Adding a CR in some files and in others not, is a good starting point for a
DOS+Unix mess we all have already seen in many projects.
Patch fixes all files matching (even those comming from grunt's build)::
find ./searx -exec file {} \; | grep CR
BTW: Same with mixing TAB and SPACE indent styles in one and the same file. So
if sources are tuched here in this patch, its also fixed.
Signed-off-by: Markus Heiser <markus.heiser@darmarit.de>
Add image format and source information to display - needs changes to engines to actually display something.
Displays result.source (website from which the image was taken) and result.img_format (image type and size).
Result is styled with result-format and result-source classes. See PR #1566 for an example of an engine which has the necessary changes.
Strip <span class="highlight">...</span> in the oscar image template.
The new url parameter "timeout_limit" set timeout limit defined in second.
Example "timeout_limit=1.5" means the timeout limit is 1.5 seconds.
In addition, the query can start with <[number] to set the timeout limit.
For number between 0 and 99, the unit is the second :
Example: "<30 searx" means the timeout limit is 3 seconds
For number above 100, the unit is the millisecond:
Example: "<850 searx" means the timeout is 850 milliseconds.
In addition, there is a new optional setting: outgoing.max_request_timeout.
If not set, the user timeout can't go above searx configuration (as before: the max timeout of selected engine for a query).
If the value is set, the user can set a timeout between 0 and max_request_timeout using
<[number] or timeout_limit query parameter.
Related to #1077
Updated version of PR #1413 from @isj-privacore
Add match_language function in utils to match any user given
language code with a list of engine's supported languages.
Also add language_aliases dict on each engine to translate
standard language codes into the custom codes used by the engine.
The `filename` parameter of the `url_for` function doesn't need a leading `/`, or else the resulting URL features a double-slash `//` that throws off searx 0.12.0 with Apache 2.4.25 on Debian, resulting in missing favicons.