mirror of
https://github.com/Brandon-Rozek/website.git
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78 lines
No EOL
2.6 KiB
Markdown
78 lines
No EOL
2.6 KiB
Markdown
---
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date: 2022-12-24 10:01:16-04:00
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draft: false
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medium_enabled: true
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medium_post_id: 9b2818a6e154
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tags:
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- Archive
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title: Personal Web Archive and How I Archive Single Web pages
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---
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The [Internet Archive](https://web.archive.org/) is great for providing a centralized database of snapshots of websites throughout time. What happens though when you want to have
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your own offline copy during times of little to no internet
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access? [Archivebox](https://archivebox.io/) is one solution
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to such problem. It behaves similarly to the Internet
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archive and also allows importing of RSS feeds to save local copies of blog posts. To install it, you can use `pipx`.
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```bash
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pipx install archivebox
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```
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For the rest of this post, however, I want to talk about a simpler tool. A combination of `wget` and `python -m http.server`. In the past, I've used `wget` to [mirror entire websites](/blog/archivingsites/). We can adjust the command slightly so that it doesn't follow links and instead only looks at a single webpage.
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```bash
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wget --convert-links \
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--adjust-extension \
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--no-clobber \
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--page-requisites \
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INSERT_URL_HERE
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```
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Now assume we have a folder full of downloaded websites. To view them, we can use any HTTP server. One of the easiest to temporarily setup currently is Python's built in one.
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To serve all the files in the current directory
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```bash
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python -m http.server OPTIONAL_PORT_NUM
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```
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If you leave the port number field empty, then this returns
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```
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Serving HTTP on 0.0.0.0 port 8000 (http://0.0.0.0:8000/) ...
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```
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A few nice side-effects of using `wget` and `python`.
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- Python's default webserver shows a list of files in the directory. This can make it easier to browse around the web archive.
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- The `wget` flags make it so that if you want to archive `https://brandonrozek.com/blog/personal-simple-web-archive/` then all you need to access is `http://localhost:8000/brandonrozek.com/blog/personal-simple-web-archive`. In other words, it preserves URLs.
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Now this approach isn't perfect, if a webpage makes heavy use of javascript or server side features then it'll be incomplete. Though for the majority of the wiki pages or blog posts I want to save for future reference, this approach works well.
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My full script is below:
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```bash
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#!/bin/sh
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set -o errexit
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set -o nounset
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set -o pipefail
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ARCHIVE_FOLDER="$HOME/webarchive"
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show_usage() {
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echo "Usage: archivesite [URL]"
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exit 1
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}
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# Check argument count
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if [ "$#" -ne 1 ]; then
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show_usage
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fi
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cd "$ARCHIVE_FOLDER"
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wget --convert-links \
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--adjust-extension \
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--page-requisites \
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--no-verbose \
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"$1"
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# Keep track of requested URLs
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echo "$1" >> saved_urls.txt
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``` |