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130 lines
4.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
130 lines
4.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
=====================================
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Run shell commands from your instance
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=====================================
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Command line engines are custom engines that run commands in the shell of the
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host. In this article you can learn how to create a command engine and how to
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customize the result display.
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The command
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===========
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When specifyng commands, you must make sure the commands are available on the
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searx host. Searx will not install anything for you. Also, make sure that the
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``searx`` user on your host is allowed to run the selected command and has
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access to the required files.
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Access control
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==============
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Be careful when creating command engines if you are running a public
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instance. Do not expose any sensitive information. You can restrict access by
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configuring a list of access tokens under tokens in your ``settings.yml``.
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Available settings
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==================
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* ``command``: A comma separated list of the elements of the command. A special
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token ``{{QUERY}}`` tells searx where to put the search terms of the
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user. Example: ``['ls', '-l', '-h', '{{QUERY}}']``
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* ``query_type``: The expected type of user search terms. Possible values:
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``path`` and ``enum``. ``path`` checks if the uesr provided path is inside the
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working directory. If not the query is not executed. ``enum`` is a list of
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allowed search terms. If the user submits something which is not included in
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the list, the query returns an error.
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* ``delimiter``: A dict containing a delimiter char and the "titles" of each
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element in keys.
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* ``parse_regex``: A dict containing the regular expressions for each result
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key.
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* ``query_enum``: A list containing allowed search terms if ``query_type`` is
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set to ``enum``.
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* ``working_dir``: The directory where the command has to be executed. Default:
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``.``
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* ``result_separator``: The character that separates results. Default: ``\n``
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Customize the result template
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=============================
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There is a default result template for displaying key-value pairs coming from
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command engines. If you want something more tailored to your result types, you
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can design your own template.
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Searx relies on `Jinja2 <https://jinja.palletsprojects.com/>`_ for
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templating. If you are familiar with Jinja, you will not have any issues
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creating templates. You can access the result attributes with ``{{
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result.attribute_name }}``.
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In the example below the result has two attributes: ``header`` and ``content``.
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To customize their diplay, you need the following template (you must define
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these classes yourself):
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.. code:: html
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<div class="result">
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<div class="result-header">
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{{ result.header }}
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</div>
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<div class="result-content">
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{{ result.content }}
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</div>
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</div>
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Then put your template under ``searx/templates/{theme-name}/result_templates``
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named ``your-template-name.html``. You can select your custom template with the
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option ``result_template``.
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.. code:: yaml
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- name: your engine name
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engine: command
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result_template: your-template-name.html
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Examples
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========
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Find files by name
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------------------
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The first example is to find files on your searx host. It uses the command
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`find` available on most Linux distributions. It expects a path type query. The
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path in the search request must be inside the ``working_dir``.
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The results are displayed with the default `key-value.html` template. A result
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is displayed in a single row table with the key "line".
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.. code:: yaml
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- name : find
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engine : command
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command : ['find', '.', '-name', '{{QUERY}}']
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query_type : path
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shortcut : fnd
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tokens : []
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disabled : True
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delimiter :
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chars : ' '
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keys : ['line']
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Find files by contents
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-----------------------
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In the second example, we define an engine that searches in the contents of the
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files under the ``working_dir``. The search type is not defined, so the user can
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input any string they want. To restrict the input, you can set the ``query_type``
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to ``enum`` and only allow a set of search terms to protect
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yourself. Alternatively, make the engine private, so no one malevolent accesses
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the engine.
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.. code:: yaml
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- name : regex search in files
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engine : command
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command : ['grep', '{{QUERY}}']
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shortcut : gr
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tokens : []
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disabled : True
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delimiter :
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chars : ' '
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keys : ['line']
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