httpindex (1)
Leading comments
SWISH++ httpindex.1 Copyright (C) 1998 Paul J. Lucas This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the ...
NAME
httpindex - HTTP front-end for SWISH++ indexerSYNOPSIS
wget [ options ] URL... 2>&1 | httpindex [ options ]DESCRIPTION
httpindex is a front-end for index++(1) to index files copied from remote servers using wget(1). The files (in a copy of the remote directory structure) can be kept, deleted, or replaced with their descriptions after indexing.OPTIONS
wget Options
The wget(1) options that are required are: -A, -nv, -r, and -x; the ones that are highly recommended are: -l, -nh, -t, and -w. (See the EXAMPLE.)httpindex Options
httpindex accepts the same short options as index++(1) except for -H, -I, -l, -r, -S, and -V.The following options are unique to httpindex:
- -d
- Replace the text of local copies of retrieved files with their descriptions after they have been indexed. This is useful to display file descriptions in search results without having to have complete copies of the remote files thus saving filesystem space. (See the extract_description() function in WWW(3) for details about how descriptions are extracted.)
- -D
- Delete the local copies of retrieved files after they have been indexed. This prevents your local filesystem from filling up with copies of remote files.
EXAMPLE
To index all HTML and text files on a remote web server keeping descriptions locally:
- wget -A html,txt -linf -t2 -rxnv -nh -w2 www.foo.com 2>&1 | httpindex -d -e'html:*.html,text:*.txt'
Note that you need to redirect wget(1)'s output from standard error to standard output in order to pipe it to httpindex.
EXIT STATUS
Exits with a value of zero only if indexing completed sucessfully; non-zero otherwise.CAVEATS
In addition to those for index++(1), httpindex does not correctly handle the use of multiple -e, -E, -m, or -M options (because the Perl script uses the standard GetOpt::Std package for processing command-line options that doesn't). The last of any of those options ``wins.''The work-around is to use multiple values for those options seperated by commas to a single one of those options. For example, if you want to do:
- httpindex -e'html:*.html' -e'text:*.txt'
do this instead:
- httpindex -e'html:*.html,text:*.txt'