NAME
lwp-rget - Retrieve WWW documents recursively
SYNOPSIS
lwp-rget [--verbose] [--depth=N] [--limit=N] [--prefix=URL] <URL>
lwp-rget --version
DESCRIPTION
This program will retrieve a document and store it in a local file. It will follow any links found in the document and store these documents as well, patching links so that they refer to these local copies. This process continues until there are no more unvisited links or the process is stopped by the one or more of the limits which can be controlled by the command line arguments.
This program is useful if you want to make a local copy of a collection of documents or want to do web reading off-line.
All documents are stored as plain files in the current directory. The file names chosen are derived from the last component of URL paths.
The options are:
- --depth=n
-
Limit the recursive level. Embedded images are always loaded, even if they fall outside the --depth. This means that one can use --depth=0 in order to fetch a single document together with all inline graphics.
The default depth is 5.
- --limit=n
-
Limit the number of documents to get. The default limit is 50.
- --prefix=url_prefix
-
Limit the links to follow. Only URLs that start the prefix string are followed.
The default prefix is set as the "directory" of the initial URL to follow. For instance if we start lwp-rget with the URL
http://www.sn.no/foo/bar.html
, then prefix will be set tohttp://www.sn.no/foo/
.Use
--prefix=''
if you don't want the fetching to be limited by any prefix. - --sleep=n
-
Sleep n seconds before retrieving each document. This options allows you to go slowly, not loading the server you visiting too much.
- --verbose
-
Make more noise while running.
- --quiet
-
Don't make any noise.
- --version
-
Print program version number and quit.
- --help
-
Print the usage message and quit.
Before the program exits the name of the file, where the initial URL is stored, is printed on stdout. All used filenames are also printed on stderr as they are loaded. This printing can be suppressed with the --quiet option.
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Gisle Aas <aas@sn.no>