BigSitemap¶ ↑
BigSitemap is a Sitemap (sitemaps.org) generator suitable for applications with greater than 50,000 URLs. It splits large Sitemaps into multiple files, gzips the files to minimize bandwidth usage, batches database queries to minimize memory usage, can be set up with just a few lines of code and is compatible with just about any framework.
BigSitemap is best run periodically through a Rake/Thor task.
sitemap = BigSitemap.new(:url_options => {:host => 'example.com'}) # Add a model sitemap.add Product # Add another model with some options sitemap.add(Post, { :conditions => {:published => true}, :path => 'articles', :change_frequency => 'daily', :priority => 0.5 }) # Generate the files sitemap.generate
The code above will create a minimum of three files:
-
public/sitemaps/sitemap_index.xml.gz
-
public/sitemaps/sitemap_products.xml.gz
-
public/sitemaps/sitemap_posts.xml.gz
If your sitemaps grow beyond 50,000 URLs (this limit can be overridden with the :max_per_sitemap
option), the sitemap files will be partitioned into multiple files (sitemap_products_1.xml.gz
, sitemap_products_2.xml.gz
, …).
If you’re using Rails then the URLs for each database record are generated with the polymorphic_url
helper. That means that the URL for a record will be exactly what you would expect: generated with respect to the routing setup of your app. In other contexts where this helper isn’t available, the URLs are generated in the form:
:base_url/:path/:to_param
If the to_param
method does not exist, then id
will be used.
Install¶ ↑
Via gem:
gem install alexrabarts-big_sitemap -s http://gems.github.com
Advanced¶ ↑
Options¶ ↑
-
:url_options
– hash with:host
, optionally:port
and:protocol
-
:base_url
– string alternative to:url_options
, e.g. “example.com:8080/” -
:document_root
– string defaults toRails.root
orMerb.root
if available -
:path
– string defaults to ‘sitemaps’, which places sitemap files under the/sitemaps
directory -
:max_per_sitemap
–50000
, which is the limit dictated by Google but can be less -
:batch_size
–1001
(not1000
due to a bug in DataMapper) -
:gzip
–true
-
:ping_google
–true
-
:ping_yahoo
–false
, needs:yahoo_app_id
-
:ping_msn
–false
-
:pink_ask
–false
Chaining¶ ↑
You can chain methods together. You could even get away with as little code as:
BigSitemap.new(:url_options => {:host => 'example.com'}).add(Post).generate
Pinging Search Engines¶ ↑
To ping search engines, call ping_search_engines
after you generate the sitemap:
sitemap.generate sitemap.ping_search_engines
Change Frequency and Priority¶ ↑
You can control “changefreq” and “priority” values for each record individually by passing lambdas instead of fixed values:
sitemap.add(Posts, :change_frequency => lambda {|post| ... }, :priority => lambda {|post| ... } )
Find Methods¶ ↑
Your models must provide either a find_for_sitemap
or all
class method that returns the instances that are to be included in the sitemap.
Additionally, you models must provide a count_for_sitemap
or count
class method that returns a count of the instances to be included.
If you’re using ActiveRecord (Rails) or DataMapper then all
and count
are already provided and you don’t need to do anything unless you want to include a subset of records. If you provide your own find_for_sitemap
or all
method then it should be able to handle the :offset
and :limit
options, in the same way that ActiveRecord and DataMapper handle them. This is especially important if you have more than 50,000 URLs.
Cleaning the Sitemaps Directory¶ ↑
Calling the clean
method will remove all files from the Sitemaps directory.
Limitations¶ ↑
If your database is likely to shrink during the time it takes to create the sitemap then you might run into problems (the final, batched SQL select will overrun by setting a limit that is too large since it is calculated from the count, which is queried at the very beginning). Patches welcome!
TODO¶ ↑
Tests for Rails components.
Credits¶ ↑
Thanks to Alastair Brunton and Harry Love, who’s work provided a starting point for this library. scoop.cheerfactory.co.uk/2008/02/26/google-sitemap-generator/
Thanks to Mislav Marohnić for contributing patches.
Copyright¶ ↑
Copyright © 2009 Stateless Systems (statelesssystems.com). See LICENSE for details.