You want to check whether a document contains invalid links.
Use the technique outlined in
Recipe 20.3
to extract each link, and then use the LWP::Simple module's
head
function to make sure that link exists.
Example 20.5
is an applied example of the link-extraction technique. Instead of just printing the name of the link, we call the LWP::Simple module's
head
function on it. The HEAD method fetches the remote document's metainformation to determine status information without downloading the whole document. If it fails, then the link is bad so we print an appropriate message.
Because this program uses the
get
function from LWP::Simple, it is expecting a URL, not a filename. If you want to supply either, use the
URI::Heuristic module described in
Recipe 20.1
.
#!/usr/bin/perl -w # churl - check urls use HTML::LinkExtor; use LWP::Simple qw(get head); $base_url = shift or die "usage: $0 <start_url>\n"; $parser = HTML::LinkExtor->new(undef, $base_url); $parser->parse(get($base_url)); @links = $parser->links; print "$base_url: \n"; foreach $linkarray (@links) { my @element = @$linkarray; my $elt_type = shift @element; while (@element) { my ($attr_name , $attr_value) = splice(@element, 0, 2); if ($attr_value->scheme =~ /\b(ftp|https?|file)\b/) { print " $attr_value: ", head($attr_value) ? "OK" : "BAD", "\n"; } } }
Here's an example of a program run:
% churl http://www.wizards.com
http://www.wizards.com:
FrontPage/FP_Color.gif: OK
FrontPage/FP_BW.gif: BAD
#FP_Map: OK
Games_Library/Welcome.html: OK
This program has the same limitation as the HTML::LinkExtor program in Recipe 20.3 .
The documentation for the CPAN modules HTML::LinkExtor, LWP::Simple, LWP::UserAgent, and HTTP::Response; Recipe 20.8
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