IIS SEO Toolkit – Crawler Module Extensibility
Sample SEO Toolkit CrawlerModule Extensibility
In this blog we are going to write an example on how to extend the SEO Toolkit functionality, so for that we are going to pretend our company has a large Web site that includes several images, and now we are interested in making sure all of them comply to a certain standard, lets say all of them should be smaller than 1024x768 pixels and that the quality of the images is no less than 16 bits per pixel. Additionally we would also like to be able to make custom queries that can later allow us to further analyze the contents of the images and filter based on directories and more.
For this we will extend the SEO Toolkit crawling process to perform the additional processing for images, we will be adding the following new capabilities:
- Capture additional information from the Content. In this case we will capture information about the image, in particular we will extend the report to add a "Image Width", "Image Height" and a "Image Pixel Format".
- Flag additional violations. In this example we will flag three new violations:
- Image is too large. This violation will be flagged any time the content length of the image is larger than the "Maximum Download Size per URL" configured at the start of the analysis. It will also flag this violation if the resolution is larger than 1024x768.
- Image pixel format is too small. This violation will be flagged if the image is 8 or 4 bits per pixel.
- Image has a small resolution. This will be flagged if the image resolution per inch is less than 72dpi.
Enter CrawlerModule
A crawler module is a class that extends the crawling process in Site Analysis to provide custom functionality while processing each URL. By deriving from this class you can easily raise your own set of violations or add your own data and links to any URL.
{
// Methods
public virtual void BeginAnalysis();
public virtual void EndAnalysis(bool cancelled);
public abstract void Process(CrawlerProcessContext context);
// Properties
protected WebCrawler Crawler { get; }
protected CrawlerSettings Settings { get; }
}
It includes three main methods:
- BeginAnalysis. This method is invoked once at the beginning of the crawling process and allows you to perform any initialization needed. Common tasks include registering custom properties in the Report that can be accessed through the Crawler property.
- Process. This method is invoked for each URL once its contents has been downloaded. The context argument includes a property URLInfo that provides all the metadata extracted for the URL. It also includes a list of Violations and Links in the URL. Common tasks include augmenting the metadata of the URL whether using its contents or external systems, flagging new custom Violations, or discovering new links in the contents.
- EndAnalysis. This method is invoked once at the end of the crawling process and allows you to do any final calculations on the report once all the URLs have been processed. Common tasks in this method include performing aggregations of data across all the URLs, or identifying violations that depend on all the data being available (such as finding duplicates).
Coding the Image Crawler Module
Create a Class Library in Visual Studio and add the code shown below.
- Open Visual Studio and select the option File->New Project
- In the New Project dialog select the Class Library project template and specify a name and a location such as "SampleCrawlerModule"
- Using the Menu "Project->Add Reference", add a reference to the IIS SEO Toolkit client library (C:\Program Files\Reference Assemblies\Microsoft\IIS\Microsoft.Web.Management.SEO.Client.dll).
- Since we are going to be registering this through the IIS Manager extensibility, add a reference to the IIS Manager extensibility DLL (c:\windows\system32\inetsrv\Microsoft.Web.Management.dll) using the "Project->Add Reference" menu.
- Also, since we will be using the .NET Bitmap class you need to add a reference to "System.Drawing" using the "Project->Add Reference" menu.
- Delete the auto-generated Class1.cs since we will not be using it.
- Using the Menu "Project->Add New Item" Add a new class named "ImageExtension".
using System.Drawing;
using System.Drawing.Imaging;
using Microsoft.Web.Management.SEO.Crawler;
namespace SampleCrawlerModule {
/// <summary>
/// Extension to add validation and metadata to images while crawling
/// </summary>
internal class ImageExtension : CrawlerModule {
private const string ImageWidthField = "iWidth";
private const string ImageHeightField = "iHeight";
private const string ImagePixelFormatField = "iPixFmt";
public override void BeginAnalysis() {
// Register the properties we want to augment at the begining of the analysis
Crawler.Report.RegisterProperty(ImageWidthField, "Image Width", typeof(int));
Crawler.Report.RegisterProperty(ImageHeightField, "Image Height", typeof(int));
Crawler.Report.RegisterProperty(ImagePixelFormatField, "Image Pixel Format", typeof(string));
}
public override void Process(CrawlerProcessContext context) {
// Make sure only process the Content Types we need to
switch (context.UrlInfo.ContentTypeNormalized) {
case "image/jpeg":
case "image/png":
case "image/gif":
case "image/bmp":
// Process only known content types
break;
default:
// Ignore any other
return;
}
//--------------------------------------------
// If the content length of the image was larger than the max
// allowed to download, then flag a violation, and stop
if (context.UrlInfo.ContentLength >
Crawler.Settings.MaxContentLength) {
Violations.AddImageTooLargeViolation(context,
"It is larger than the allowed download size");
// Stop processing since we do not have all the content
return;
}
// Load the image from the response into a bitmap
using (Bitmap bitmap = new Bitmap(context.UrlInfo.ResponseStream)) {
Size size = bitmap.Size;
//--------------------------------------------
// Augment the metadata by adding our fields
context.UrlInfo.SetPropertyValue(ImageWidthField, size.Width);
context.UrlInfo.SetPropertyValue(ImageHeightField, size.Height);
context.UrlInfo.SetPropertyValue(ImagePixelFormatField, bitmap.PixelFormat.ToString());
//--------------------------------------------
// Additional Violations:
//
// If the size is outside our standards, then flag violation
if (size.Width > 1024 &&
size.Height > 768) {
Violations.AddImageTooLargeViolation(context,
String.Format("The image size is: {0}x{1}",
size.Width, size.Height));
}
// If the format is outside our standards, then flag violation
switch (bitmap.PixelFormat) {
case PixelFormat.Format1bppIndexed:
case PixelFormat.Format4bppIndexed:
case PixelFormat.Format8bppIndexed:
Violations.AddImagePixelFormatSmall(context);
break;
}
if (bitmap.VerticalResolution <= 72 ||
bitmap.HorizontalResolution <= 72) {
Violations.AddImageResolutionSmall(context,
bitmap.HorizontalResolution + "x" + bitmap.VerticalResolution);
}
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Helper class to hold the violations
/// </summary>
private static class Violations {
private static readonly ViolationInfo ImageTooLarge =
new ViolationInfo("ImageTooLarge",
ViolationLevel.Warning,
"Image is too large.",
"The Image is too large: {details}.",
"Make sure that the image content is required.",
"Images");
private static readonly ViolationInfo ImagePixelFormatSmall =
new ViolationInfo("ImagePixelFormatSmall",
ViolationLevel.Warning,
"Image pixel format is too small.",
"The Image pixel format is too small",
"Make sure that the quality of the image is good.",
"Images");
private static readonly ViolationInfo ImageResolutionSmall =
new ViolationInfo("ImageResolutionSmall",
ViolationLevel.Warning,
"Image resolution is small.",
"The Image resolution is too small: ({res})",
"Make sure that the image quality is good.",
"Images");
internal static void AddImageTooLargeViolation(CrawlerProcessContext context, string details) {
context.Violations.Add(new Violation(ImageTooLarge,
0, "details", details));
}
internal static void AddImagePixelFormatSmall(CrawlerProcessContext context) {
context.Violations.Add(new Violation(ImagePixelFormatSmall, 0));
}
internal static void AddImageResolutionSmall(CrawlerProcessContext context, string resolution) {
context.Violations.Add(new Violation(ImageResolutionSmall,
0, "res", resolution));
}
}
}
}
As you can see in the BeginAnalysis the module registers three new properties with the Report using the Crawler property. This is only required if you want to provide either a custom text or use it for different type other than a string. Note that current version only allows primitive types like Integer, Float, DateTime, etc.
During the Process method it first makes sure that it only runs for known content types, then it performs any validations raising a set of custom violations that are defined in the Violations static helper class. Note that we load the content from the Response Stream, which is the property that contains the received from the server. Note that if you were analyzing text the property Response would contain the content (this is based on Content Type, so HTML, XML, CSS, etc, will be kept in this String property).
Registering it
When running inside IIS Manager, crawler modules need to be registered as a standard UI module first and then inside their initialization they need to be registered using the IExtensibilityManager interface. In this case to keep the code as simple as possible everything is added in a single file. So add a new file called "RegistrationCode.cs" and include the contents below:
using Microsoft.Web.Management.Client;
using Microsoft.Web.Management.SEO.Crawler;
using Microsoft.Web.Management.Server;
namespace SampleCrawlerModule {
internal class SampleCrawlerModuleProvider : ModuleProvider {
public override ModuleDefinition GetModuleDefinition(IManagementContext context) {
return new ModuleDefinition(Name, typeof(SampleCrawlerModule).AssemblyQualifiedName);
}
public override Type ServiceType {
get { return null; }
}
public override bool SupportsScope(ManagementScope scope) {
return true;
}
}
internal class SampleCrawlerModule : Module {
protected override void Initialize(IServiceProvider serviceProvider, ModuleInfo moduleInfo) {
base.Initialize(serviceProvider, moduleInfo);
IExtensibilityManager em = (IExtensibilityManager)GetService(typeof(IExtensibilityManager));
em.RegisterExtension(typeof(CrawlerModule), new ImageExtension());
}
}
}
This code defines a standard UI IIS Manager module and in its client-side initialize method it uses the IExtensibilityManager interface to register the new instance of the Image extension. This will make it visible to the Site Analysis feature.
Testing it
To test it we need to add the UI module to Administration.config, that also means that the assembly needs to be registered in the GAC.
To Strongly name the assembly
In Visual Studio, you can do this easily by using the menu "Project->Properties", and select the "Signing" tab, check the "Sign the assembly", and choose a file, if you don't have one you can easily just choose New and specify a name.
After this you can compile and now should be able to add it to the GAC.
To GAC it
If you have the SDK's you should be able to call it like in my case:
"\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v6.0A\bin\gacutil.exe" /if SampleCrawlerModule.dll
(Note, you could also just open Windows Explorer, navigate to c:\Windows\assembly and drag & drop your file in there, that will GAC it automatically).
Finally to see the right name that should be use in Administration.config run the following command:
"\Program Files\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v6.0A\bin\gacutil.exe" /l SampleCrawlerModule
In my case it displays:
SampleCrawlerModule, Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=6f4d9863e5b22f10, …
Finally register it in Administration.config
Open Administration.config in Notepad using an elevated instance, find the </moduleProviders> and add a string like the one below but replacing the right values for Version and PublicKeyToken:
Use it
After registration you now should be able to launch IIS Manager and navigate to Search Engine Optimization. Start a new Analysis to your Web site. Once completed if there are any violations you will see them correctly in the Violations Summary or any other report. For example see below all the violations in the "Images" category.
Since we also extended the metadata by including the new fields (Image Width, Image Height, and Image Pixel Format) now you can use them with the Query infrastructure to easily create a report of all the images:
And since they are standard fields, they can be used in Filters, Groups, and any other functionality, including exporting data. So for example the following query can be opened in the Site Analysis feature and will display an average of the width and height of images summarized by type of image:
<query dataSource="urls">
<filter>
<expression field="ContentTypeNormalized" operator="Begins" value="image/" />
</filter>
<group>
<field name="ContentTypeNormalized" />
</group>
<displayFields>
<field name="ContentTypeNormalized" />
<field name="(Count)" />
<field name="Average(iWidth)" />
<field name="Average(iHeight)" />
</displayFields>
</query>
And of course violation details are shown as specified, including Recommendation, Description, etc:
Summary
As you can see extending the SEO Toolkit using a Crawler Module allows you to provide additional information, whether Metadata, Violations or Links to any document being processed. This can be used to add support for content types not supported out-of-the box such as PDF, Office Documents or anything else that you need. It also can be used to extend the metadata by writing custom code to wire data from other system into the report giving you the ability to exploit this data using the Query capabilities of Site Analysis.