Book Image

Python Web Scraping Cookbook

By : Michael Heydt
Book Image

Python Web Scraping Cookbook

By: Michael Heydt

Overview of this book

Python Web Scraping Cookbook is a solution-focused book that will teach you techniques to develop high-performance scrapers and deal with crawlers, sitemaps, forms automation, Ajax-based sites, caches, and more. You'll explore a number of real-world scenarios where every part of the development/product life cycle will be fully covered. You will not only develop the skills needed to design and develop reliable performance data flows, but also deploy your codebase to AWS. If you are involved in software engineering, product development, or data mining (or are interested in building data-driven products), you will find this book useful as each recipe has a clear purpose and objective. Right from extracting data from the websites to writing a sophisticated web crawler, the book's independent recipes will be a godsend. This book covers Python libraries, requests, and BeautifulSoup. You will learn about crawling, web spidering, working with Ajax websites, paginated items, and more. You will also learn to tackle problems such as 403 errors, working with proxy, scraping images, and LXML. By the end of this book, you will be able to scrape websites more efficiently and able to deploy and operate your scraper in the cloud.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Pushing containers into ECR

In this recipe we will rebuild our API and microservice containers and push them to ECR. We will also push a RabbitMQ container to ECR.

Getting ready

Bear with this, as this can get tricky. In addition to our container images, we also need to push our RabbitMQ container to ECR. ECS doesn't talk to Docker Hub and and can't pull that image. it would be immensely convenient, but at the same time it's probably also a security issue.

Pushing these containers to ECR from a home internet connection can take a long time. I create a Linux image in EC2 in the same region as my ECR, pulled down the code from github, build the containers on that EC2 system, and then push to ECR. The push...