Command line tool to extract the main content from a webpage, as done by the "Reader View" feature of most modern browsers. It's intended to be used with terminal RSS readers, to make the articles more readable on web browsers such as lynx. The code is closely adapted from the Firefox version and the output is expected to be mostly equivalent.
This tool is young and written in C, so it's reasonable to wonder about the potential for memory issues. To be safe, all HTML parsing happens inside a sandboxed subprocess. Seccomp is used for this purpose on Linux, Pledge on OpenBSD, and Capsicum on FreeBSD.
There are three direct dependencies: libxml2, libseccomp and libcurl. On Debian/Ubuntu, you can install the first two by running (as root):
apt install libxml2-dev libseccomp-dev
The libcurl package comes in different flavours, depending on the backend that provides the SSL support. Any of them will do. To install the GnuTLS version:
apt install libcurl4-gnutls-dev
For rdrview to be useful, you should also get a character mode web browser such as lynx:
apt install lynx
The name of the packages might differ in your distribution. On Fedora, for example, you can install everything with:
dnf install libcurl-devel libxml2-devel libseccomp-devel lynx
To build rdrview, just cd to its directory and run
make
Now it should be ready to be used. You can try:
./rdrview 'https://github.com/eafer/rdrview'
For more information, see the man page:
man ./rdrview.1
If you find rdrview useful and want to install it, become root again and run
make install
Now you can just call it with rdrview
and get help with man rdrview
, like
you would for any other tool in your system.
To build rdrview on the BSDs, you will need GNU make as well as the libraries. Having a terminal browser available is recommended. On OpenBSD, become root and run
pkg_add gmake gcc libxml curl lynx
On FreeBSD, that would be
pkg install gmake gcc libxml2 curl lynx
Now you can cd to the source directory and run gmake
for the build, and
optionally gmake install
for the installation. The BSDs don't provide any
mailcap file by default, so to run rdrview you will need to specify the web
browser:
./rdrview -B lynx 'https://github.com/eafer/rdrview'
I don't own any Apple computers to test this myself, but I've been told that
rdrview does build on macOS. A sandbox is not yet implemented, but the tool
can still be run with the --disable-sandbox
flag, as long as the user
understands the risk.
rdrview was written by Ernesto A. Fernández, but it's mainly a transpilation done by hand of Mozilla's Readability.js; which was itself, in their own words, "heavily based on Arc90's readability.js". This is the original license:
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
https://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.