Hey Emacs, this is -*- outline -*- mode This is the to-do list for Wget. There is no timetable of when we plan to implement these features -- this is just a list of things it'd be nice to see in Wget. Patches to implement any of these items would be gladly accepted. The items are not listed in any particular order. Not all of them represent user-visible changes. * Add an option to not encode special characters like ' ' and '~' when saving local files. Would be good to have a mode that encodes all special characters (as now), one that encodes none (as above), and one that only encodes a character if it was encoded in the original URL (e.g. %20 but not %7E). * --retr-symlinks should cause wget to traverse links to directories too. * Lots of noncompliant webservers issue HTTP redirects to relative URLs, and browsers follow them, so wget should too. * Make wget return non-zero status in more situations, like incorrect HTTP auth. * Timestamps are sometimes not copied over on files retrieved by FTP. * Wget does not currently handle "fragment identifiers" (the part of a URL starting with the '#' character) properly. * Make -K compare X.orig to X and move the former on top of the latter if they're the same, rather than leaving identical .orig files laying around. * Add an option to save all text/html files with a .html extension so that when grabbing the output of a dynamically-generated remote page, you'll end up with a filename that will cause _your_ webserver to realize the saved static HTML file isn't text/plain (or an illegal CGI script in the case of *.cgi). * Allow mirroring of FTP URLs where logging in puts you somewhere else besides '/'. * Make `-k' convert too. * Make `-k' check for files that were downloaded in the past and convert links to them in newly-downloaded documents. * -k should convert convert relative references to absolute if not downloaded. * -k should convert "hostless absolute" URLs, like . However, Brian McMahon wants the old incorrect behavior to still be available as an option, as he depends on it to allow mirrors of his site to send CGI queries to his original site, but still get graphics off of the mirror site. Perhaps this would be better dealt with by adding an option to tell -k not to convert certain URL patterns? * Add option to clobber existing file names (no `.N' suffixes). * Introduce a concept of "boolean" options. For instance, every boolean option `--foo' would have a `--no-foo' equivalent for turning it off. Get rid of `--foo=no' stuff. Short options would be handled as `-x' vs. `-nx'. * Implement "thermometer" display (not all that hard; use an alternative show_progress() if the output goes to a terminal.) * Add option to only list wildcard matches without doing the download. * Add case-insensitivity as an option. * Handle MIME types correctly. There should be an option to (not) retrieve files based on MIME types, e.g. `--accept-types=image/*'. * Implement "persistent" retrieving. In "persistent" mode Wget should treat most of the errors as transient. * Allow time-stamping by arbitrary date. * Fix Unix directory parser to allow for spaces in file names. * Allow size limit to files. * Recognize HTML comments correctly. Add more options for handling bogus HTML found all over the 'net. * Implement breadth-first retrieval. * Download to .in* when mirroring. * Add an option to delete or move no-longer-existent files when mirroring. * Implement a switch to avoid downloading multiple files (e.g. x and x.gz). * Implement uploading (--upload URL?) in FTP and HTTP. * Rewrite FTP code to allow for easy addition of new commands. It should probably be coded as a simple DFA engine. * Recognize more FTP servers (VMS). * Make HTTP timestamping use If-Modified-Since facility. * Implement better spider options. * Add more protocols (e.g. gopher and news), implementing them in a modular fashion. * Implement a concept of "packages" a la mirror. * Implement correct RFC1808 URL parsing. * Implement HTTP cookies. * Implement more HTTP/1.1 bells and whistles (ETag, Content-MD5 etc.) * Support SSL encryption through SSLeay or OpenSSL.