You can now import zim files into YaCy by simply moving them
to the DATA/SURROGATE/IN folder. They will be fetched and after
parsing moved to DATA/SURROGATE/OUT.
There are exceptions where the parser is not able to identify the
original URL of the documents in the zim file. In that case the file
is simply ignored.
This commit also carries an important fix to the pdf parser and an
increase of the maximum parsing speed to 60000 PPM which should make it
possible to index up to 1000 files in one second.
*.epub files are zip files containing xhtml files with content and other artifact files,
which the zipParser can already feed to index
- extension "epub"
- mime "epub+zip"
New "Media Type detection" section in the advanced crawl start page
allow to choose between :
- not loading URLs with unknown or unsupported file extension without
checking the actual Media Type (relying Content-Type header for now).
This was the old default behavior, faster, but not really accurate.
- always cross check URL file extension against the actual Media Type.
This lets properly parse URLs ending with an apparently odd file
extension, but which have actually a supported Media Type such as
text/html.
Sample URLs with misleading file extensions added as documentation in
the crawl start page.
fixes issue #244
- Removed calls to no more existing clearResources functions (on PDFont
class and its children) since upgrade to pdfbox 2.n.n
- Removed hacky usage of protected internal ClassLoader function. This
removes the warnings displayed when running with JDK9 or JDK10 :
[java] WARNING: Illegal reflective access by
net.yacy.document.parser.pdfParser$ResourceCleaner (file:<path>) to
method java.lang.ClassLoader.findLoadedClass(java.lang.String)
[java] WARNING: Please consider reporting this to the maintainers
of net.yacy.document.parser.pdfParser$ResourceCleaner
[java] WARNING: Use --illegal-access=warn to enable warnings of
further illegal reflective access operations
[java] WARNING: All illegal access operations will be denied in a
future release
Crawling thousands of pdf documents from various sources after
modifications applied, revealed no new memory leak related to pdfbox
(measurements done with JVisualVM).