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subtitle: How to generate RSS feed via command line
author: Yann Esposito
email: yann@esposito.host
date: [2019-09-30 Mon]
keywords: programming web
description: How I generate RSS feed via command line
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TL;DR: To generate an RSS file you need to provide many metadatas.
Those metadata are not part of all HTML files.
So generating RSS from a tree of HTML file is not straightforward.
Here is the script I use.
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RSS feed is meant to declare updates and new articles for a website.
Each RSS entry must therefore have a date, an unique id, a title, maybe
some categories, etc...
For most blog platform or even static website generator, those meta infos
are clearly put in the sources or in some DB.
I use =org-mode= for generating my website, and the =ox-rss= is quite slow
when generating an RSS with the full content of each item.
Mainly, the way to achieve full content of my articles inside an RSS with
=ox-rss= is by first creating a very big org file containing all the
articles, and then transforming it in RSS. And this is very slow (several minutes).
So a simpler idea inspired by lb[fn:lb] is to generate the RSS directly
from the generated HTML files.
The only difficulty is to find the metadata inside those HTML.
Unfortunately there is no real standard for all those metas.
So to use the HTML as source you'll need to "parse" the HTML file.
For that purpose I use =html-xml-utils=[fn:hu].
I wrote a simple zsh script; it starts with lot of variables to fill:
# Directory webdir="_site" # directory containing your website html files postsdir="$webdir/posts" # directory containing the articles rssfile="$webdir/rss.xml" # the RSS file to generate # maximal number of articles to put in the RSS file maxarticles=10 # RSS Metas rsstitle="her.esy.fun" rssurl="https://her.esy.fun/rss.xml" websiteurl="https://her.esy.fun" rssdescription="her.esy.fun articles, mostly random personal thoughts" rsslang="en" rssauthor="yann@esposito.host (Yann Esposito)" rssimgtitle="yogsototh" rssimgurl="https://her.esy.fun/img/FlatAvatar.png"
Then I set the accessor to extract the information I want from HTML files.
It is quite unfortunate that there is no really strong convention for where
to put article dates, article author email.
There are metas for title and keywords thought.
# HTML Accessors (similar to CSS accessors) dateaccessor='.article-date' contentaccessor='#content' # title and keyword shouldn't be changed titleaccessor='title' keywordsaccessor='meta[name=keywords]::attr(content)'
A few helper functions:
formatdate() { # format the date for RSS local d=$1 LC_TIME=en_US date --date $d +'%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S %z' } finddate(){ < $1 hxselect -c $dateaccessor } findtitle(){ < $1 hxselect -c $titleaccessor } # retrieve the content, take care of using absolute URL getcontent(){ < $1 hxselect $contentaccessor | \ perl -pe 'use URI; $base="'$2'"; s# (href|src)="((?!https?://)[^"]*)"#" ".$1."=\"".URI->new_abs($2,$base)->as_string."\""#eig' } findkeywords(){ < $1 hxselect -c $keywordsaccessor | sed 's/,//g' } mkcategories(){ for keyword in $*; do printf "\\n<category>%s</category>" $keyword done }
The =mkcategories= will be used to add an RSS category for each keyword.
And finally the real loop doing the work:
tmpdir=$(mktemp -d) # create a temporary work dir typeset -a dates # an array to save dates of all articles dates=( ) # for each HTML file we generate the XML for the item in a file # named ${d}-$(basename $fic).rss that naming convention will be useful to # sort article by date for fic in $postsdir/**/*.html; do postfile="$(echo "$fic"|sed 's#^'$postsdir'/##')" blogfile="$(echo "$fic"|sed 's#^'$webdir'/##')" printf "%-30s" $postfile xfic="$tmpdir/$fic.xml" mkdir -p $(dirname $xfic) hxclean $fic > $xfic # create a cleaner HTML file to help hxselect work d=$(finddate $xfic) echo -n " [$d]" rssdate=$(formatdate $d) title=$(findtitle $xfic) keywords=( $(findkeywords $xfic) ) printf ": %-55s" "$title ($keywords)" # up until here, we extracted the informations we need for the item categories=$(mkcategories $keywords) absoluteurl="${websiteurl}/${blogfile}" { printf "\\n<item>" printf "\\n<title>%s</title>" "$title" printf "\\n<guid>%s</guid>" "$absoluteurl" printf "\\n<pubDate>%s</pubDate>%s" "$rssdate" printf "%s" "$categories" printf "\\n<description><![CDATA[\\n%s\\n]]></description>" "$(getcontent "$xfic" "$absoluteurl")" printf "\\n</item>\\n\\n" } >> "$tmpdir/${d}-$(basename $fic).rss" # we append the date to the list of dates dates=( $d $dates ) echo " [${fg[green]}OK${reset_color}]" done # Now we publish the items in reverse newer articles first echo "Publishing" for fic in $(ls $tmpdir/*.rss | sort -r | head -n $maxarticles ); do echo "${fic:t}" cat $fic >> $tmpdir/rss done # we get the latest publish date rssmaxdate=$(formatdate $(for d in $dates; do echo $d; done | sort -r | head -n 1)) # we put the current date for the latest build date rssbuilddate=$(formatdate $(date)) # we generate the RSS file { # Write the preamble of the RSS file cat <<END <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <rss version="2.0" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/" xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/" xmlns:georss="http://www.georss.org/georss" xmlns:geo="http://www.w3.org/2003/01/geo/wgs84_pos#" xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"><channel> <title>${rsstitle}</title> <atom:link href="${rssurl}" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /> <link>${websiteurl}</link> <description><![CDATA[${rssdescription}]]></description> <language>${rsslang}</language> <pubDate>${rssmaxdate}</pubDate> <lastBuildDate>$rssbuilddate</lastBuildDate> <generator>mkrss.sh</generator> <webMaster>${rssauthor}</webMaster> <image> <url>${rssimgurl}</url> <title>${rssimgtitle}</title> <link>${websiteurl}</link> </image> END # write all items cat $tmpdir/rss # close the RSS file cat <<END </channel> </rss> END } > "$rssfile" # cleanup temporary directory rm -rf $tmpdir echo "RSS Generated"
Here is the full script I use:
You can notice I start my script with:
#!/usr/bin/env nix-shell #!nix-shell -i zsh
The =nix-shell= bang pattern is a neat trick to have all the dependencies I
need when running my script.
It takes care that =zsh=, =coreutils= and =html-xml-utils= are installed
before running my script.
For example my script uses =date= from GNU coreutils and not the =BSD= date
from my OS, which makes the script more portable.
This also take care of using the URI perl package.
Along my script I have a
file containing:
# { pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }: { pkgs ? import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/19.09.tar.gz) {} }: pkgs.mkShell { buildInputs = [ pkgs.coreutils pkgs.html-xml-utils pkgs.zsh pkgs.perl pkgs.perlPackages.URI ]; }
Mainly it /pins/ a package version and the list in =buildInputs= contains
the packages to install locally.
If you are not already using nix[fn:nix] you should really take a look.
That =shell.nix= will work on Linux and MacOS.
[fn:lb] https://github.com/LukeSmithxyz/lb
[fn:hu] https://www.w3.org/Tools/HTML-XML-utils/
[fn:nix] https://nixos.org/nix