Dan Mahoney, System Admin wrote:
> On Mon, 17 Mar 2003, Tony Lewis wrote:
>
> > Wget should already do what you want (provided that the file system
where
> > you will be mirroring the results can handle things like "?", "=", and
"&"
> > in a file name).
>
> Can most unix systems? I thought the qu
On Mon, 17 Mar 2003, Tony Lewis wrote:
> Dan Mahoney, System Admin wrote:
>
> > Assume I have a site that I want to create a static mirror of. Normally
> > this site is database driven, but I figure if I spider the entire site,
> > and map all the GET URLS to static urls I can have a full mirror.
Aaron S. Hawley wrote:
> On Thu, 13 Mar 2003, Max Bowsher wrote:
>
>>> David Balazic wrote:
>>>
>>> So it is "do it yourself" , huh ? :-)
>>
>> More to the point, *no one* is available who has cvs write access.
>
> what if for the time being the task of keeping track of submissions
> for wget w
On Thu, 13 Mar 2003, Max Bowsher wrote:
> > David Balazic wrote:
> >
> > So it is "do it yourself" , huh ? :-)
>
> More to the point, *no one* is available who has cvs write access.
what if for the time being the task of keeping track of submissions for
wget was done with its debian package?
htt
Dan Mahoney, System Admin wrote:
> Assume I have a site that I want to create a static mirror of. Normally
> this site is database driven, but I figure if I spider the entire site,
> and map all the GET URLS to static urls I can have a full mirror. Has
> anyone known of this being successfully d
Hi all,
Assume I have a site that I want to create a static mirror of. Normally
this site is database driven, but I figure if I spider the entire site,
and map all the GET URLS to static urls I can have a full mirror. Has
anyone known of this being successfully done? How would I get apache to
"