- add script to shellcheck,
- fix error messages from shellcheck and
- moved global variables to local variables (lower case)
No functional change!
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
The idea is to avoid conflict when there are differents branches with changes are made on the static files.
A solution is to ask the administrators to build the files from the sources, but it requires to install the npm dependencies.
So the solution in this commit keep the sources and the build files in the same git repository.
In one branch, the modification of the source (*.less, *.js) are commited without the built files.
The built files are commited in a uniq commit, with a commit message "Static build"
In case of merge or rebase, this commit can be dropped.
New make targets:
* static.build.commit.drop:
drop the last "Static build".
The command checks that there are only build files in the commit.
* static.build.commit :
call "make static.build.commit.drop"
call "make themes.all"
commit the files
* static.git.restore.staged:
git restore --staged <build files>
* static.git.restore:
git restore <build files>
Related to https://github.com/searxng/searxng/issues/137
- move jshint option from gruntfile to .jshintrc
- remove trailing-whitespace from gruntfile and
- add jshint esversion: 6
- .dir-locals.el add locals for js-mode to use JSHint from the simple theme
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
This patch disables role 'no-descending-specificity'. IMO it is better to have
this rule active (see below [1]), but it is hard to rewrite the less files to
pass this rule, so for the first I chose to disable this rule.
---
Source order is important in CSS, and when two selectors have the same
specificity, the one that occurs last will take priority. However, the situation
is different when one of the selectors has a higher specificity. In that case,
source order does not matter: the selector with higher specificity will win out
even if it comes first.
The clashes of these two mechanisms for prioritization, source order and
specificity, can cause some confusion when reading stylesheets. If a selector
with higher specificity comes before the selector it overrides, we have to think
harder to understand it, because it violates the source order
expectation. Stylesheets are most legible when overriding selectors always come
after the selectors they override. That way both mechanisms, source order and
specificity, work together nicely.
This rule enforces that practice as best it can, reporting fewer errors than it
should. It cannot catch every actual overriding selector, but it can catch
certain common mistakes.
[1] https://stylelint.io/user-guide/rules/list/no-descending-specificity/
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
This fix was autogenerated by::
npx stylelint -f unix --fix 'searx/static/themes/simple/src/less/**/*.less'
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
Docker is blocking network of existing LXC containers / there is a conflict in
the iptables setup of Docker & LXC. With this patch:
- utils/lxc.sh checks internet connectivity (instead of silently hang)
- Chapter "Internet Connectivity & Docker" describes the problem and made a
suggestion for a solution a solution
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
In 5a7b12ee we changed the signature of the YAML settings, this patch takes this
into account.
Related-to: 5a7b12ee [yamllint] searx/settings.yml
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
In the EU there exists a "General Data Protection Regulation" [1] aka GDPR (BTW:
very user friendly!) which requires consent to tracking. To get the consent
from the user, google-news requests are redirected to confirm and get a CONSENT
Cookie from https://consent.google.de/s?continue=...
This patch adds a CONSENT Cookie to the google-news request to avoid
redirection.
The behavior of the CONTENTS cookies over all google engines seems similar but
the pattern is not yet fully clear to me, here are some random samples from my
analysis ..
Using common google search from different domains::
google.com: CONSENT=YES+cb.{{date}}-14-p0.de+FX+816
google.de: CONSENT=YES+cb.{{date}}-14-p0.de+FX+333
google.fr: CONSENT=YES+srp.gws-{{date}}-0-RC2.fr+FX+826
When searching about videos (google-videos)::
google.es: CONSENT=YES+srp.gws-{{date}}-0-RC2.es+FX+076
google.de: CONSENT=YES+srp.gws-{{date}}-0-RC2.de+FX+171
Google news has only one domain for all languages::
news.google.com: CONSENT=YES+cb.{{date}}-14-p0.de+FX+816
Using google-scholar search from different domains::
scholar.google.de: CONSENT=YES+cb.{{date}}-14-p0.de+FX+333
scholar.google.fr: does not use such a cookie / did not ask the user
scholar.google.es: does not use such a cookie / did not ask the user
Interim summary:
Pattern is unclear and I won't apply the CONSENT cookie to all google engines.
More experience is need before we generalize the CONSENT cookies over all
google engines.
Related:
- e9a6ab401 [fix] youtube - send CONSENT Cookie to not be redirected
- https://github.com/benbusby/whoogle-search/issues/311
- https://github.com/benbusby/whoogle-search/issues/243
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Data_Protection_Regulation
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
Since we added
- 1c67b6aec [enh] google engine: supports "default language"
there is a KeyError: 'hl in request,error pattern::
ERROR:searx.searx.search.processor.online:engine google news : exception : 'hl'
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "searx/search/processors/online.py", line 144, in search
search_results = self._search_basic(query, params)
File "searx/search/processors/online.py", line 118, in _search_basic
self.engine.request(query, params)
File "searx/engines/google_news.py", line 97, in request
if lang_info['hl'] == 'en':
KeyError: 'hl'
Closes: https://github.com/searxng/searxng/issues/154
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>