Get Google Search Results With PHP – Google AJAX API And The SEO Perspective
If you’ve ever tried to write a program that fetches search results from Google, you’ll no doubt be familiar with the excrutiating annoyances of parsing the results and getting blocked periodically. Run a couple hundred queries in a row and bam! – your script is banned until proven innocent by entering an captcha. Even that would provide only a short reprieve, as you’d soon get blocked again.
Luckily there’s an official Google search API that will let you avoid that hassle. In this post you’ll find an example PHP script and a (mainly) SEO-oriented review of the API.
Using the AJAX API in PHP
I must confess that until yesterday I didn’t know you could use the Google AJAX search API in languages other than JavaScript. The documentation didn’t even mention the possibility when the API was first released. Well, it does now, and PHP is among the supported languages. Oh, the joy.
The API is already pretty well documented, so I won’t waste your time with another lengthy tutorial. Instead, here’s a simple example of how you could use it in PHP :
/** * google_search_api() * Query Google AJAX Search API * * @param array $args URL arguments. For most endpoints only "q" (query) is required. * @param string $referer Referer to use in the HTTP header (must be valid). * @param string $endpoint API endpoint. Defaults to 'web' (web search). * @return object or NULL on failure */ function google_search_api($args, $referer = 'http://localhost/test/', $endpoint = 'web'){ $url = "http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/services/search/".$endpoint; if ( !array_key_exists('v', $args) ) $args['v'] = '1.0'; $url .= '?'.http_build_query($args, '', '&'); $ch = curl_init(); curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_URL, $url); curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, 1); // note that the referer *must* be set curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_REFERER, $referer); $body = curl_exec($ch); curl_close($ch); //decode and return the response return json_decode($body); } $rez = google_search_api(array( 'q' => 'antique shoes', )); print_r($rez);
That’s it for the programming part.
So should we really throw away our lovingly crafted SERP scrapers and embrace the “official” API? Perhaps not. There are some peculiar things I’ve noticed after trying out the new API.
The Good
Lets start with the positive aspects. First, it looks like you can indeed safely use the API without getting blocked – I successfully ran about 1800 API queries in ~2 hours. Due to my crappy connection I was unable to test how it would behave if you turn it up to eleven and send hundreds of requests per second, but the rate limiter is definitely more lenient on API users than on plain SERP scrapers. This is a major plus for people who don’t like throttling their software to one request per minute or hunting for working proxies to get around bans.
The API also makes it easy to parse the results. All queries return JSON-encoded data, so you just json_decode() it and go. No need to invent complicated regexps that must be rewritten every time Google changes the HTML structure of the search results page.
The Bad
Of course, with a cliche megacorporation like Google it’s never all fun and games. You can only get 8 search results at a time, and no more than 64 results in total for any particular keyword. Whether this is a problem depends on what you intend to do with the API, but it’s certainly an unpleasant limitation.
The really peculiar – nay, insidious – thing is how the search results returned by the API differ from normal SERPs. A site that is #10 in a normal Google search may suddenly turn up as #1 in the API results. The typical #5 result may be moved to the second page. Basically, the API results look like they’ve been shuffled around a bit – the same URLs are returned but in slightly different order. Also, the “estimated result count” provided by the API is consistently much lower than what a normal search shows. All this makes the API useless for rank checking and similar SEO applications.
According to my tests you can’t just write off these discrepancies as a sideffect of geo-targeting.
It Depends
Overall, the API is either great or it kind-of sucks, depending on what you want to do with it.
At the risk of sounding like a conspiracy theorist, I must say the API seems to be cleverly engineered to be useful for “normal” purposes and somewhat useless for SEO. After all, only SEO workers really need accurate ranking data and more than 64 results per keyword phrase. Typical search engine users rarely move beyond the first page of results, so the limitations don’t hurt them. The various mashup makers that cater to the common user are also unaffected. It’s only the SEOs (and the rare academic researcher) that would be dissatisfied with the imposed constraints.
Of course, I’m sure you can still imagine a few interesting uses for the API ๐
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Thanks alot for the prefect code! you saved my ass ,gonna use it ;D
Thanks ๐
We’ve also developed an API to get Google search results if you want to check it out: https://serpapi.com
Now that the AJAX API has been deprecated, you can use this GitHub project: https://github.com/serpapi/google-search-results-php
Thank you for sharing this code.
To scrape Google, you should checkout https://avesapi.com