didja just try...

wget -m http://www.somedomain.org/secured/

Jamie

On Tuesday 02 October 2001 04:35 pm, you wrote:
> I think I had all the settings right in wget.  I think there might be a bug
> in wget, at least in the cygwin version.
>
> I originally had this, which didn't work:
> wget --http-user=myname --http-passwd=mypasswd -o wget.log \
>  -H -D somedomain.org -k -p -r -N -nr \
>  http://www.somedomain.org/secured/
>
> I changed it to this, which works:
> wget --http-user=myname --http-passwd=mypasswd -o wget.log \
>  -H -D somedomain.org -k -p -r -l15 -N -nr \
>  http://www.somedomain.org/secured/
>
> It seems strange that wget should start recursing after only adding -l15.
> I used 15 as an arbitrary high number; I'm sure that there are fewer than
> six levels at the site I wget'd.
>
> It also seems strange that cygwin and Mandrake include wget but neither
> installs the man-page wget, I figured there wasn't one.
>
> By the way, I did complain to the web author about the stupid frames, and
> about various other web-design issues.
>
> At 03:41 PM 10/2/2001 -0700, Jamie wrote:
> >Actually, I think his issue is wget not sucking the frames...which
> > shouldnt be considered blowing... that would be something entirely
> > different...
> >
> >Jamie
> >
> >On Tuesday 02 October 2001 12:37 pm, you wrote:
> >> On Tue, 2 Oct 2001, Ralph Zeller wrote:
> >> > I sometimes like to suck down an entire web-site using wget.  However,
> >> > wget doesn't follow links in frames.  Is there another tool that can
> >> > recursively web-suck including following links in frames?  Thanks.
> >>
> >> Tell the web authors who use frames in their pages they suck.  :)
> >>
> >> Sorry, couldn't resist.
> >>
> >>    -Gregor
> >>
> >>        <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> /* Oregon Public Networking - Eugene, OR */

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