v0.4.0 shipped tarballs without the new webclaw-server binary because
the release workflow predates that binary and was hardcoded for two:
- Package step used `cp ... 2>/dev/null || true`, so a missing binary
was silently skipped instead of failing the job.
- Docker job's download step copied only webclaw + webclaw-mcp into
the build context, so Dockerfile.ci's COPY webclaw-server step then
died with 'file not found'.
- Homebrew formula's install block only covered the same two, so brew
users would have gotten a release with a missing binary.
Three changes:
1. Package step now explicitly copies all three binaries and drops the
swallow-all-errors pattern. If a future binary gets renamed or
removed this step screams instead of silently publishing half a
release.
2. Docker Download step copies webclaw-server alongside the other
binaries into the build context.
3. Homebrew formula installs webclaw-server too.
v0.4.0 tag + GitHub Release will be deleted and re-pushed on top of
this commit so the canonical v0.4.0 artifacts are complete. No users
affected — download count was 0 on every broken asset.
cargo install webclaw-mcp on a fresh machine prints
warning: field `tool_router` is never read
--> crates/webclaw-mcp/src/server.rs:22:5
The field is essential — dropping it unregisters every MCP tool. The
warning shows up because rmcp 1.3.x changed how the #[tool_handler]
macro reads the field: instead of referencing it by name in the
generated impl, it goes through a derived trait method. rustc's
dead-code lint sees only the named usage and fires.
The field stays. Annotated with #[allow(dead_code)] and a comment
explaining the situation so the next person looking at this doesn't
remove the field thinking it's actually unused.
No behaviour change. Verified clean compile under rmcp 1.3.0 in our
lock; the warning will disappear for anyone running cargo install
against this commit.
Per-URL extraction micro-benchmark. Fetches a URL once, runs the same
pipeline as --format llm, prints a small ASCII table comparing raw
HTML vs. llm output on tokens, bytes, and extraction time.
webclaw bench https://stripe.com # ASCII table
webclaw bench https://stripe.com --json # one-line JSON
webclaw bench https://stripe.com --facts FILE # adds fidelity row
The --facts file uses the same schema as benchmarks/facts.json (curated
visible-fact list per URL). URLs not in the file produce no fidelity
row, so an uncurated site doesn't show 0/0.
v1 uses an approximate tokenizer (chars/4 Latin, chars/2 when CJK
dominates). Off by ~10% vs cl100k_base but the signal — 'is the LLM
output 90% smaller than the raw HTML' — is order-of-magnitude, not
precise accounting. Output is labeled '~ tokens' so nobody mistakes
it for a real BPE count. Swapping in tiktoken-rs later is a one
function change; left out of v1 to avoid the 2 MB BPE-data binary
bloat for a feature most users will run a handful of times.
Implemented as a real clap subcommand (clap::Subcommand) rather than
yet another flag, with the existing flag-based flow falling through
when no subcommand is given. Existing 'webclaw <url> --format ...'
invocations work exactly as before. Lays the groundwork for future
subcommands without disrupting the legacy flat-flag UX.
12 new unit tests cover the tokenizer, formatters, host extraction,
and fact-matching. Verified end-to-end on example.com and tavily.com
(5/5 facts preserved at 93% token reduction).
Self-hosters hitting docs/self-hosting were promised three binaries
but the OSS Docker image only shipped two. webclaw-server lived in
the closed-source hosted-platform repo, which couldn't be opened. This
adds a minimal axum REST API in the OSS repo so self-hosting actually
works without pretending to ship the cloud platform.
Crate at crates/webclaw-server/. Stateless, no database, no job queue,
single binary. Endpoints: GET /health, POST /v1/{scrape, crawl, map,
batch, extract, summarize, diff, brand}. JSON shapes mirror
api.webclaw.io for the endpoints OSS can support, so swapping between
self-hosted and hosted is a base-URL change.
Auth: optional bearer token via WEBCLAW_API_KEY / --api-key. Comparison
is constant-time (subtle::ConstantTimeEq). Open mode (no key) is
allowed and binds 127.0.0.1 by default; the Docker image flips
WEBCLAW_HOST=0.0.0.0 so the container is reachable out of the box.
Hard caps to keep naive callers from OOMing the process: crawl capped
at 500 pages synchronously, batch capped at 100 URLs / 20 concurrent.
For unbounded crawls or anti-bot bypass the docs point users at the
hosted API.
Dockerfile + Dockerfile.ci updated to copy webclaw-server into
/usr/local/bin and EXPOSE 3000. Workspace version bumped to 0.4.0
(new public binary).
v0.3.13 switched ENTRYPOINT to ["webclaw"] to make `docker run IMAGE
https://example.com` work. That broke a different use case: downstream
Dockerfiles that `FROM ghcr.io/0xmassi/webclaw` and set their own
CMD ["./setup.sh"] — the child's ./setup.sh becomes arg to webclaw,
which tries to fetch it as a URL and fails:
fetch error: request failed: error sending request for uri
(https://./setup.sh): client error (Connect)
Both Dockerfile and Dockerfile.ci now use docker-entrypoint.sh which:
- forwards flags (-*) and URLs (http://, https://) to `webclaw`
- exec's anything else directly
Test matrix (all pass locally):
docker run IMAGE https://example.com → webclaw scrape ok
docker run IMAGE --help → webclaw --help ok
docker run IMAGE → default CMD, --help
docker run IMAGE bash → bash runs
FROM IMAGE + CMD ["./setup.sh"] → setup.sh runs, webclaw available
Default CMD is ["webclaw", "--help"] so bare `docker run IMAGE` still
prints help.
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Replaces the previous benchmarks/README.md, which claimed specific numbers
(94.2% accuracy, 0.8ms extraction, 97% Cloudflare bypass, etc.) with no
reproducing code committed to the repo. The `webclaw-bench` crate and
`benchmarks/fixtures`, `benchmarks/ground-truth` directories it referenced
never existed. This is what #18 was calling out.
New benchmarks/ is fully reproducible. Every number ships with the script
that produced it. `./benchmarks/run.sh` regenerates everything.
Results (18 sites, 90 hand-curated facts, median of 3 runs, webclaw 0.3.18,
cl100k_base tokenizer):
tool reduction_mean fidelity latency_mean
webclaw 92.5% 76/90 (84.4%) 0.41s
firecrawl 92.4% 70/90 (77.8%) 0.99s
trafilatura 97.8% 45/90 (50.0%) 0.21s
webclaw matches or beats both competitors on fidelity on all 18 sites
while running 2.4x faster than Firecrawl's hosted API.
Includes:
- README.md — headline table + per-site breakdown
- methodology.md — tokenizer, fact selection, run rationale
- sites.txt — 18 canonical URLs
- facts.json — 90 curated facts (PRs welcome to add sites)
- scripts/bench.py — the runner
- results/2026-04-17.json — today's raw data, median of 3 runs
- run.sh — one-command reproduction
Closes#18
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
`search_from = abs_pos + 1` landed mid-char when a rejected match
started on a multi-byte UTF-8 character, panicking on the next
`markdown[search_from..]` slice. Advance by `needle.len()` instead —
always a valid char boundary, and skips the whole rejected match
instead of re-scanning inside it.
Repro: webclaw https://bruler.ru/about_brand -f json
Before: panic "byte index 782 is not a char boundary; it is inside 'Ч'"
After: extracts 2.3KB of clean Cyrillic markdown with 7 sections
Two regression tests cover multi-byte rejected matches and
all-rejected cycles in Cyrillic text.
Closes#16
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Three P3 items from the 2026-04-16 audit. Bump to 0.3.17.
webclaw-fetch/sitemap.rs: parse_robots_txt used trimmed[..8] slice
plus eq_ignore_ascii_case for the directive test. That was fragile:
"Sitemap :" (space before colon) fell through silently, inline
"# ..." comments leaked into the URL, and a line with no URL at all
returned an empty string. Rewritten to split on the first colon,
match any-case "sitemap" as the directive name, strip comments, and
require `://` in the value. +7 unit tests cover case variants,
space-before-colon, comments, empty values, non-URL values, and
non-sitemap directives.
webclaw-fetch/crawler.rs: is_cancelled uses Ordering::Acquire
instead of Relaxed. Behaviourally equivalent on current hardware for
single-word atomic loads, but the explicit ordering documents intent
for readers + compilers.
webclaw-mcp/server.rs: add lazy OnceLock cache for the Firefox
FetchClient. Tool calls that repeatedly request the firefox profile
without cookies used to build a fresh reqwest pool + TLS stack per
call. Chrome (default) already used the long-lived field; Random is
per-call by design; cookie-bearing requests still build ad-hoc since
the cookie header is part of the client shape.
Tests: 85 webclaw-fetch (was 78, +7 new sitemap), 272 webclaw-core,
43 webclaw-llm, 11 CLI — all green. Clippy clean across workspace.
Refs: docs/AUDIT-2026-04-16.md P3 section
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
* feat(fetch,llm): DoS hardening via response caps + glob validation (P2)
Response body caps:
- webclaw-fetch::Response::from_wreq now rejects bodies over 50 MB. Checks
Content-Length up front (before the allocation) and the actual
.bytes() length after (belt-and-braces against lying upstreams).
Previously the HTML -> markdown conversion downstream could allocate
multiple String copies per page; a 100 MB page would OOM the process.
- webclaw-llm providers (anthropic/openai/ollama) share a new
response_json_capped helper with a 5 MB cap. Protects against a
malicious or runaway provider response exhausting memory.
Crawler frontier cap: after each BFS depth level the frontier is
truncated to max(max_pages * 10, 100) entries, keeping the most
recently discovered links. Dense pages (tag clouds, search results)
used to push the frontier into the tens of thousands even after
max_pages halted new fetches.
Glob pattern validation: user-supplied include_patterns /
exclude_patterns are rejected at Crawler::new if they contain more
than 4 `**` wildcards or exceed 1024 chars. The backtracking matcher
degrades exponentially on deeply-nested `**` against long paths.
Cleanup:
- Removed blanket #![allow(dead_code)] from webclaw-cli/src/main.rs;
no warnings surfaced, the suppression was obsolete.
- core/.gitignore: replaced overbroad *.json with specific local-
artifact patterns (previous rule would have swallowed package.json,
components.json, .smithery/*.json).
Tests: +4 validate_glob tests. Full workspace test: 283 passed
(webclaw-core + webclaw-fetch + webclaw-llm).
Version: 0.3.15 -> 0.3.16
CHANGELOG updated.
Refs: docs/AUDIT-2026-04-16.md (P2 section)
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
* chore: gitignore CLI research dumps, drop accidentally-tracked file
research-*.json output from `webclaw ... --research ...` got silently
swept into git by the relaxed *.json gitignore in the preceding commit.
The old blanket *.json rule was hiding both this legitimate scratch
file AND packages/create-webclaw/server.json (MCP registry config that
we DO want tracked).
Removes the research dump from git and adds a narrower research-*.json
ignore pattern so future CLI output doesn't get re-tracked by accident.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Three call sites in webclaw-fetch used .expect("semaphore closed") on
`Semaphore::acquire()`. Under normal operation they never fire, but
under a shutdown race or adversarial runtime state the spawned task
would panic and be silently dropped from the batch / crawl run — the
caller would see fewer results than URLs with no indication why.
Rewritten to match on the acquire result:
- client::fetch_batch and client::fetch_and_extract_batch_with_options
now emit BatchResult/BatchExtractResult carrying
FetchError::Build("semaphore closed before acquire").
- crawler's inner loop emits a failed PageResult with the same error
string instead of panicking.
Behaviorally a no-op for the happy path. Fixes the silent-dropped-task
class of bug noted in the 2026-04-16 audit.
Version: 0.3.14 -> 0.3.15
CHANGELOG updated.
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
* fix(cli): close --on-change command injection via sh -c (P0)
The --on-change flag on `webclaw watch` (single-URL, line 1588) and
`webclaw watch` multi-URL mode (line 1738) previously handed the entire
user-supplied string to `tokio::process::Command::new("sh").arg("-c").arg(cmd)`.
Any path that can influence that string — a malicious config file, an MCP
client driven by an LLM with prompt-injection exposure, an untrusted
environment variable substitution — gets arbitrary shell execution.
The command is now tokenized with `shlex::split` (POSIX-ish quoting rules)
and executed directly via `Command::new(prog).args(args)`. Metacharacters
like `;`, `&&`, `|`, `$()`, `<(...)`, env expansion, and globbing no longer
fire.
An explicit opt-in escape hatch is available for users who genuinely need
a shell pipeline: `WEBCLAW_ALLOW_SHELL=1` preserves the old `sh -c` path
and logs a warning on every invocation so it can't slip in silently.
Both call sites now route through a shared `spawn_on_change()` helper.
Adds `shlex = "1"` to webclaw-cli dependencies.
Version: 0.3.13 -> 0.3.14
CHANGELOG updated.
Surfaced by the 2026-04-16 workspace audit.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
* chore(brand): fix clippy 1.95 unnecessary_sort_by errors
Pre-existing sort_by calls in brand.rs became hard errors under clippy
1.95. Switch to sort_by_key with std::cmp::Reverse. Pure refactor — same
ordering, no behavior change. Bundled here so CI goes green on the P0
command-injection fix.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Sites like Bluesky emit JSON-LD with literal newline characters inside
string values (technically invalid JSON). Add sanitize_json_newlines()
fallback that escapes control characters inside quoted strings before
retrying the parse. This recovers ProfilePage, Product, and other
structured data that was previously silently dropped.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Docker CMD gets overridden by any args, while ENTRYPOINT receives them.
This fixes `docker run webclaw <url>` silently ignoring the URL argument.
Bump to 0.3.13.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Crawls are same-origin by default. Enable allow_subdomains to follow
sibling/child subdomains (blog.example.com from example.com), or
allow_external_links for full cross-origin crawling.
Root domain extraction uses a heuristic that handles two-part TLDs
(co.uk, com.au). Includes 5 unit tests for root_domain().
Bump to 0.3.12.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Try /sitemap_index.xml, /wp-sitemap.xml, and /sitemap/sitemap-index.xml
after the standard /sitemap.xml. WordPress 5.5+ and many CMS platforms
use non-standard paths that were previously missed. Paths found via
robots.txt are deduplicated to avoid double-fetching.
Bump to 0.3.11.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Stress testing showed 33% of proxies are dead, causing 30s+ timeouts
per request with 3 retries (worst case 94s). Reducing timeout from 30s
to 12s and retries from 3 to 2 brings worst case to 25s. Combined with
disabling 509 dead proxies from the pool, this should significantly
improve response times under load.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
CI runs Rust 1.94 which flags these. Collapsed nested if-let in
cell_has_block_content() and replaced .map()+return with .inspect()
in table_to_md().
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Version bump for layout table, stack overflow, and noise filter fixes
contributed by @devnen. Also fixes cargo fmt issues that caused CI lint
failure on the merge commit.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Two related fixes for content being stripped by the noise filter:
1. Remove <form> from unconditional noise tags. ASP.NET and similar
frameworks wrap entire pages in a <form> tag — these are not input
forms. Forms with >500 chars of text are now treated as content
wrappers, not noise.
2. Add safety valve for class/ID noise matching. When malformed HTML
leaves a noise container unclosed (e.g., <div class="header"> missing
its </div>), the HTML5 parser makes all subsequent siblings into
children of that container. A header/nav/footer with >5000 chars of
text is almost certainly a broken wrapper absorbing real content —
exempt it from noise filtering.
Pages like Express.co.uk live blogs nest 200+ DOM levels deep, overflowing
the default 1 MB main-thread stack on Windows during recursive markdown
conversion.
Two-layer fix:
1. markdown.rs: add depth parameter to node_to_md/children_to_md/inline_text
with MAX_DOM_DEPTH=200 guard — falls back to plain text collection at limit
2. lib.rs: wrap extract_with_options in a worker thread with 8 MB stack so
html5ever parsing and extraction both have room on deeply nested pages
Tested with Express.co.uk live blog (previously crashed, now extracts 2000+
lines of clean markdown) and drudgereport.com (still works correctly).
Sites like Drudge Report use <table> for page layout, not data. Each cell
contains extensive block-level content (divs, hrs, paragraphs, links).
Previously, table_to_md() called inline_text() on every cell, collapsing
all whitespace and flattening block elements into a single unreadable line.
Changes:
- Add cell_has_block_content() heuristic: scans for block-level descendants
(p, div, hr, ul, ol, h1-h6, etc.) to distinguish layout vs data tables
- Layout tables render each cell as a standalone section separated by blank
lines, using children_to_md() to preserve block structure
- Data tables (no block elements in cells) keep existing markdown table format
- Bold/italic tags containing block elements are treated as containers
instead of wrapping in **/**/* (fixes Drudge's <b><font>...</font></b>
column wrappers that contain the entire column content)
- Add tests for layout tables with paragraphs and with links
Research results saved to ~/.webclaw/research/ (report.md + full.json).
MCP returns file paths + findings instead of the full report, preventing
"exceeds maximum allowed tokens" errors in Claude/Cursor.
Same query returns cached result instantly without spending credits.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
- --research "query": deep research via cloud API, saves JSON file with
report + sources + findings, prints report to stdout
- --deep: longer, more thorough research mode
- MCP extract/summarize: cloud fallback when no local LLM available
- MCP research: returns structured JSON instead of raw text
- Bump to v0.3.7
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
__NEXT_DATA__, SvelteKit, and JSON-LD now appear as a
## Structured Data section in -f markdown and -f llm output.
Works with --only-main-content and all extraction flags.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Previous approach used mislav/bump-homebrew-formula-action which only
updated macOS arm64 SHA. Now downloads all 4 tarballs after Docker
finishes, computes SHAs, and writes the complete formula.
Fixes#12 (brew install checksum mismatch on Linux)
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Next.js pages embed server-rendered data in <script id="__NEXT_DATA__">.
Now extracted as structured JSON (pageProps) in the structured_data field.
Tested on 45 sites — 13 return rich structured data including prices,
product info, and page state not visible in the DOM.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
- Extract structured JSON from SvelteKit kit.start() data arrays
- Convert JS object literals (unquoted keys) to valid JSON
- Data appears in structured_data field (machine-readable)
- License changed from MIT to AGPL-3.0
- Bump to v0.3.4
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
boring-sys2 builds BoringSSL from C source via cmake. For aarch64 cross-
compilation, we need g++, cmake, and CC/CXX env vars pointing to the
cross-compiler. Also removed stale reqwest_unstable RUSTFLAG.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
The --cfg reqwest_unstable flag was required by the old patched reqwest.
wreq handles everything internally — no special build flags needed.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
wreq uses BoringSSL (via boring-sys2) which needs cmake and clang
at build time. Removed stale reference to Impit's patched rustls.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Migrated webclaw-fetch from webclaw-tls (patched rustls/h2/hyper/reqwest)
to wreq by @0x676e67. wreq uses BoringSSL for TLS and the http2 crate
for HTTP/2 fingerprinting — battle-tested with 60+ browser profiles.
This removes all 5 [patch.crates-io] entries that consumers previously
needed. Browser profiles (Chrome 145, Firefox 135, Safari 18, Edge 145)
are now built directly on wreq's Emulation API with correct TLS options,
HTTP/2 SETTINGS ordering, pseudo-header order, and header wire order.
84% pass rate across 1000 real sites. 384 unit tests green.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
- --cookie-file reads Chrome extension format ([{name, value, domain, ...}])
- Works with EditThisCookie, Cookie-Editor, and similar browser extensions
- Merges with --cookie when both provided
- MCP scrape tool now accepts cookies parameter
- Closes#7
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
When a fetch returns a challenge page (small HTML with Akamai markers),
automatically visit the homepage first to collect _abck/bm_sz cookies,
then retry the original URL. This bypasses Akamai's cookie-based gate
on subpages without needing JS execution.
Detected via: <title>Challenge Page</title> or bazadebezolkohpepadr
sensor marker on responses under 15KB.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Response.headers() now returns &http::HeaderMap instead of
&HashMap<String, String>. Updated FetchResult, is_pdf_content_type,
is_document_content_type, is_bot_protected, and all related tests.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>