Reputation: 3110
I wrote a spider, that worked brilliantly the first time. The second time I tried to run it, it didn't venture beyond the start_urls
. I tried to fetch
the url in scrapy shell
and create a HtmlXPathSelector
object from the returned response. That is when I got the error
So the steps were: `
[scrapy shell] fetch('http://example.com') #its something other than example.
[scrapy shell] from scrapy.selector import HtmlXPathSelector
[scrapy shell] hxs = HtmlXPathSelector(response)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Traceback:
AttributeError Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-3-a486208adf1e> in <module>()
----> 1 HtmlXPathSelector(response)
/home/codefreak/project-r42catalog/env-r42catalog/lib/python2.7/site-packages/scrapy/selector/lxmlsel.pyc in __init__(self, response, text, namespaces, _root, _expr)
29 body=unicode_to_str(text, 'utf-8'), encoding='utf-8')
30 if response is not None:
---> 31 _root = LxmlDocument(response, self._parser)
32
33 self.namespaces = namespaces
/home/codefreak/project-r42catalog/env-r42catalog/lib/python2.7/site-packages/scrapy/selector/lxmldocument.pyc in __new__(cls, response, parser)
25 if parser not in cache:
26 obj = object_ref.__new__(cls)
---> 27 cache[parser] = _factory(response, parser)
28 return cache[parser]
29
/home/codefreak/project-r42catalog/env-r42catalog/lib/python2.7/site-packages/scrapy/selector/lxmldocument.pyc in _factory(response, parser_cls)
11 def _factory(response, parser_cls):
12 url = response.url
---> 13 body = response.body_as_unicode().strip().encode('utf8') or '<html/>'
14 parser = parser_cls(recover=True, encoding='utf8')
15 return etree.fromstring(body, parser=parser, base_url=url)
Error:
AttributeError: 'Response' object has no attribute 'body_as_unicode'
Am I overlooking something very obvious or stumbled upon a bug in scrapy?
Upvotes: 3
Views: 9418
Reputation: 2254
body_as_unicode
is a method of TextResponse. TextResponse, or one of its subclasses such as HtmlResponse, will be created by scrapy if the http response contains textual content.
In [1]: fetch('http://scrapy.org')
...
In [2]: type(response)
Out[2]: scrapy.http.response.html.HtmlResponse
...
In [3]: fetch('http://www.scrapy.org/site-media/images/logo.png')
...
In [4]: type(response)
Out[4]: scrapy.http.response.Response
In your case, the most likely explanation is that scrapy believes the response does not contain text.
Does the HTTP response from the server correctly set the Content-Type header? Does it render correctly in a browser? These questions will help understand if it's expected behavior or a bug.
Upvotes: 9