-When only relative links are followed (option @samp{-L}), recursive
-retrieving will never span hosts. No time-expensive @sc{dns}-lookups
-will be performed, and the process will be very fast, with the minimum
-strain of the network. This will suit your needs often, especially when
-mirroring the output of various @code{x2html} converters, since they
-generally output relative links.
-
-@node Host Checking, Domain Acceptance, Relative Links, Following Links
-@section Host Checking
-@cindex DNS lookup
-@cindex host lookup
-@cindex host checking
-
-The drawback of following the relative links solely is that humans often
-tend to mix them with absolute links to the very same host, and the very
-same page. In this mode (which is the default mode for following links)
-all @sc{url}s that refer to the same host will be retrieved.
-
-The problem with this option are the aliases of the hosts and domains.
-Thus there is no way for Wget to know that @samp{regoc.srce.hr} and
-@samp{www.srce.hr} are the same host, or that @samp{fly.srk.fer.hr} is
-the same as @samp{fly.cc.fer.hr}. Whenever an absolute link is
-encountered, the host is @sc{dns}-looked-up with @code{gethostbyname} to
-check whether we are maybe dealing with the same hosts. Although the
-results of @code{gethostbyname} are cached, it is still a great
-slowdown, e.g. when dealing with large indices of home pages on different
-hosts (because each of the hosts must be @sc{dns}-resolved to see
-whether it just @emph{might} be an alias of the starting host).
-
-To avoid the overhead you may use @samp{-nh}, which will turn off
-@sc{dns}-resolving and make Wget compare hosts literally. This will
-make things run much faster, but also much less reliable
-(e.g. @samp{www.srce.hr} and @samp{regoc.srce.hr} will be flagged as
-different hosts).
-
-Note that modern @sc{http} servers allow one IP address to host several
-@dfn{virtual servers}, each having its own directory hierarchy. Such
-``servers'' are distinguished by their hostnames (all of which point to
-the same IP address); for this to work, a client must send a @code{Host}
-header, which is what Wget does. However, in that case Wget @emph{must
-not} try to divine a host's ``real'' address, nor try to use the same
-hostname for each access, i.e. @samp{-nh} must be turned on.
-
-In other words, the @samp{-nh} option must be used to enable the
-retrieval from virtual servers distinguished by their hostnames. As the
-number of such server setups grow, the behavior of @samp{-nh} may become
-the default in the future.
-
-@node Domain Acceptance, All Hosts, Host Checking, Following Links
-@section Domain Acceptance
-
-With the @samp{-D} option you may specify the domains that will be
-followed. The hosts the domain of which is not in this list will not be
-@sc{dns}-resolved. Thus you can specify @samp{-Dmit.edu} just to make
-sure that @strong{nothing outside of @sc{mit} gets looked up}. This is
-very important and useful. It also means that @samp{-D} does @emph{not}
-imply @samp{-H} (span all hosts), which must be specified explicitly.
-Feel free to use this options since it will speed things up, with almost
-all the reliability of checking for all hosts. Thus you could invoke
-
-@example
-wget -r -D.hr http://fly.srk.fer.hr/
-@end example
-
-to make sure that only the hosts in @samp{.hr} domain get
-@sc{dns}-looked-up for being equal to @samp{fly.srk.fer.hr}. So
-@samp{fly.cc.fer.hr} will be checked (only once!) and found equal, but
-@samp{www.gnu.ai.mit.edu} will not even be checked.
-
-Of course, domain acceptance can be used to limit the retrieval to
-particular domains with spanning of hosts in them, but then you must
-specify @samp{-H} explicitly. E.g.:
-
-@example
-wget -r -H -Dmit.edu,stanford.edu http://www.mit.edu/
-@end example
-
-will start with @samp{http://www.mit.edu/}, following links across
-@sc{mit} and Stanford.
+The @samp{-H} option turns on host spanning, thus allowing Wget's
+recursive run to visit any host referenced by a link. Unless sufficient
+recursion-limiting criteria are applied depth, these foreign hosts will
+typically link to yet more hosts, and so on until Wget ends up sucking
+up much more data than you have intended.
+
+@item Limit spanning to certain domains---@samp{-D}
+
+The @samp{-D} option allows you to specify the domains that will be
+followed, thus limiting the recursion only to the hosts that belong to
+these domains. Obviously, this makes sense only in conjunction with
+@samp{-H}. A typical example would be downloading the contents of
+@samp{www.server.com}, but allowing downloads from
+@samp{images.server.com}, etc.:
+
+@example
+wget -rH -Dserver.com http://www.server.com/
+@end example
+
+You can specify more than one address by separating them with a comma,
+e.g. @samp{-Ddomain1.com,domain2.com}.
+
+@item Keep download off certain domains---@samp{--exclude-domains}