Dan Jacobson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Wishlist: giving a way to save the types of cookies you say you won't in:
> `--save-cookies FILE'
> Save cookies to FILE at the end of session. Cookies whose expiry
> time is not specified, or those that have already expired, are not
> sav
"Tony Lewis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hrvoje Niksic wrote:
>
>> Wget could always support a URL parameter, such as:
>>
>> wget 'ftp://server/dir1/dir2/file;disk=foo'
>>
>
> Assuming, you can detect a VMS connection, why not simply
> ftp://server/foo:[dir1.dir2]?
Because it doesn't look l
I'm not sure if this is a bug. It would seem so from my reading of the man page.
wget version: 1.9.1
OS: Mac OS X 10.2.6 (run from tshrc shell in Darwin, not really using any part of the Mac-specific OS)
.wgetrc: none
Command line:
wget --input-file=combined_input --append-output=combined_log --w
Well, thanks for all of the information. I will take a look at the latest cvs code to
see if there is anything useful I may be able to contribute in that regard.
--
Ben
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Behalf Of Maciej W. Rozycki
Sent: Friday, May 28
On Fri, 28 May 2004, Bufford, Benjamin (AGRE) wrote:
> Correction, no other client that *I have checked* seems to work with
> "disk:" part of a VMS pathname. For that matter many of them have
> trouble with accessing just regular diorectories. So, wget does a
> better job than most. I have trie
Correction, no other client that *I have checked* seems to work with "disk:" part of
a VMS pathname. For that matter many of them have trouble with accessing just regular
diorectories. So, wget does a better job than most. I have tried the double-slash
notation, but I to no avail. It does
On Thu, 27 May 2004, Tony Lewis wrote:
> Assuming, you can detect a VMS connection, why not simply
> ftp://server/foo:[dir1.dir2]?
Well, that would contradict the URI specification (although it could be
considered a usable hack).
--
+ Maciej W. Rozycki, Technical University of Gdansk, Poland
On Fri, 28 May 2004, Hrvoje Niksic wrote:
> > Well, then there's no way of automatic detection if the initial path
> > element of an URL specifies a disk or a directory. Perhaps a
> > special construct could be used, such as a double slash.
>
> Wget could always support a URL parameter, such as:
Wishlist: giving a way to save the types of cookies you say you won't in:
`--save-cookies FILE'
Save cookies to FILE at the end of session. Cookies whose expiry
time is not specified, or those that have already expired, are not
saved.
so we can carry state between wget invocations,