14

I'm running a scraper of this course website and I'm wondering whether there's a faster way to scrape the page once I have it put into beautifulsoup. It takes way longer than I would have expected.

Tips?

from selenium import webdriver
from selenium.webdriver.common.keys import Keys
from selenium.webdriver.support.ui import Select
from selenium.webdriver.support import expected_conditions as EC

from bs4 import BeautifulSoup

driver = webdriver.PhantomJS()
driver.implicitly_wait(10) # seconds
driver.get("https://acadinfo.wustl.edu/Courselistings/Semester/Search.aspx")
select = Select(driver.find_element_by_name("ctl00$Body$ddlSchool"))

parsedClasses = {}

for i in range(len(select.options)):
    print i
    select = Select(driver.find_element_by_name("ctl00$Body$ddlSchool"))
    select.options[i].click()
    upperLevelClassButton = driver.find_element_by_id("Body_Level500")
    upperLevelClassButton.click()
    driver.find_element_by_name("ctl00$Body$ctl15").click()

    soup = BeautifulSoup(driver.page_source, "lxml")

    courses = soup.select(".CrsOpen")
    for course in courses:
        courseName = course.find_next(class_="ResultTable")["id"][13:]
        parsedClasses[courseName] = []
        print courseName
        for section in course.select(".SecOpen"):
            classInfo = section.find_all_next(class_="ItemRowCenter")
            parsedClasses[courseName].append((int(classInfo[0].string), int(classInfo[1].string), int(classInfo[2].string)))

print parsedClasses
print parsedClasses['FL2014' + 'A46' + '3284']

driver.quit()
3
  • use lxml directly (with xpath expressions) if you care about speed.
    – roippi
    Aug 28, 2014 at 1:26
  • This is essentially a request for a code review, and thus not a good fit for SO. There is a site in the SE network dedicated to code reviews: codereview.stackexchange.com
    – Louis
    Aug 28, 2014 at 10:10
  • 4
    @Louis I disagree, it is also about alternative ways to get the data from the search results. It is not just about the code and the quality of it.
    – alecxe
    Aug 28, 2014 at 13:42

3 Answers 3

22

Okay, you can really speed this up by:

Since this is ASP.NET generated form and due to it's security features, things get a bit more complicated. Here's the complete code, don't be afraid of it - I've added comments and open to questions:

import re
from bs4 import BeautifulSoup, SoupStrainer
import requests

# start session and get the search page
session = requests.Session()
response = session.get('https://acadinfo.wustl.edu/Courselistings/Semester/Search.aspx')

# parse the search page using SoupStrainer and lxml
strainer = SoupStrainer('form', attrs={'id': 'form1'})
soup = BeautifulSoup(response.content, 'lxml', parse_only=strainer)

# get the view state, event target and validation values
viewstate = soup.find('input', id='__VIEWSTATE').get('value')
eventvalidation = soup.find('input', id='__EVENTVALIDATION').get('value')
search_button = soup.find('input', value='Search')
event_target = re.search(r"__doPostBack\('(.*?)'", search_button.get('onclick')).group(1)

# configure post request parameters
data = {
    '__EVENTTARGET': event_target,
    '__EVENTARGUMENT': '',
    '__LASTFOCUS': '',
    '__VIEWSTATE': viewstate,
    '__EVENTVALIDATION': eventvalidation,
    'ctl00$Body$ddlSemester': '201405',
    'ctl00$Body$ddlSession': '',
    'ctl00$Body$ddlDept': '%',
    'ctl00$Body$ddlAttributes': '0',
    'ctl00$Body$Days': 'rbAnyDay',
    'ctl00$Body$Time': 'rbAnyTime',
    'ctl00$Body$cbMorning': 'on',
    'ctl00$Body$cbAfternoon': 'on',
    'ctl00$Body$cbEvening': 'on',
    'ctl00$Body$tbStart': '9:00am',
    'ctl00$Body$tbEnds': '5:00pm',
    'ctl00$Body$ddlUnits': '0',
    'ctl00$Body$cbHideIStudy': 'on',
    'ctl00$Body$courseList$hidHoverShow': 'Y',
    'ctl00$Body$courseList$hidDeptBarCnt': '',
    'ctl00$Body$courseList$hidSiteURL': 'https://acadinfo.wustl.edu/Courselistings',
    'ctl00$Body$courseList$hidExpandDetail': '',
    'ctl00$Body$hidDay': ',1,2,3,4,5,6,7',
    'ctl00$Body$hidLevel': '1234',
    'ctl00$Body$hidDefLevel': ''
}

# get the list of options
strainer = SoupStrainer('div', attrs={'id': 'Body_courseList_tabSelect'})
options = soup.select('#Body_ddlSchool > option')
for option in options:
    print "Processing {option} ...".format(option=option.text)

    data['ctl00$Body$ddlSchool'] = option.get('value')

    # make the search post request for a particular option
    response = session.post('https://acadinfo.wustl.edu/Courselistings/Semester/Search.aspx',
                            data=data)
    result_soup = BeautifulSoup(response.content, parse_only=strainer)
    print [item.text[:20].replace('&nbsp', ' ') + '...' for item in result_soup.select('div.CrsOpen')]

Prints:

Processing Architecture ...
[u'A46 ARCH 100...', u'A46 ARCH 111...', u'A46 ARCH 209...', u'A46 ARCH 211...', u'A46 ARCH 266...', u'A46 ARCH 305...', u'A46 ARCH 311...', u'A46 ARCH 323...', u'A46 ARCH 328...', u'A46 ARCH 336...', u'A46 ARCH 343...', u'A46 ARCH 350...', u'A46 ARCH 355...', u'A46 ARCH 411...', u'A46 ARCH 422...', u'A46 ARCH 428...', u'A46 ARCH 436...', u'A46 ARCH 445...', u'A46 ARCH 447...', u'A46 ARCH 465...', u'A48 LAND 451...', u'A48 LAND 453...', u'A48 LAND 461...']
Processing Art ...
[u'F10 ART 1052...', u'F10 ART 1073...', u'F10 ART 213A...', u'F10 ART 215A...', u'F10 ART 217B...', u'F10 ART 221A...', u'F10 ART 231I...', u'F10 ART 241D...', u'F10 ART 283T...', u'F10 ART 301A...', u'F10 ART 311E...', u'F10 ART 313D...', u'F10 ART 315B...', u'F10 ART 317H...', u'F10 ART 323A...', u'F10 ART 323B...', u'F10 ART 323C...', u'F10 ART 329C...', u'F10 ART 337E...', u'F10 ART 337F...', u'F10 ART 337H...', u'F10 ART 385A...', u'F10 ART 391M...', u'F10 ART 401A...', u'F10 ART 411E...', u'F10 ART 413D...', u'F10 ART 415B...', u'F10 ART 417H...', u'F10 ART 423A...', u'F10 ART 423B...', u'F10 ART 423C...', u'F10 ART 429C...', u'F10 ART 433C...', u'F10 ART 433D...', u'F10 ART 433E...', u'F10 ART 433K...', u'F10 ART 461C...', u'F10 ART 485A...', u'F20 ART 111P...', u'F20 ART 115P...', u'F20 ART 1186...', u'F20 ART 119C...', u'F20 ART 127A...', u'F20 ART 133B...', u'F20 ART 135G...', u'F20 ART 135I...', u'F20 ART 135J...', u'F20 ART 1361...', u'F20 ART 1363...', u'F20 ART 1713...', u'F20 ART 219C...', u'F20 ART 2363...', u'F20 ART 2661...', u'F20 ART 281S...', u'F20 ART 311P...', u'F20 ART 315P...', u'F20 ART 3183...', u'F20 ART 333B...', u'F20 ART 335A...', u'F20 ART 335J...', u'F20 ART 3713...', u'F20 ART 381S...', u'F20 ART 415P...', u'F20 ART 435I...']
...

There are certainly things to improve here, like, I've hardcoded the other form values - you should probably parse the possible values and set them appropriately.

Another improvement would be to tie this up to grequests:

GRequests allows you to use Requests with Gevent to make asynchronous HTTP Requests easily.


As you can see, when you are at the higher-level and interact with a browser through the webdriver - you are not worried about the actual requests coming to the server to get you the data. This makes it easy to automate, but can be painfully slow. When you go down to the low-level automation, you have more options to speed things up, but the implementation complexity grows very fast. Plus, think about how reliable could this sort of the solution be. So may be stick to the "black-box" solution and stay with selenium?


I've also tried to solve the problem using:

but failed because of different reasons (can provide you with the relevant error messages). Though, all these 3 tools should have helped to simplify the solution.

Also see similar threads:

3
  • Wow! So yes - one of the reasons I went with Selenium is because I felt that they could change the website a small amount and break my script incredibly easily... but also I recognize how slow it is to run a phantom web browser. I also was just hacking away happily and thought it might be easier to skip all the post data because the website looks like kind of a mess. How did you figure which fields needed to be populated? Aug 28, 2014 at 16:20
  • @tbondwilkinson exactly. I've used browser developer tools that chrome provides. In case of Firefox, you can use firebug. Pretty much must have for web-scraping.
    – alecxe
    Aug 28, 2014 at 16:22
  • Thanks @alecxe, I got a 1.5x speed up by using the lxml parser and 10x by using SoupStrainer to restrain only to divs, in my case most of the html wasn't used for anything. Jul 22, 2019 at 17:25
13

I'm gonna post this hidden gem in hopes that it might help someone as it helped me a lot:

Just make sure you're passing string object to BeautifulSoup and not bytes.

If you're using requests, do this

page = requests.get(some_url)
soup = BeautifulSoup(page.text, 'html.parser')

instead of this

page = requests.get(some_url)
soup = BeautifulSoup(page.content, 'html.parser')

I don't know the reason behind this, author of referenced article doesn't either, but it sure made my code almost 4 times faster.

Speeding Up BeautifulSoup With Large XML Files, James Hodgkinson

0
6

According to beautifulsoup docs:

You can speed up encoding detection significantly by installing the cchardet library.

Assuming you are already using lxml as the parser for beautifulsoup (which the OP is), you can speed it up significantly (10x - link) by just installing and importing cchardet.

1
  • 1
    For me it was not 10x faster, but about 20% faster which is still quite helpful. Weird that character detection slows it down so much...
    – Burrito
    Feb 7, 2021 at 17:57

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