settings.yml:
* outgoing.networks:
* can contains network definition
* propertiers: enable_http, verify, http2, max_connections, max_keepalive_connections,
keepalive_expiry, local_addresses, support_ipv4, support_ipv6, proxies, max_redirects, retries
* retries: 0 by default, number of times searx retries to send the HTTP request (using different IP & proxy each time)
* local_addresses can be "192.168.0.1/24" (it supports IPv6)
* support_ipv4 & support_ipv6: both True by default
see https://github.com/searx/searx/pull/1034
* each engine can define a "network" section:
* either a full network description
* either reference an existing network
* all HTTP requests of engine use the same HTTP configuration (it was not the case before, see proxy configuration in master)
The `url_for` function in the template context is not the one from Flask, it is
the one from `webapp`. The `webapp.url_for_theme` is different from its
namesake of Flask and has it quirks, when called with argument `_external=True`.
The `webapp.url_for_theme` can't handle absolute URLs since it pokes a leading
'/', here is the snippet of the old code::
url = url_for(endpoint, **values)
if settings['server']['base_url']:
if url.startswith('/'):
url = url[1:]
url = urljoin(settings['server']['base_url'], url)
Next drawback of (Flask's) `_external=True` is, that it will not return the HTTP
scheme when searx (the Flask app) listens on http and is proxied by a https
server.
To get the right scheme `HTTP_X_SCHEME` is needed by Flask (werkzeug). Since
this is not provided in every environment (e.g. behind Apache mod_wsgi or the
HTTP header is not fully set for some other reasons) it is recommended to
get *script_name*, *server* and *scheme* from the configured `base_url`. If
`base_url` is specified, then these values from are given preference over any
Flask's generics.
BTW this patch normalize to use `url_for` in the `opensearch.xml` and drop the
need of `host` and `urljoin` in template's context.
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus@darmarit.de>
Some of our interface locales include uppercase country codes,
which are separated by `_` instead of the more common `-`.
Also, a browser's `Accept-Language` header could be in lowercase.
This commit attempts to normalize those cases so a browser's
language+country codes can better match with our locales.
This solution assumes that our UI locales have nothing more than
language and optionally country. If we ever add a script specific
locale like `zh-Hant-TW` this would have to change to accomodate
that, but the idea would be pretty much the same as this fix.
Without this commit the module searx checks the secret_key value.
With this commit, make docs, utils/standalone_searx.py,
utils/fetch_firefox_version.py works without SEARX_DEBUG=1
For reference see https://github.com/searx/searx/pull/2386
see searx.search.processors.abstract.EngineProcessor
First the method searx call the get_params method.
If the return value is not None, then the searx call the method search.
use
from searx.engines.duckduckgo import _fetch_supported_languages, supported_languages_url # NOQA
so it is possible to easily remove all unused import using autoflake:
autoflake --in-place --recursive --remove-all-unused-imports searx tests
* URL / : the index page displayed the selected or the default category.
* URL / : when the q parameter is set using the URL, the redirect includes the URL query.
* URL /search : an empty query doesn't raise an exception.
This makes it easier to separately handle search and index requests
from a web server or from a reverse proxy.
If a request to index contains a query, a permanent redirect HTTP response
is returned. This should give some level of backwards compatibility
for users that have set a searx instance in their browser's search bar.
Xpath engine and results template changed to account for the fact that
archive.org doesn't cache .onions, though some onion engines migth have
their own cache.
Disabled by default. Can be enabled by setting the SOCKS proxies to
wherever Tor is listening and setting using_tor_proxy as True.
Requires Tor and updating packages.
To avoid manually adding the timeout on each engine, you can set
extra_proxy_timeout to account for Tor's (or whatever proxy used) extra
time.
When the user add searx as a search engine, the browser loads the /opensearch.xml URL without the cookies.
Without the query parameters, the user preferences are ignored (method and autocomplete).
In addition, opensearch.xml is modified to support automatic updates,
see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/OpenSearch
Always call initialize engines except on the first run of werkzeug with the reload feature.
the reload feature is activated when:
* searx_debug is True (SEARX_DEBUG environment variable or settings.yml)
* FLASK_APP=searx/webapp.py FLASK_ENV=development flask run (see https://flask.palletsprojects.com/en/1.1.x/cli/ )
Fix SEARX_DEBUG=0 make docs
docs/admin/engines.rst : engines are initialized
See https://github.com/searx/searx/issues/2204#issuecomment-701373438
requests 2.24.0 uses the ssl module except if it doesn't support SNI, in this case searx fallbacks to pyopenssl.
searx logs a critical message and exit if the ssl modules doesn't support SNI and pyOpenSSL is not installed.
searx logs a critical message and exit if the ssl version is older than 1.0.2.
in requirements.txt, pyopenssl is still required to install searx as a fallback.