Hi Fernando, Once again, the answer is quite the same. You could parse the --debug output of Wget to do this. Though, remember, parsing the debug is not always safe since we may change it any point.
However, even for this case, I guess, using Wget2 is a better choice for you. https://gitlab.com/gnuwget/wget2 * Fernando Gont <fg...@si6networks.com> [181127 13:08]: > Folks, > > I'm using wget in a script to find broken and "moved" links in a web site. > > My problem is that, when parsing the output of "wget --spider", I cannot > tell which page triggered the retrieval of a URL (i.e., the "referer" of > such URL) -- so, while I can find that there are broken links, I cannot > easily tell which page contains the broken link. > > Any clues on how to obtain such info? > > Thanks! > Fernando > > > > > -- > Fernando Gont > SI6 Networks > e-mail: fg...@si6networks.com > PGP Fingerprint: 6666 31C6 D484 63B2 8FB1 E3C4 AE25 0D55 1D4E 7492 > > > > > > -- Thanking You, Darshit Shah PGP Fingerprint: 7845 120B 07CB D8D6 ECE5 FF2B 2A17 43ED A91A 35B6
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