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rss-parser
Advanced tools
rss-parser is a lightweight and easy-to-use library for parsing RSS and Atom feeds in Node.js. It provides a simple API to fetch and parse feeds, making it easy to integrate RSS feed reading functionality into your applications.
Parsing a feed from a URL
This feature allows you to parse an RSS feed from a given URL. The code sample demonstrates how to fetch and parse the feed, then log the title of the feed and each item within it.
const Parser = require('rss-parser');
let parser = new Parser();
(async () => {
let feed = await parser.parseURL('https://example.com/rss');
console.log(feed.title);
feed.items.forEach(item => {
console.log(item.title + ':' + item.link);
});
})();
Parsing a feed from a string
This feature allows you to parse an RSS feed from a raw XML string. The code sample demonstrates how to parse the XML string and log the title of the feed and each item within it.
const Parser = require('rss-parser');
let parser = new Parser();
let xml = `<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<rss version="2.0">
<channel>
<title>Example RSS Feed</title>
<link>https://example.com/</link>
<description>This is an example RSS feed</description>
<item>
<title>Example Item</title>
<link>https://example.com/example-item</link>
<description>This is an example item</description>
</item>
</channel>
</rss>`;
(async () => {
let feed = await parser.parseString(xml);
console.log(feed.title);
feed.items.forEach(item => {
console.log(item.title + ':' + item.link);
});
})();
Customizing the parser
This feature allows you to customize the parser to include additional fields that are not part of the default RSS/Atom specification. The code sample demonstrates how to include a custom field ('media:content') and log it for each item in the feed.
const Parser = require('rss-parser');
let parser = new Parser({
customFields: {
item: ['media:content']
}
});
(async () => {
let feed = await parser.parseURL('https://example.com/rss');
console.log(feed.title);
feed.items.forEach(item => {
console.log(item.title + ':' + item['media:content']);
});
})();
Feedparser is a robust RSS and Atom feed parsing library for Node.js. It offers more control and customization options compared to rss-parser, but it has a steeper learning curve and requires more boilerplate code to get started.
The rss package is primarily focused on generating RSS feeds rather than parsing them. It allows you to create RSS feeds programmatically, which can be useful if you need to provide RSS feeds for your own content.
xml2js is a general-purpose XML parser for Node.js. While it is not specifically designed for RSS or Atom feeds, it can be used to parse any XML, including RSS feeds. It provides more flexibility but requires more manual handling of the XML structure.
A small library for turning RSS XML feeds into JavaScript objects.
npm install --save rss-parser
You can parse RSS from a URL (parser.parseURL
) or an XML string (parser.parseString
).
Both callbacks and Promises are supported.
Here's an example in NodeJS using Promises with async/await:
let Parser = require('rss-parser');
let parser = new Parser();
(async () => {
let feed = await parser.parseURL('https://www.reddit.com/.rss');
console.log(feed.title);
feed.items.forEach(item => {
console.log(item.title + ':' + item.link)
});
})();
When using TypeScript, you can set a type to control the custom fields:
import Parser from 'rss-parser';
type CustomFeed = {foo: string};
type CustomItem = {bar: number};
const parser: Parser<CustomFeed, CustomItem> = new Parser({
customFields: {
feed: ['foo', 'baz'],
// ^ will error because `baz` is not a key of CustomFeed
item: ['bar']
}
});
(async () => {
const feed = await parser.parseURL('https://www.reddit.com/.rss');
console.log(feed.title); // feed will have a `foo` property, type as a string
feed.items.forEach(item => {
console.log(item.title + ':' + item.link) // item will have a `bar` property type as a number
});
})();
We recommend using a bundler like webpack, but we also provide pre-built browser distributions in the
dist/
folder. If you use the pre-built distribution, you'll need a polyfill for Promise support.
Here's an example in the browser using callbacks:
<script src="/node_modules/rss-parser/dist/rss-parser.min.js"></script>
<script>
// Note: some RSS feeds can't be loaded in the browser due to CORS security.
// To get around this, you can use a proxy.
const CORS_PROXY = "https://cors-anywhere.herokuapp.com/"
let parser = new RSSParser();
parser.parseURL(CORS_PROXY + 'https://www.reddit.com/.rss', function(err, feed) {
if (err) throw err;
console.log(feed.title);
feed.items.forEach(function(entry) {
console.log(entry.title + ':' + entry.link);
})
})
</script>
A few minor breaking changes were made in v3. Here's what you need to know:
new Parser()
before calling parseString
or parseURL
parseFile
is no longer available (for better browser support)options
are now passed to the Parser constructorparsed.feed
is now just feed
(top-level object removed)feed.entries
is now feed.items
(to better match RSS XML)Check out the full output format in test/output/reddit.json
feedUrl: 'https://www.reddit.com/.rss'
title: 'reddit: the front page of the internet'
description: ""
link: 'https://www.reddit.com/'
items:
- title: 'The water is too deep, so he improvises'
link: 'https://www.reddit.com/r/funny/comments/3skxqc/the_water_is_too_deep_so_he_improvises/'
pubDate: 'Thu, 12 Nov 2015 21:16:39 +0000'
creator: "John Doe"
content: '<a href="http://example.com">this is a link</a> & <b>this is bold text</b>'
contentSnippet: 'this is a link & this is bold text'
guid: 'https://www.reddit.com/r/funny/comments/3skxqc/the_water_is_too_deep_so_he_improvises/'
categories:
- funny
isoDate: '2015-11-12T21:16:39.000Z'
contentSnippet
field strips out HTML tags and unescapes HTML entitiesdc:
prefix will be removed from all fieldsdc:date
and pubDate
will be available in ISO 8601 format as isoDate
author
is specified, but not dc:creator
, creator
will be set to author
(see article)updated
becomes lastBuildDate
for consistencyIf your RSS feed contains fields that aren't currently returned, you can access them using the customFields
option.
let parser = new Parser({
customFields: {
feed: ['otherTitle', 'extendedDescription'],
item: ['coAuthor','subtitle'],
}
});
parser.parseURL('https://www.reddit.com/.rss', function(err, feed) {
console.log(feed.extendedDescription);
feed.items.forEach(function(entry) {
console.log(entry.coAuthor + ':' + entry.subtitle);
})
})
To rename fields, you can pass in an array with two items, in the format [fromField, toField]
:
let parser = new Parser({
customFields: {
item: [
['dc:coAuthor', 'coAuthor'],
]
}
})
To pass additional flags, provide an object as the third array item. Currently there is one such flag:
keepArray (false)
- set to true
to return all values for fields that can have multiple entries.includeSnippet (false)
- set to true
to add an additional field, ${toField}Snippet
, with HTML stripped outlet parser = new Parser({
customFields: {
item: [
['media:content', 'media:content', {keepArray: true}],
]
}
})
If your RSS Feed doesn't contain a <rss>
tag with a version
attribute,
you can pass a defaultRSS
option for the Parser to use:
let parser = new Parser({
defaultRSS: 2.0
});
rss-parser
uses xml2js
to parse XML. You can pass these options
to new xml2js.Parser()
by specifying options.xml2js
:
let parser = new Parser({
xml2js: {
emptyTag: '--EMPTY--',
}
});
You can set the amount of time (in milliseconds) to wait before the HTTP request times out (default 60 seconds):
let parser = new Parser({
timeout: 1000,
});
You can pass headers to the HTTP request:
let parser = new Parser({
headers: {'User-Agent': 'something different'},
});
By default, parseURL
will follow up to five redirects. You can change this
with options.maxRedirects
.
let parser = new Parser({maxRedirects: 100});
rss-parser
uses http/https module
to do requests. You can pass these options
to http.get()
/https.get()
by specifying options.requestOptions
:
e.g. to allow unauthorized certificate
let parser = new Parser({
requestOptions: {
rejectUnauthorized: false
}
});
Contributions are welcome! If you are adding a feature or fixing a bug, please be sure to add a test case
The tests run the RSS parser for several sample RSS feeds in test/input
and outputs the resulting JSON into test/output
. If there are any changes to the output files the tests will fail.
To check if your changes affect the output of any test cases, run
npm test
To update the output files with your changes, run
WRITE_GOLDEN=true npm test
npm run build
git commit -a -m "Build distribution"
npm version minor # or major/patch
npm publish
git push --follow-tags
FAQs
A lightweight RSS parser, for Node and the browser
The npm package rss-parser receives a total of 190,759 weekly downloads. As such, rss-parser popularity was classified as popular.
We found that rss-parser demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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