The server says
Content-Length: 7388868608
wget 1.9 says
Length: -1,201,065,984 [application/octet-stream]
Yeah, that's a 33 bit number, but my file system can handle it,
so wget should be able to as well:
-rw-r--r--1 jwz 7388868608 Jan 21 00:06 foo.tar.gz
Also, it's
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
wget -A gz mplayer.hu/pipermail/mplayer-userss/ isn't working
correctly. Wget downloads the files with html , and says they are
unwanted and finally delete this file. I have this problem often with
http Servers.
with best regards from Dortmund
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
wget -A gz mplayer.hu/pipermail/mplayer-userss/ isn't working
correctly. Wget downloads the files with html , and says they are
unwanted and finally delete this file. I have this problem often with
http Servers. But wget 1.7.1 OS/2 works correct.
with best
Greetings all.
I've posted in the past, but never really have gotten connectivity to a
https server I support using the wget application. I've looked in the
manual, on the website and searched the Internet but am not getting very
far.
wget -V
GNU Wget 1.9
wget -d -S https://server/file
Simons, Rick [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Greetings all.
I've posted in the past, but never really have gotten connectivity to a
https server I support using the wget application. I've looked in the
manual, on the website and searched the Internet but am not getting very
far.
wget -V
I got wget compiled with ssl support now, and have a followup question ...
I'm getting the local file created but populated with a server response, not
the actual contents of the remote file. See example:
wget -d -S https://server/testfile --http-user=user --http-passwd=pass
DEBUG output
Well, that's what you're telling it to do with the -S option, so why are you
surprised? man wget, then /-S
Mark Post
-Original Message-
From: Simons, Rick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, January 21, 2004 11:09 AM
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: Syntax question ...
I
Another followup question(s), and thanks for the continued assistance ...:
-S
--server-response
Print the headers sent by HTTP servers and responses sent by FTP servers.
I misinterpreted this switch that the file would still be downloaded, but
the console would see the server messages not
Simons, Rick [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I got wget compiled with ssl support now, and have a followup question ...
I'm getting the local file created but populated with a server response, not
the actual contents of the remote file. See example:
wget -d -S https://server/testfile
On Wed, 21 Jan 2004, Hrvoje Niksic wrote:
Thanks for the report. Wget still doesn't handle large files (it doesn't
use off_t yet). I plan to fix this for the next release.
Speaking of this subject, I'm currently doing just about the same in libcurl
(adding large file support) and I thought
Daniel Stenberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Wed, 21 Jan 2004, Hrvoje Niksic wrote:
Thanks for the report. Wget still doesn't handle large files (it doesn't
use off_t yet). I plan to fix this for the next release.
Speaking of this subject, I'm currently doing just about the same in
Hi All,
Is there a way to have wget split a download among multiple servers (or at
least download specific parts of a file)? If not, can anybody recommend a
good download accelerator (and/or manager)?
Thanks in advance.
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