
match
This is an ARRAY reference of XPath expressions to try against the
document, in order of preference. Entries optionally may be
two-element ARRAY references themselves, the second element being a
URL where an XSLT stylesheet may be found.
match => [ '/some/xpath/expression',
[ '/other/expr', '/url/of/transform.xsl' ],
],
link
This is a HASH reference where the keys correspond to "rel"
attributes and the values to "href" attributes of "" elements.
If the values are ARRAY references, they will be processed in
document order. "rel" attributes will be sorted lexically. If a
callback is supplied instead, the caller expects a result of the
same form.
link => { rel1 => 'href1', rel2 => [ qw(href2 href3) ] },
# or
link => \&_link_cb,
meta
This is a HASH reference where the keys correspond to "name"
attributes and the values to "content" attributes of ""
elements. If the values are ARRAY references, they will be processed
in document order. "name" attributes will be sorted lexically. If a
callback is supplied instead, the caller expects a result of the
same form.
meta => { name1 => 'content1',
name2 => [ qw(content2 content3) ] },
# or
meta => \&_meta_cb,
callback
These callbacks will be passed into the internal XML::LibXSLT
processor. See XML::LibXML::InputCallback for details.
callback => [ \&_match_cb, \&_open_cb, \&_read_cb, \&_close_cb ],
# or
callback => $icb, # isa XML::LibXML::InputCallback
process $INPUT [, $URI, $CONFIG ]
Processes $INPUT, which may be a string, GLOB reference, or
XML::LibXML::Document object. Returns an XML::LibXML::Document object
with the changes mentioned in the "DESCRIPTION".
AUTHOR
Dorian Taylor, ""
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-html-detergent at
rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
. I will
be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on
your bug as I make changes.
SUPPORT
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc HTML::Detergent
You can also look for information at:
* RT: CPAN's request tracker (report bugs here)
* AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
* CPAN Ratings
* Search CPAN
SEE ALSO
XML::LibXML
XML::LibXSLT
HTML::HTML5::Parser
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2013 Dorian Taylor.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
a copy of the License at
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.