BigSitemap is a Sitemap generator suitable for applications with greater than 50,000 URLs. It splits large Sitemaps into multiple files, gzips the files to minimize bandwidth usage, supports increment updates, 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.
require 'big_sitemap' include Rails.application.routes.url_helpers # Allows access to Rails routes BigSitemap.generate(:url_options => {:host => 'example.com'}, :document_root => "#{APP_ROOT}/public") do # Add a static page add '/about' # Add some URLs from your Rails application Post.find(:all).each do |post| add post_path(post) end # Add some URLs with additional options Product.find(:all).each do |product| add product_path(product), :change_frequency => 'daily', :priority => 0.5 end end
The code above will create a minimum of two files:
-
public/sitemaps/sitemap_index.xml.gz
-
public/sitemaps/sitemap.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_1.xml.gz
, sitemap_2.xml.gz
, …).
Use the framework-specific classes to take advantage of built-in shortcuts.
BigSiteMapRails
deals with setting the :document_root
and :url_options
initialization options.
BigSitemapMerb
deals with setting the :document_root
initialization option.
Via gem:
sudo gem install big_sitemap
-
:url_options
– hash with:host
, optionally:port
and:protocol
-
:base_url
– string alternative to:url_options
, e.g.'https://example.com:8080/'
-
:url_path
– string path_name to sitemaps folder, defaults to:document_path
-
:document_root
– string -
:document_path
– string document path for sitemaps, relative to :document_root, defaults to empty string (putting sitemap files in the document root directory) -
:document_full
– string absolute document path to generation folder - defaults to:document_root/:document_path
-
:max_per_sitemap
–50000
, which is the limit dictated by Google but can be less -
:gzip
–true
-
:ping_google
–true
-
:ping_yahoo
–false
, needs:yahoo_app_id
-
:ping_bing
–false
-
:ping_ask
–false
-
:partial_update
–false
You can control “changefreq”, “priority” and “lastmod” values for each record individually by passing them as optional arguments when adding URLs:
add(product_path(product), { :change_frequency => 'daily', :priority => 0.5, :last_modified => product.updated_at })
If you enable :partial_update
, the filename will include the id of the first entry. This is perfect to update just the last file with new entries without the need to re-generate files being already there. You must pass the entry’s id in when adding the URL. For example:
BigSitemap.generate(:base_url => ‘example.com’, :partial_update => true) do
Widget.find_in_batches(:conditions => "id > #{get_last_id}").each do |widget| add widget_path(widget), :id => widget.id end
end
Tests for framework-specific components.
Thanks to Alastair Brunton and Harry Love, who’s work provided a starting point for this library.
Thanks also to those who have contributed patches:
-
Mislav Marohnić
-
Jeff Schoolcraft
-
Dalibor Nasevic
-
Tobias Bielohlawek (www.rngtng.com)
Copyright © 2010 Stateless Systems (statelesssystems.com). See LICENSE for details.