Home

Awesome

Readability.php

Latest Stable Version Tests

PHP port of Mozilla's Readability.js. Parses html text (usually news and other articles) and returns title, author, main image and text content without nav bars, ads, footers, or anything that isn't the main body of the text. Analyzes each node, gives them a score, and determines what's relevant and what can be discarded.

Screenshot

The project aim is to be a 1 to 1 port of Mozilla's version and to follow closely all changes introduced there, but there are some major differences on the structure. Most of the code is a 1:1 copy –even the comments were imported– but some functions and structures were adapted to suit better the PHP language.

Original Developer: Andres Rey

Developer/Maintainer: FiveFilters.org

Code porting

Master branch - Up to date on 26 August 2021, with the exception of a piece of code which doesn't produce the same results in PHP for us compard to the JS version. Perhaps there's an error, or some difference in the underlying code that affects this. If you know what's wrong, please feel free to drop us a note or submit a pull request. :)

Version 2.1.0 - Up to date with Readability.js up to 19 Nov 2018.

Requirements

PHP 7.4+, ext-dom, ext-xml, and ext-mbstring. To install these dependencies (in the rare case your system does not have them already), you could try something like this in *nix like environments:

$ sudo apt-get install php7.4-xml php7.4-mbstring

How to use it

First you have to require the library using composer:

composer require fivefilters/readability.php

Then, create a Readability class and pass a Configuration class, feed the parse() function with your HTML and echo the variable:

<?php
require __DIR__ . '/vendor/autoload.php';
use fivefilters\Readability\Readability;
use fivefilters\Readability\Configuration;
use fivefilters\Readability\ParseException;

$readability = new Readability(new Configuration());

$html = file_get_contents('http://your.favorite.newspaper/article.html');

try {
    $readability->parse($html);
    echo $readability;
} catch (ParseException $e) {
    echo sprintf('Error processing text: %s', $e->getMessage());
}

Your script will output the parsed text or inform about any errors. You should always wrap the ->parse call in a try/catch block because if the HTML cannot be parsed correctly, a ParseException will be thrown.

If you want to have a finer control on the output, just call the properties one by one, wrapping it with your own HTML.

<h1><?= $readability->getTitle(); ?></h1>
<h2>By <?= $readability->getAuthor(); ?></h2>
<div class="content"><?= $readability->getContent(); ?></div>

Here's a list of the available properties:

If you need to tweak the final HTML you can get the DOMDocument of the result by calling ->getDOMDocument().

Options

You can change the behaviour of Readability via the Configuration object. For example, if you want to fix relative URLs and declare the original URL, you could set up the configuration like this:

$configuration = new Configuration();
$configuration
    ->setFixRelativeURLs(true)
    ->setOriginalURL('http://my.newspaper.url/article/something-interesting-to-read.html');

Also you can pass an array of configuration parameters to the constructor:

$configuration = new Configuration([
    'fixRelativeURLs' => true,
    'originalURL'     => 'http://my.newspaper.url/article/something-interesting-to-read.html',
    // other parameters ... listing below
]);

Then you pass this Configuration object to Readability. The following options are available. Remember to prepend set when calling them using native setters.

Debug log

Logging is optional and you will have to inject your own logger to save all the debugging messages. To do so, use a logger that implements the PSR-3 logging interface and pass it to the configuration object. For example:

// Using monolog

$log = new Logger('Readability');
$log->pushHandler(new StreamHandler('path/to/my/log.txt'));

$configuration->setLogger($log);

In the log you will find information about the parsed nodes, why they were removed, and why they were considered relevant to the final article.

Limitations

Of course the main limitation is PHP. Websites that load the content through lazy loading, AJAX, or any type of javascript fueled call will be ignored (actually, not ran) and the resulting text will be incorrect, compared to the readability.js results. All the articles you want to parse with readability.php need to be complete and all the content should be in the HTML already.

Known libxml parsing issues

Readability.php as of version 3.0.0 uses a HTML5 parser. Earlier versions used libxml. The issues below apply to libxml parsing, so if you're using an earlier version of Readability.php (pre 3.0.0), or if you've set the parser to libxml in the configuration, read on...

Javascript spilling into the text body

DOMDocument has some issues while parsing javascript with unescaped HTML on strings. Consider the following code:

<div> <!-- Offending div without closing tag -->
<script type="text/javascript">
       var test = '</div>';
       // I should not appear on the result
</script>

If you would like to remove the scripts of the HTML (like readability does), you would expect ending up with just one div and one comment on the final HTML. The problem is that libxml takes that closing div tag inside the javascript string as a HTML tag, effectively closing the unclosed tag and leaving the rest of the javascript as a string within a P tag. If you save that node, the final HTML will end up like this:

<div> <!-- Offending div without closing tag -->
<p>';
       // I should not appear on the result
</p></div>

This is a libxml issue and not a Readability.php bug.

There's a workaround for this: using the summonCthulhu option. This will remove all script tags via regex, which is not ideal because you may end up summoning the lord of darkness.

&nbsp entities disappearing

&nbsp entities are converted to spaces automatically by libxml and there's no way to disable it.

Self closing tags rendering as fully expanded tags

Self closing tags like <br /> get automatically expanded to <br></br. No way to disable it in libxml.

Dependencies

Readability.php uses

To-do

How it works

Readability parses all the text with DOMDocument, scans the text nodes and gives the a score, based on the amount of words, links and type of element. Then it selects the highest scoring element and creates a new DOMDocument with all its siblings. Each sibling is scored to discard useless elements, like nav bars, empty nodes, etc.

Security

If you're going to use Readability with untrusted input (whether in HTML or DOM form), we strongly recommend you use a sanitizer library like HTML Purifier to avoid script injection when you use the output of Readability. We would also recommend using CSP to add further defense-in-depth restrictions to what you allow the resulting content to do. The Firefox integration of reader mode uses both of these techniques itself. Sanitizing unsafe content out of the input is explicitly not something we aim to do as part of Readability itself - there are other good sanitizer libraries out there, use them!

Testing

Any version of PHP from 7.4 and above installed locally should be enough to develop new features and add new test cases. If you want to be 100% sure that your change doesn't create any issues with other versions of PHP, you can use the provided Docker containers to test currently in 7.4, 8.0, 8.1.

If you use composer to download this this package, make sure you pass the --prefer-source flag, otherwise the test/ folder won't be downloaded.

You'll need Docker and Docker Compose for this. To run all the tests in the three PHP versions above, just type the following command:

make test-all

This will start all the containers and run all the tests on every supported version of PHP. If you want to test against a specific version, you can use make test-7.4, make test-8.0, or make test-8.1.

Different versions of libxml

If you want to test against supported versions of PHP AND multiple versions of libxml, run test-all-versions. This will test against PHP versions 7.4 to 8.1 and libxml versions 2.9.10, 2.9.13 and 2.9.14. Normally you won't need to do this unless you think you've found a bug on an specific version of libxml.

Updating the expected tests

If you've made an improvement to the code, you'll probably want to examine the Readability.php output for the test cases here. To do that, run the following command first from the root of the project folder:

docker-compose up -d php-7.4-libxml-2.9.10

You should now have a docker image running with the project root folder mapped to /app/ on your Docker instance (see docker-compose.yml). Any changes to these files will be accessible from the Docker instance from now on.

Next, create a folder in tests/ called /changed, then run the following command to run the test suite:

docker-compose exec -e output-changes=1 -e output-diff=1 php-7.4-libxml-2.9.10 php /app/vendor/phpunit/phpunit/phpunit --configuration /app/phpunit.xml

The two environment variables (output-changes=1 and output-diff=1) will result in new output for any failing test (along with a diff of changes) being written to the changed/ folder.

If you're happy the changes are okay, set output-diff=0 and the diff files will no longer be written, making it easier to copy the new expected output files over to their corresponding locations in test-pages.

License

Based on Arc90's readability.js (1.7.1) script available at: http://code.google.com/p/arc90labs-readability

Copyright (c) 2010 Arc90 Inc

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at

   http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.