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Pywb Configuration
This page explains how to configure pywb wayback to run with your WARC and ARC files.
PyWb requires the creation of sorted index files, called 'cdx' files, in order to search through the archives. It should be possible to run pywb with existing cdx filee, although creating new SURT ordered cdx is recommended for more flexibility.
If you have existing .warc/.arc and .cdx files, you can adjust the index_paths and archive_paths sections in the config.yaml to point to the location of those files.
By default, pywb expects the cdx files to be Sort-friendly URL Reordering Transform (SURT) ordering.
This is an ordering that transforms: example.com -> com,example)/ to faciliate better search.
It is recommended for future indexing, but is not required.
Non-SURT ordered CDX indexes will work as well, but be sure to specify:
surt_ordered: False in the config.yaml
pywb (from version 0.2.x) includes its a command-line tool for generating cdx files,
to use run cdx-indexer after installing pywb.
To create a single sorted index mypath/cdx/mywarc.cdx from a single warc mypath/warcs/mywarc.gz run:
cdx-indexer -s mypath/cdx/mywarc.cdx mypath/warcs/mywarc.gz
To index a full directory of warcs, and merge the cdx into a single index, run:
cdx-indexer -s mypath/cdx/all.cdx mypath/warcs/
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The default output uses SURT key ordered cdx files (as explained), but the
-uflag is used to output non-surt ordered cdx. If using-u, setsurt_ordered: False -
The default output is not sorted, but the
-sflag is used to have thecdx-indexeroutput a sorted cdx. For use with pywb, sorted cdxs are necessary. -
For very large warcs, or lots of warcs in a directory, it may be desirable to use the system sort command instead of
-sto do the sorting.cdx-indexercan be used to generate the unsorted cdx to stdout and then piped to system sort command: -
export LC_ALL=C cdx-indexer mypath/lots_of_warcs/ | sort > mypath/cdx/all.cdx
This is an older way to create cdxs, left here for reference. pywb now includes its own cdx indexer which removes much of this complexity and is explained above
If you have warc files without cdxs, the following steps can be taken to create the indexs.
cdx indexs are sorted plain text files indexing the contents of archival records in one or more WARC/ARC files.
(The cdx_writer tool creates SURT ordered keys by default)
pywb does not currently generate indexs automatically, but this may be added in the future.
For production purposes, it is recommended that the cdx indexs be generated ahead of time.
** Note: these recommendations are subject to change as the external libraries are being cleaned up **
The directions are for running in a shell:
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Clone https://github.com/internetarchive/CDX-Writer to get cdx_writer.py
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Copy cdx_writer.py from
CDX_Writerinto warctools/hanzo inwarctools -
Ensure sort order set to byte-order
export LC_ALL=Cto ensure proper sorting. -
From the directory of the warc(s), run
<FULL PATH>/warctools/hanzo/cdx_writer mypath/warcs/mywarc.gz | sort > mypath/cdx/mywarc.cdxThis will create a sorted
mywarc.cdxformywarc.gz. Then pointpywbto themypath/warcsandmypath/cdxdirectories in the yaml config. -
pywb sort merges all specified cdx files on the fly. However, if dealing with larger number of small cdxs, there will be performance benefit
from sort-merging them into a larger cdx file before running pywb. This is recommended for production.
An example sort merge post process can be done as follows:
export LC_ALL=C sort -m mypath/cdx/*.cdx > mypath/merged_cdx/merge_1.cdx(The merged cdx will start with several
CDXheaders due to the merge. These headers indicate the cdx format and should be all the same! They are always first and pywb ignores them)In the yaml config, set
index_pathsto point tomypath/merged_cdx/merged_1.cdx