:


Original of this document is here

These frequently asked questions about Web robots.
Send suggestions and comments to Martijn Koster.

Table of Contents

  1. About WWW robots
  2. Indexing robots
  3. For Server Administrators
  4. Robots exclusion standard
  5. Availability

About Web Robots


What is a WWW robot?

A robot is a program that automatically traverses the Web's hypertext structure by retrieving a document, and recursively retrieving all documents that are referenced.

Note that "recursive" here doesn't limit the definition to any specific traversal algorithm; even if a robot applies some heuristic to the selection and order of documents to visit and spaces out requests over a long space of time, it is still a robot.

Normal Web browsers are not robots, because the are operated by a human, and don't automatically retrieve referenced documents (other than inline images).

Web robots are sometimes referred to as Web Wanderers, Web Crawlers, or Spiders. These names are a bit misleading as they give the impression the software itself moves between sites like a virus; this not the case, a robot simply visits sites by requesting documents from them.


What is an agent?

The word "agent" is used for lots of meanings in computing these days. Specifically:
Autonomous agents
are programs that do travel between sites, deciding themselves when to move and what to do (e.g. General Magic's Telescript). These can only travel between special servers and are currently not widespread in the Internet.
Intelligent agents
are programs that help users with things, such as choosing a product, or guiding a user through form filling, or even helping users find things. These have generally little to do with networking.
User-agent
is a technical name for programs that perform networking tasks for a user, such as Web User-agents like Netscape Explorer, Email User-agent like Qualcomm Eudora etc.

What is a search engine?

A search engine is a program that searches through some dataset. In the context of the Web, the word "search engine" is most often used for search forms that search through databases of HTML documents gathered by a robot.

What other kinds of robots are there?

Robots can be used for a number of purposes: See the list of active robots to see what robot does what. Don't ask me -- all I know is what's on the list...

So what are Robots, Spiders, Web Crawlers, Worms, Ants

They're all names for the same sort of thing, with slightly different connotations:
Robots
the generic name, see above.
Spiders
same as robots, but sounds cooler in the press.
Worms
same as robots, although technically a worm is a replicating program, unlike a robot.
Web crawlers
same as robots, but note WebCrawler is a specific robot
WebAnts
distributed cooperating robots.

Aren't robots bad for the web?

There are a few reasons people believe robots are bad for the Web: But at the same time the majority of robots are well designed, professionally operated, cause no problems, and provide a valuable service in the absence of widely deployed better solutions.

So no, robots aren't inherently bad, nor inherently brilliant, and need careful attention.


Are there any robot books?

Yes:
Internet Agents: Spiders, Wanderers, Brokers, and Bots by Fah-Chun Cheong.
This books covers Web robots, commerce transaction agents, Mud agents, and a few others. It includes source code for a simple Web robot based on top of libwww-perl4.

Its coverage of HTTP, HTML, and Web libraries is a bit too thin to be a "how to write a web robot" book, but it provides useful background reading and a good overview of the state-of-the-art, especially if you haven't got the time to find all the info yourself on the Web.

Published by New Riders, ISBN 1-56205-463-5.

Bots and Other Internet Beasties by Joseph Williams
I haven't seen this myself, but someone said: The William's book 'Bots and other Internet Beasties' was quit disappointing. It claims to be a 'how to' book on writing robots, but my impression is that it is nothing more than a collection of chapters, written by various people involved in this area and subsequently bound together.

Published by Sam's, ISBN: 1-57521-016-9

Web Client Programming with Perl by Clinton Wong
This O'Reilly book is planned for Fall 1996, check the O'Reilly Web Site for the current status. It promises to be a practical book, but I haven't seen it yet.
A few others can be found on the The Software Agents Mailing List FAQ

Where do I find out more about robots?

There is a Web robots home page on: http://info.webcrawler.com/mak/projects/robots/robots.html

While this is hosted at one of the major robots' site, it is an unbiased and reasoneably comprehensive collection of information which is maintained by Martijn Koster <m.koster@webcrawler.com>.

Of course the latest version of this FAQ is there.

You'll also find details and an archive of the robots mailing list, which is intended for technical discussions about robots.


Indexing robots


How does a robot decide where to visit?

This depends on the robot, each one uses different strategies. In general they start from a historical list of URLs, especially of documents with many links elsewhere, such as server lists, "What's New" pages, and the most popular sites on the Web.

Most indexing services also allow you to submit URLs manually, which will then be queued and visited by the robot.

Sometimes other sources for URLs are used, such as scanners through USENET postings, published mailing list achives etc.

Given those starting points a robot can select URLs to visit and index, and to parse and use as a source for new URLs.

How does an indexing robot decide what to index?

If an indexing robot knows about a document, it may decide to parse it, and insert it into its database. How this is done depends on the robot: Some robots index the HTML Titles, or the first few paragraphs, or parse the entire HTML and index all words, with weightings depending on HTML constructs, etc. Some parse the META tag, or other special hidden tags.

We hope that as the Web evolves more facilities becomes available to efficiently associate meta data such as indexing information with a document. This is being worked on...


How do I register my page with a robot?

You guessed it, it depends on the service :-) Most services have a link to a URL submission form on their search page.

Fortunately you don't have to submit your URL to every service by hand: Submit-it <URL: http://www.submit-it.com/> will do it for you.


For Server Administrators


How do I know if I've been visited by a robot?

You can check your server logs for sites that retrieve many documents, especially in a short time.

If your server supports User-agent logging you can check for retrievals with unusual User-agent heder values.

Finally, if you notice a site repeatedly checking for the file '/robots.txt' chances are that is a robot too.


I've been visited by a robot! Now what?

Well, nothing :-) The whole idea is they are automatic; you don't need to do anything.

If you think you have discovered a new robot (ie one that is not listed on the list of active robots, and it does more than sporadic visits, drop me a line so I can make a note of it for future reference. But please don't tell me about every robot that happens to drop by!


A robot is traversing my whole site too fast!

This is called "rapid-fire", and people usually notice it if they're monitoring or analysing an access log file.

First of all check if it is a problem by checking the load of your server, and monitoring your servers' error log, and concurrent connections if you can. If you have a medium or high performance server, it is quite likely to be able to cope a high load of even several requests per second, especially if the visits are quick.

However you may have problems if you have a low performance site, such as your own desktop PC or Mac you're working on, or you run low performance server software, or if you have many long retrievals (such as CGI scripts or large documents). These problems manifest themselves in refused connections, a high load, performance slowdowns, or in extreme cases a system crash.

If this happens, there are a few things you should do. Most importantly, start logging information: when did you notice, what happened, what do your logs say, what are you doing in response etc; this helps investigating the problem later. Secondly, try and find out where the robot came from, what IP addresses or DNS domains, and see if they are mentioned in the list of active robots. If you can identify a site this way, you can email the person responsible, and ask them what's up. If this doesn't help, try their own site for telephone numbers, or mail postmaster at their domain.

If the robot is not on the list, mail me with all the information you have collected, including actions on your part. If I can't help, at least I can make a note of it for others.


How do I keep a robot off my server?

Read the next section...

Robots exclusion standard


Why do I find entries for /robots.txt in my log files?

They are probably from robots trying to see if you have specified any rules for them using the Standard for Robot Exclusion, see also below.

If you don't care about robots and want to prevent the messages in your error logs, simply create an empty file called robots.txt in the root level of your server.

Don't put any HTML or English language "Who the hell are you?" text in it -- it will probably never get read by anyone :-)


How do I prevent robots scanning my site?

The quick way to prevent robots visiting your site is put these two lines into the /robots.txt file on your server:
User-agent: *
Disallow: /
but its easy to be more selective than that.

Where do I find out how /robots.txt files work?

You can read the whole standard specification but the basic concept is simple: by writing a structured text file you can indicate to robots that certain parts of your server are off-limits to some or all robots. It is best explained with an example:
# /robots.txt file for http://webcrawler.com/
# mail webmaster@webcrawler.com for constructive criticism

User-agent: webcrawler
Disallow:

User-agent: lycra
Disallow: /

User-agent: *
Disallow: /tmp
Disallow: /logs
The first two lines, starting with '#', specify a comment

The first paragraph specifies that the robot called 'webcrawler' has nothing disallowed: it may go anywhere.

The second paragraph indicates that the robot called 'lycra' has all relative URLs starting with '/' disallowed. Because all relative URL's on a server start with '/', this means the entire site is closed off.

The third paragraph indicates that all other robots should not visit URLs starting with /tmp or /log. Note the '*' is a special token; its not a regular expression.

Two common errors:


Will the /robots.txt standard be extended?

Probably... there are some ideas floating around. They haven't made it into a coherent proposal because of time constraints, and because there is little pressure. Mail suggestions to the robots mailing list, and check the robots home page for work in progress.

What if I can't make a /robots.txt file?

Sometimes you cannot make a /robots.txt file, because you don't administer the entire server. All is not lost: there is a new standard for using HTML META tags to keep robots out of your documents.

The basic idea is that if you include a tag like:

<META NAME="ROBOTS" CONTENT="NOINDEX">
in your HTML document, that document won't be indexed.

If you do:

<META NAME="ROBOTS" CONTENT="NOFOLLOW">
the links in that document will not be parsed by the robot.

Availability


Where can I use a robot?

If you mean a search service, check out the various directory pages on the Web, such as Netscape's Exploring the Net or try one of the Meta search services such as MetaSearch

Where can I get a robot?

Well, you can have a look at the list of robots; I'm starting to indicate their public availability slowly.

In the meantime, two indexing robots that you should be able to get hold of are Harvest (free), and Verity's.


Where can I get the source code for a robot?

See above -- some may be willing to give out source code.

Alternatively check out the libwww-perl5 package, that has a simple example.


I'm writing a robot, what do I need to be careful of?

Lots. First read through all the stuff on the robot page then read the proceedings of past WWW Conferences, and the complete HTTP and HTML spec. Yes; it's a lot of work :-)

I've written a robot, how do I list it?

Simply fill in a form you can find on The Web Robots Database and email it to me.
Martijn Koster
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  1. Charles P.Kollar, John R.R. Leavitt, Michael Mauldin, Robot Exclusion Standard Revisited, www.kollar.com/robots.html

  2. Martijn Koster, Standard for robot exclusion, info.webcrawler.com/mak/projects/robots/robots.html
Standard for robot exclusion

Martijn Koster , .

30 1994 robots-request@nexor.co.uk ( WebCrawler. . Robots pages at WebCrawler info.webcrawler.com/mak/projects/robots/) . Technical World Wide Web www-talk@info.cern.ch .

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Martijn Koster, m.koster@webcrawler.com

: , info@citmgu.ru


Last-modified: Thu, 28 May 1998 14:14:26 GMT
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