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rawdog: RSS Aggregator Without Delusions Of Grandeur

This is a very lazy Python 3 port of the original rawdog, because pip for python2 isn't available on Debian 11, and I wasn't going to be bothered to migrate my newsfeed to a different tool. I ran 2to3, swapped cgi.encode for html.encode, and fixed some of the abuse of string types and encodings that are less-necessary as py3 is UTF-8-by-default. Things may work for you, or not; I've not tested any plugins (they'd need to be ported to py3 as well), because I don't use any.

I've haphazardly incremented the version to 3.0. This seems appropriate.


rawdog is a feed aggregator, capable of producing a personal "river of news" or a public "planet" page. It supports all common feed formats, including all versions of RSS and Atom. By default, it is run from cron, collects articles from a number of feeds, and generates a static HTML page listing the newest articles in date order. It supports per-feed customizable update times, and uses ETags, Last-Modified, gzip compression, and RFC3229+feed to minimize network bandwidth usage. Its behaviour is highly customisable using plugins written in Python.

rawdog has the following dependencies:

  • Python 3
  • feedparser 5.1.2
  • PyTidyLib 0.2.1 or later (optional but strongly recommended)

To install rawdog on your system, use setuptools -- python setup.py install. This will install feedparser, the rawdog command, and the rawdoglib Python module that it uses internally. (If you want to install to a non-standard prefix, read the help provided by python setup.py install --help.)

rawdog needs a config file to function. Make the directory .rawdog in your $HOME directory, copy the provided file config into that directory, and edit it to suit your preferences. Comments in that file describe what each of the options does.

You should copy the provided file style.css into the same directory that you've told rawdog to write its HTML output to. rawdog should be usable from a browser that doesn't support CSS, but it won't be very pretty.

When you invoke rawdog from the command line, you give it a series of actions to perform -- for instance, rawdog --update --write tells it to do the --update action (downloading articles from feeds), then the --write action (writing the latest articles it knows about to the HTML file).

For details of all rawdog's actions and command-line options, see the rawdog(1) man page -- "man rawdog" after installation.

You will want to run rawdog -uw periodically to fetch data and write the output file. The easiest way to do this is to add a crontab entry that looks something like this:

0,10,20,30,40,50 * * * * /path/to/rawdog -uw

(If you don't know how to use cron, then man crontab is probably a good start.) This will run rawdog every ten minutes.

If you want rawdog to fetch URLs through a proxy server, then set your http_proxy environment variable appropriately; depending on your version of cron, putting something like:

http_proxy=http://myproxy.mycompany.com:3128/

at the top of your crontab should be appropriate. (The http_proxy variable will work for many other programs too.)

In the event that rawdog gets horribly confused (for instance, if your system clock has a huge jump and it thinks it won't need to fetch anything for the next thirty years), you can forcibly clear its state by removing the ~/.rawdog/state file (and the ~/.rawdog/feeds/*.state files, if you've got the "splitstate" option turned on).

If you don't like the appearance of rawdog, then customise the style.css file. If you come up with one that looks much better than the existing one, please send it to me!

This should, hopefully, be all you need to know. If rawdog breaks in interesting ways, please tell me at the email address at the top of this file.