20

I am following this guide http://doc.scrapy.org/en/0.16/topics/practices.html#run-scrapy-from-a-script to run scrapy from my script. Here is part of my script:

    crawler = Crawler(Settings(settings))
    crawler.configure()
    spider = crawler.spiders.create(spider_name)
    crawler.crawl(spider)
    crawler.start()
    log.start()
    reactor.run()
    print "It can't be printed out!"

It works at it should: visits pages, scrape needed info and stores output json where I told it(via FEED_URI). But when spider finishing his work(I can see it by number in output json) execution of my script wouldn't resume. Probably it isn't scrapy problem. And answer should somewhere in twisted's reactor. How could I release thread execution?

2
  • Wrap this code in a new script and call that perhaps?
    – Talvalin
    Feb 8, 2013 at 21:39
  • Not sure I got your comment right. What do you mean 'call the script'? It hangs right in reactor.run() and log writes me: 'INFO: Closing spider (finished)' so spider seems to be finished. Feb 8, 2013 at 22:15

2 Answers 2

28

You will need to stop the reactor when the spider finishes. You can accomplish this by listening for the spider_closed signal:

from twisted.internet import reactor

from scrapy import log, signals
from scrapy.crawler import Crawler
from scrapy.settings import Settings
from scrapy.xlib.pydispatch import dispatcher

from testspiders.spiders.followall import FollowAllSpider

def stop_reactor():
    reactor.stop()

dispatcher.connect(stop_reactor, signal=signals.spider_closed)
spider = FollowAllSpider(domain='scrapinghub.com')
crawler = Crawler(Settings())
crawler.configure()
crawler.crawl(spider)
crawler.start()
log.start()
log.msg('Running reactor...')
reactor.run()  # the script will block here until the spider is closed
log.msg('Reactor stopped.')

And the command line log output might look something like:

stav@maia:/srv/scrapy/testspiders$ ./api
2013-02-10 14:49:38-0600 [scrapy] INFO: Running reactor...
2013-02-10 14:49:47-0600 [followall] INFO: Closing spider (finished)
2013-02-10 14:49:47-0600 [followall] INFO: Dumping Scrapy stats:
    {'downloader/request_bytes': 23934,...}
2013-02-10 14:49:47-0600 [followall] INFO: Spider closed (finished)
2013-02-10 14:49:47-0600 [scrapy] INFO: Reactor stopped.
stav@maia:/srv/scrapy/testspiders$
7
  • 2
    It definitely should be described in documentations. Thanks. Feb 13, 2013 at 11:59
  • I've submitted a pull request which describes how to stop the reactor to the scrapy documentation, it should be in soon :) Jun 26, 2013 at 6:54
  • 1
    When running scrapy from script like that how do I pass arguments for scrapy? Like -o output.json -t json Sep 25, 2013 at 21:44
  • where should I put that script please? Feb 9, 2014 at 18:06
  • 1
    instead of using an additional stop_reactor, this works: crawler.signals.connect(reactor.stop, signal=signals.spider_closed)
    – arcolife
    Sep 5, 2014 at 7:42
6

In scrapy 0.19.x you should do this:

from twisted.internet import reactor
from scrapy.crawler import Crawler
from scrapy import log, signals
from testspiders.spiders.followall import FollowAllSpider
from scrapy.utils.project import get_project_settings

spider = FollowAllSpider(domain='scrapinghub.com')
settings = get_project_settings()
crawler = Crawler(settings)
crawler.signals.connect(reactor.stop, signal=signals.spider_closed)
crawler.configure()
crawler.crawl(spider)
crawler.start()
log.start()
reactor.run() # the script will block here until the spider_closed signal was sent

Note these lines

settings = get_project_settings()
crawler = Crawler(settings)

Without it your spider won't use your settings and will not save the items. Took me a while to figure out why the example in documentation wasn't saving my items. I sent a pull request to fix the doc example.

One more way to do it is just call command directly from you script

from scrapy import cmdline
cmdline.execute("scrapy crawl followall".split())  #followall is the spider's name

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