Google, Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo, and Bing are constantly trying to view your website... but they don't execute javascript. That's why we built Prerender. Prerender is perfect for AngularJS SEO, BackboneJS SEO, EmberJS SEO, and any other javascript framework.
Behind the scenes, Prerender is a node server from prerender.io that uses phantomjs to create static HTML out of a javascript page. We host this as a service at prerender.io but we also open sourced it because we believe basic SEO is a right, not a privilege!
It should be used in conjunction with these middleware libraries to serve the prerendered HTML to crawlers for SEO. Get started in two lines of code using Rails or Node.
Prerender adheres to google's _escaped_fragment_
proposal, which we recommend you use. It's easy:
- Just add <meta name="fragment" content="!"> to the <head> of all of your pages
- If you use hash urls (#), change them to the hash-bang (#!)
- That's it! Perfect SEO on javascript pages.
Prerender includes lots of plugins including Amazon S3 to cache your prerendered HTML.
This is a list of middleware available to use with the prerender service:
- prerender-node (Express)
- prerender_rails (Rails)
- zfr-prerender (Zend Framework 2)
- YuccaPrerenderBundle (Symfony 2)
Request more middleware for a different framework in this issue.
This is a simple service that only takes a url and returns the rendered HTML (with all script tags removed).
Note: you should proxy the request through your server (using middleware) so that any relative links to CSS/images/etc still work.
GET
http://service.prerender.io/https://google.com
GET
http://service.prerender.io/https://google.com/search?q=angular
If you are trying to test Prerender with your website on localhost, you'll have to run the Prerender server locally so that Prerender can access your local dev website.
If you are running the prerender service locally. Make sure you set your middleware to point to your local Prerender server with:
export PRERENDER_SERVICE_URL=<your local url>
$ npm install
$ node index.js
// also supports heroku style invocation using foreman
$ foreman start
$ git clone https://github.com/collectiveip/prerender.git
$ heroku create
$ git push heroku master
#Customization
We use a plugin system in the same way that Connect and Express use middleware. Our plugins are a little different and we don't want to confuse the prerender plugins with the prerender middleware, so we opted to call them "plugins".
Plugins are in the lib/plugins
directory, and add functionality to the prerender service.
Each plugin can implement any of the plugin methods:
####init()
called when you call prerender.use(require('my_plugin'));
.
Use this function to initialize defaults.
####beforePhantomRequest(req, res, next)
called at the beginning of the request lifecycle, before phantomjs starts to load the url.
Use this function to short circuit the lifecycle.
Examples:
- Find and return a cached version of the url before loading it.
- Reject a request based on the host sending too many requests per second.
####onPhantomPageCreate(req, res, next)
called after the phantomjs page has been created.
Use this function to bind custom functions to phantomjs events.
Example:
- Outputting to the terminal console when phantomjs has console output.
####afterPhantomRequest(req, res, next)
called at the end of the request lifecycle, after phantomjs successfully loads the HTML for a url.
Use this function to access/modify the HTML returned from a url.
Examples:
- Save off the HTML to a cache for quick access later.
- Change the HTML to remove all script tags.
####beforeSend(req, res, next)
called any time res.send is called, even if a plugin calls res.send or prerender sends a res.send(404)
The difference between this and afterPhantomRequest
is beforeSend
always happens. afterPhantomRequest
only happens on the completion of the normal lifecycle.
Use this function to do things with every request.
Examples:
- Print out info about the request.
- Change the HTML to remove all script tags.
console.log(req.prerender);
{
//the url that will be hit (transformed from _escaped_fragment_ if passed in)
url: 'http://site.com/#!/path/to/a/site',
//the HTML that came back from the webpage (only in afterPhantomRequest)
documentHTML: '<html></html>'
}
We remove script tags because we don't want any framework specific routing/rendering to happen on the rendered HTML once it's executed by the crawler. The crawlers may not execute javascript, but we'd rather be safe than have something get screwed up.
For example, if you rendered the HTML of an angular page but left the angular scripts in there, your browser would try to execute the angular routing and rendering on a page that no longer has any angular bindings.
If your Javascript routing has a catch-all for things like 404's, you can tell the prerender service to serve a 404 to google instead of a 200. This way, google won't index your 404's.
Add these tags in the <head>
of your page if you want to serve soft http headers. Note: Prerender will still send the HTML of the page. This just modifies the status code and headers being sent.
Example: telling prerender to server this page as a 404
<meta name="prerender-status-code" content="404">
Example: telling prerender to serve this page as a 302 redirect
<meta name="prerender-status-code" content="302">
<meta name="prerender-header" content="Location: http://www.google.com">
If you only want to allow requests to a certain domain, use this plugin to cause a 404 for any other domains.
You can add the whitelisted domains to the plugin itself, or use the ALLOWED_DOMAINS
environment variable.
export ALLOWED_DOMAINS=www.prerender.io,prerender.io
If you want to disallow requests to a certain domain, use this plugin to cause a 404 for the domains.
You can add the blacklisted domains to the plugin itself, or use the BLACKLISTED_DOMAINS
environment variable.
export BLACKLISTED_DOMAINS=yahoo.com,www.google.com
A GET
request will check S3 for a cached copy. If a cached copy is found, it will return that. Otherwise, it will make the request to your server and then persist the HTML to the S3 cache.
A POST
request will skip the S3 cache. It will make a request to your server and then persist the HTML to the S3 cache. The POST
is meant to update the cache.
You'll need to sign up with Amazon Web Services and export these 3 environment variables.
$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=<aws access key>
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=<aws secret access key>
$ export S3_BUCKET_NAME=<bucket name>
Warning! Your keys should be kept private and you'll be charged for all files uploaded to S3.
If Prerender is hosted on a EC2 instance, you can also take advantage of IAM instance roles so that you don't need to export your AWS credentials.
You can also export the S3_PREFIX_KEY variable so that the key (which is by default the complete requested URL) is prefixed. This is useful if you want to organize the snapshots in the same bucket.
You may be tempted to use CloudFront (the Amazon's CDN) to accelerate the process even more by caching HTML. Doing so is
easy: just create a CloudFront distribution in front of your Prerender server. By default, Prerender returns a response
with a Cache-Control value of 86400 seconds (24 hours). CloudFront will reuse this header, so that if the same URL
(let's say: http://myprerender-service.com/http://www.myurl.com
) is asked two times within 24 hours, CloudFront will
immediately return the answer without even hitting your Prerender service.
However, please note that if your Prerender service is hosted on the same AWS region as your S3 bucket, the performance increase may be minor (latency between AWS services in same region is already pretty low).
The default is an in memory cache but you can easily change it to any caching system compatible with the cache-manager
nodejs package.
For example, with the request:
GET
http://service.prerender.io/https://facebook.com
First time: Overall Elapsed: 00:00:03.3174661
With cache: Overall Elapsed: 00:00:00.0360119
Turn on the logger plugin (uncomment it in index.js
) to enable logging to the console from phantomjs.
This will show console.log's from the phantomjs page in your local console. Great for debugging.
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2013 Todd Hooper <[email protected]>
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.