check HTTP response:
* detect some comme CAPTCHA challenge (no solving). In this case the engine is suspended for long a time.
* otherwise raise HTTPError as before
the check is done in poolrequests.py (was before in search.py).
update qwant, wikipedia, wikidata to use raise_for_httperror instead of raise_for_status
Add a new parameter "raise_for_status", set by default to True.
When True, any HTTP status code >= 300 raise an exception ( #2332 )
When False, the engine can manage the HTTP status code by itself.
* Fix "?q=test&engines=wikipedia": fix exception
* Fix "?q=test&engines=wikipedia&categories=images": now the engines from images category are included.
* Fix parse_timeout: make sure a value is always returned
* Various typing fixes (searx.webadapter, searx.search.SearchQuery)
was previously a Dict with two or three keys: name, category, from_bang
make clear that this is a engine reference (see tests/unit/test_search.py for example)
all variables using this class are renamed accordingly.
* Made first attempt at the bangs redirects plugin.
* It redirects. But in a messy way via javascript.
* First version with custom plugin
* Added a help page and a operator to see all the bangs available.
* Changed to .format because of support
* Changed to .format because of support
* Removed : in params
* Fixed path to json file and changed bang operator
* Changed bang operator back to &
* Made first attempt at the bangs redirects plugin.
* It redirects. But in a messy way via javascript.
* First version with custom plugin
* Added a help page and a operator to see all the bangs available.
* Changed to .format because of support
* Changed to .format because of support
* Removed : in params
* Fixed path to json file and changed bang operator
* Changed bang operator back to &
* Refactored getting search query. Also changed bang operator to ! and is now working.
* Removed prints
* Removed temporary bangs_redirect.js file. Updated plugin documentation
* Added unit test for the bangs plugin
* Fixed a unit test and added 2 more for bangs plugin
* Changed back to default settings.yml
* Added myself to AUTHORS.rst
* Refacored working of custom plugin.
* Refactored _get_bangs_data from list to dict to improve search speed.
* Decoupled bangs plugin from webserver with redirect_url
* Refactored bangs unit tests
* Fixed unit test bangs. Removed dubbel parsing in bangs.py
* Removed a dumb print statement
* Refactored bangs plugin to core engine.
* Removed bangs plugin.
* Refactored external bangs unit tests from plugin to core.
* Removed custom_results/bangs documentation from plugins.rst
* Added newline in settings.yml so the PR stays clean.
* Changed searx/plugins/__init__.py back to the old file
* Removed newline search.py
* Refactored get_external_bang_operator from utils to external_bang.py
* Removed unnecessary import form test_plugins.py
* Removed _parseExternalBang and _isExternalBang from query.py
* Removed get_external_bang_operator since it was not necessary
* Simplified external_bang.py
* Simplified external_bang.py
* Moved external_bangs unit tests to test_webapp.py. Fixed return in search with external_bang
* Refactored query parsing to unicode to support python2
* Refactored query parsing to unicode to support python2
* Refactored bangs plugin to core engine.
* Refactored search parameter to search_query in external_bang.py
The new url parameter "timeout_limit" set timeout limit defined in second.
Example "timeout_limit=1.5" means the timeout limit is 1.5 seconds.
In addition, the query can start with <[number] to set the timeout limit.
For number between 0 and 99, the unit is the second :
Example: "<30 searx" means the timeout limit is 3 seconds
For number above 100, the unit is the millisecond:
Example: "<850 searx" means the timeout is 850 milliseconds.
In addition, there is a new optional setting: outgoing.max_request_timeout.
If not set, the user timeout can't go above searx configuration (as before: the max timeout of selected engine for a query).
If the value is set, the user can set a timeout between 0 and max_request_timeout using
<[number] or timeout_limit query parameter.
Related to #1077
Updated version of PR #1413 from @isj-privacore
Server Timing specification: https://www.w3.org/TR/server-timing/
In the browser Dev Tools, focus on the main request, there are the responses per engine in the Timing tab.
languages.py can change, so users may query on a language that is not
on the list anymore, even if it is still recognized by a few engines.
also made no and nb the same because they seem to return the same,
though most engines will only support one or the other.