Languages are supported by mapping the language to a domain. If domain is not
found in :py:obj:`lang2domain` URL ``<lang>.search.yahoo.com`` is used.
BTW: fix issue reported at https://github.com/searx/searx/issues/3020
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
The key of the dictionary 'searx.data.ENGINES_LANGUAGES' is the *engine name*
configured in settings.xml. When multiple engines are configured to use the
same origin engine (e.g. `engine: google`)::
- name: google
engine: google
use_mobile_ui: false
...
- name: google italian
engine: google
use_mobile_ui: false
language: it
...
- name: google mobile ui
engine: google
shortcut: gomui
use_mobile_ui: true
There exists no entry for ENGINES_LANGUAGES[engine.name] (e.g. `name: google
mobile ui` or `name: google italian`). This issue can be solved by recreate the
ENGINES_LANGUAGES::
make data.languages
But this is nothing an SearXNG admin would like to do when just configuring
additional engines, since this just doubles entries in ENGINES_LANGUAGES and
BTW: `make data.languages` has various external requirements which might be not
installed or not available, on a production host.
With this patch, if engine.name fails, ENGINES_LANGUAGES[engine.engine] is used
to get the engine.supported_languages (e.g. `google` for the engine named
`google mobile`).
For an engine, when there is `language: ...` in the YAML settings, the engine
supports only one language, in this case engine.supported_languages should
contains this value defined in settings.yml (e.g. `it` for the engine named
`google italian`).
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
Closes: https://github.com/searxng/searxng/issues/384
Implement a scrapper for DuckDuckGo-Lite [1]. The existing DuckDuckGo [2]
engine does not support paging. DuckDuckgo-Lite is much faster, less verbose
and does have a paging option (reversed engineered from the input form of [1]).
[1] https://lite.duckduckgo.com/lite
[2] https://duckduckgo.com/
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
If there is no write access, there is no need for global. Remove global
statement if there is no assignment.
global-variable-not-assigned:
Using global for names but no assignment is done Used when a variable is
defined through the "global" statement but no assignment to this variable is
done.
In Pylint 2.11 the global-variable-not-assigned checker now catches global
variables that are never reassigned in a local scope and catches (reassigned)
functions [1][2]
[1] https://pylint.pycqa.org/en/latest/whatsnew/2.11.html
[2] https://github.com/PyCQA/pylint/issues/1375
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
the openstreetmap engine imports code from the wikidata engine.
before this commit, specific code make sure to copy the logger variable to the wikidata engine.
with this commit searx.engines.load_engine makes sure the .logger is initialized.
The implementation scans sys.modules for module name starting with searx.engines.
close#298
This is a workaround: inside engine code, any call to function in another engine can crash
since the logger won't be initialized except if it is done explicitly.
Instead of raising an exception and therefore hiding all results of the engine.
It make sense to remove that requirement in order to allow the implementation of
search engines that do not always have a description. In fact some search
engines that in 99% of the case have a description like Brave Search or Mojeek
crash completely if they for some reason included a result with no description.
To test this patch try Mojeek:
!mjk xyz
before and after the patch.
Suggested-by: 0xhtml in https://github.com/searx/searx/discussions/2933
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
Pylint 2.10 added new default checks [1]:
use-list-literal
Emitted when list() is called with no arguments instead of using []
use-dict-literal
Emitted when dict() is called with no arguments instead of using {}
[1] https://pylint.pycqa.org/en/latest/whatsnew/2.10.html
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>