Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
159 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

python - Access Django models with scrapy: defining path to Django project

I'm very new to Python and Django. I'm currently exploring using Scrapy to scrape sites and save data to the Django database. My goal is to run a spider based on domain given by a user.

I've written a spider that extracts the data I need and store it correctly in a json file when calling

scrapy crawl spider -o items.json -t json

As described in the scrapy tutorial.

My goal is now to get the spider to succesfully to save data to the Django database, and then work on getting the spider to run based on user input.

I'm aware that various posts exists on this subject, such as these: link 1 link 2 link 3

But having spend more than 8 hours on trying to get this to work, I'm assuming i'm not the only one still facing issues with this. I'll therefor try and gather all the knowledge i've gotten so far in this post, as well a hopefully posting a working solution at a later point. Because of this, this post is rather long.

It appears to me that there is two different solutions to saving data to the Django database from Scrapy. One is to use DjangoItem, another is to to import the models directly(as done here).

I'm not completely aware of the advantages and disadvantages of these two, but it seems like the difference is simply the using DjangoItem is just more convenient and shorter.

What i've done:

I've added:

def setup_django_env(path):
    import imp, os
    from django.core.management import setup_environ

    f, filename, desc = imp.find_module('settings', [path])
    project = imp.load_module('settings', f, filename, desc)       

    setup_environ(project)

setup_django_env('/Users/Anders/DjangoTraining/wsgi/')

Error i'm getting is:

ImportError: No module named settings

I'm thinking i'm defining the path to my Django project in a wrong way?

I've also tried the following:

setup_django_env('../../') 

How do I define the path to my Django project correctly? (if that is the issue)

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Reply

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

I think the main misconception is the package path vs the settings module path. In order to use django's models from an external script you need to set the DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE. Then, this module has to be importable (i.e. if the settings path is myproject.settings, then the statement from myproject import settings should work in a python shell).

As most projects in django are created in a path outside the default PYTHONPATH, you must add the project's path to the PYTHONPATH environment variable.

Here is a step-by-step guide to create a fully working (and minimal) Django models integration into a Scrapy project:

Note: This instructions work at the date of the last edit. If it doesn't work for you, please add a comment and describe your issue and scrapy/django versions.

  1. The projects will be created within /home/rolando/projects directory.

  2. Start the django project.

    $ cd ~/projects
    $ django-admin startproject myweb
    $ cd myweb
    $ ./manage.py startapp myapp
    
  3. Create a model in myapp/models.py.

    from django.db import models
    
    
    class Person(models.Model):
        name = models.CharField(max_length=32)
    
  4. Add myapp to INSTALLED_APPS in myweb/settings.py.

    # at the end of settings.py
    INSTALLED_APPS += ('myapp',)
    
  5. Set my db settings in myweb/settings.py.

    # at the end of settings.py
    DATABASES['default']['ENGINE'] = 'django.db.backends.sqlite3'
    DATABASES['default']['NAME'] = '/tmp/myweb.db'
    
  6. Create the database.

    $ ./manage.py syncdb --noinput
    Creating tables ...
    Installing custom SQL ...
    Installing indexes ...
    Installed 0 object(s) from 0 fixture(s)
    
  7. Create the scrapy project.

    $ cd ~/projects
    $ scrapy startproject mybot
    $ cd mybot
    
  8. Create an item in mybot/items.py.

Note: In newer versions of Scrapy, you need to install scrapy_djangoitem and use from scrapy_djangoitem import DjangoItem.

    from scrapy.contrib.djangoitem import DjangoItem
    from scrapy.item import Field

    from myapp.models import Person


    class PersonItem(DjangoItem):
        # fields for this item are automatically created from the django model
        django_model = Person

The final directory structure is this:

/home/rolando/projects
├── mybot
│?? ├── mybot
│?? │?? ├── __init__.py
│?? │?? ├── items.py
│?? │?? ├── pipelines.py
│?? │?? ├── settings.py
│?? │?? └── spiders
│?? │??     └── __init__.py
│?? └── scrapy.cfg
└── myweb
    ├── manage.py
    ├── myapp
    │?? ├── __init__.py
    │?? ├── models.py
    │?? ├── tests.py
    │?? └── views.py
    └── myweb
        ├── __init__.py
        ├── settings.py
        ├── urls.py
        └── wsgi.py

From here, basically we are done with the code required to use the django models in a scrapy project. We can test it right away using scrapy shell command but be aware of the required environment variables:

$ cd ~/projects/mybot
$ PYTHONPATH=~/projects/myweb DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE=myweb.settings scrapy shell

# ... scrapy banner, debug messages, python banner, etc.

In [1]: from mybot.items import PersonItem

In [2]: i = PersonItem(name='rolando')

In [3]: i.save()
Out[3]: <Person: Person object>

In [4]: PersonItem.django_model.objects.get(name='rolando')
Out[4]: <Person: Person object>

So, it is working as intended.

Finally, you might not want to have to set the environment variables each time you run your bot. There are many alternatives to address this issue, although the best it is that the projects' packages are actually installed in a path set in PYTHONPATH.

This is one of the simplest solutions: add this lines to your mybot/settings.py file to set up the environment variables.

# Setting up django's project full path.
import sys
sys.path.insert(0, '/home/rolando/projects/myweb')

# Setting up django's settings module name.
# This module is located at /home/rolando/projects/myweb/myweb/settings.py.
import os
os.environ['DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE'] = 'myweb.settings'

# Since Django 1.7, setup() call is required to populate the apps registry.
import django; django.setup()

Note: A better approach to the path hacking is to have setuptools-based setup.py files in both projects and run python setup.py develop which will link your project path into the python's path (I'm assuming you use virtualenv).

That is enough. For completeness, here is a basic spider and pipeline for a fully working project:

  1. Create the spider.

    $ cd ~/projects/mybot
    $ scrapy genspider -t basic example example.com
    

    The spider code:

    # file: mybot/spiders/example.py
    from scrapy.spider import BaseSpider
    from mybot.items import PersonItem
    
    
    class ExampleSpider(BaseSpider):
        name = "example"
        allowed_domains = ["example.com"]
        start_urls = ['http://www.example.com/']
    
        def parse(self, response):
            # do stuff
            return PersonItem(name='rolando')
    
  2. Create a pipeline in mybot/pipelines.py to save the item.

    class MybotPipeline(object):
        def process_item(self, item, spider):
            item.save()
            return item
    

    Here you can either use item.save() if you are using the DjangoItem class or import the django model directly and create the object manually. In both ways the main issue is to define the environment variables so you can use the django models.

  3. Add the pipeline setting to your mybot/settings.py file.

    ITEM_PIPELINES = {
        'mybot.pipelines.MybotPipeline': 1000,
    }
    
  4. Run the spider.

    $ scrapy crawl example
    

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
OGeek|极客中国-欢迎来到极客的世界,一个免费开放的程序员编程交流平台!开放,进步,分享!让技术改变生活,让极客改变未来! Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...