30 comments

  • maxloh 2 hours ago

    I find SingleFile [0] to be a much more robust version of this.

    It strips out all the JavaScript too, but also packs everything into a single HTML file that is easy to transfer. Binary assets (like web fonts and images) are packed as base64 strings.

    They also offer a CLI powered by Puppeteer. [1]

    [0]: https://github.com/gildas-lormeau/singlefile

    [1]: https://github.com/gildas-lormeau/single-file-cli

    • tamnd 2 hours ago

      It seems this repo only saves one web page?

      What I'm implementing here is mirroring a whole website, with all its subpages, so you can browse it all offline. For example, all essays from paulgraham.com.

      • maxloh 31 minutes ago

        Oh, I see. In that case, feature-wise, it is actually a modern alternative to HTTrack.

        I think the misunderstanding stems from the browser's "Save As" reference in the description. It is misleading. You use "Save As" to save a single page, not an entire website.

        Also, the description lacks a clear explanation of the project's purpose. It would be helpful to include a sentence explaining that the program downloads an entire website, not just a single page.

    • HelloUsername 2 hours ago

      What's the difference with, any webbrowser on a computer, File -> Save as ?

      • nmstoker an hour ago

        That's for a single page, this handles the whole site. Also the browser Save As options often work poorly.

    • tamnd 2 hours ago

      And thanks for the link. Let me implement this single HTML feature, it looks nice to have!

      • maxloh 19 minutes ago

        Yeah. An idea on top of that is to bundle an entire website into a single HTML page, with vendored JavaScript to enable client-side routing (all of the original pages' JS is still stripped out).

        That way, the page is self-contained as it is, but requires no bundled binary code to serve the site. It is actually safer security-wise.

        The vendored script can be as simple as this:

          const site = {
            "path-1": "<!DOCTYPE html><html> ... </html>",
            "path-2": "<!DOCTYPE html><html> ... </html>",
            // More paths
          }
        
          function attachListeners() {
            for (const [path, html] of Object.entries(site)) {
              document.querySelector(`a[href=${path}]`).onclick = () => {
                document.documentElement.outerHTML = html
                attachListeners()
              }
            }
          }
        
          document.addEventListeners("DOMContentLoaded", attachListeners)
  • ninalanyon 14 minutes ago

    > kage serve $HOME/data/kage/paulgraham.com

    If the result is static why does it need a server? Isn't it possible to make it so that it can simply be opened by the browser? Like:

    $ firefox $HOME/data/kage/paulgraham.com

    Then the result would be useable on machines without kage nstalled.

    • doctoboggan 9 minutes ago

      Usually JavaScript is blocked when you load pages that way.

  • wolttam 2 hours ago

    One use I'd have for this is company wikis that you want to give folks easy offline access to (maybe the wiki has documentation that's useful at sites that don't have cellular coverage).

    Cool!

    It would be especially cool to have a version that didn't require the separate serving process - even though it's nifty you can package up a whole site as a single binary.

    Maybe a single HTML entrypoint shim with a bit of javascript that could index into an archive (potentially embedded) of the site's content?

    • tamnd 2 hours ago

      Submitting this to Hacker News is the right place! Thanks for your idea. I will consider implementing that :)

      Also, in my mind, I already have a script/program to convert HTML to Markdown, so it could actually store everything on disk as a folder of Markdown files, and then commit them to a Git repo.

  • telesilla an hour ago

    I've been using httrack (https://www.httrack.com) to download wikis to read on flights, which isn't perfect but better than I'd found previously. I'll try this out, I'd be delighted to have good results. Thanks for the post.

  • gregwebs 2 hours ago

    This seems like it has potential to create a lot of load on a site- are there settings to set how fast it clones or avoid images/videos? Is there a way to only get a subset of a website?

    • tamnd 2 hours ago

      Could you help create a new issue for that? I will do it later. It is already 1:00 AM my time, but I am happy that anyone is interested in it. : )

  • Igor_Wiwi an hour ago

    This is quite useful tool, especially for the cases where internet access is limited (the flights for example). I implemented it as a separate feature in mdview.io: for example you can export a document as a html file for offline usage, with all the presentation features like reach tables, mermaid and etc built in. Example https://mdview.io/s/why-markdown-became-default-format-for-a... then try to Export - Export HTML

  • dimiprasakis an hour ago

    Neat project, I like the idea. One thing from a quick read: you launch Chrome with --no-sandbox. Is there a good reason for that? Security wise it's probably not a good idea. If there is no reason, I'd suggest leaving the sandbox on!

    In any case, cool stuff :)

  • sanqui 2 hours ago

    Cool concept. I would like to see this combined with mitmproxy for archive grade fidelity. You could be saving exactly the data served and at the same time a representation by a modern (contemporary) browser, with all JS having run. This combination would be my perfect replacement for the WARC format.

    • tamnd 2 hours ago

      I'm working on WARC too, with format from Common Crawl!

      By converting it to Markdown, we save a lot of space, but it is for a different purpose and a different project: https://github.com/tamnd/ccrawl-cli

      • sanqui 2 hours ago

        That's neat! In my opinion, the WARC format is quite tricky and underspecified especially since HTTP2 introduced new semantics. It encodes too much in-band and requires rewriting of the server data. A mitmproxy capture is higher fidelity and supports capturing modern features such as WebSockets. I think if we could wrap Kage's crawler interactions by it and store its capture (the intercepted traffic), we could make a potentially nice new archival format.

        • tamnd 2 hours ago

          I tried to follow well-known formats first, such as WARC and ZIM from Kiwix, so we could benefit from existing tooling support.

          For my own custom data format, I have a lot of private code that I plan to release soon. It is optimized for compression, fast lookups, and more. I have been working on it for two years. This is part of a larger, ambitious umbrella project: I am building Google from scratch (all open source), something that anyone can host, including the crawler, indexer, storage, and serving layers. Stay tuned!

          • sanqui an hour ago

            I'm a fan of compatibility with established formats!

            Sounds awesome. There is a lot of untapped potential with respect to efficiently archiving and indexing websites. I saw the impressive things Marginalia Search is doing in this area (the blog is great when it gets technical). There is also a lot of very complete archives of websites out there which are not being indexed at all, and I would love to make them available for researchers. In any case, I'm interested in your project!

          • Prime_Axiom 43 minutes ago

            Looking forward to the next project! I love these kinds of archiving tools.

    • Dhavidh 2 hours ago

      sound interesting

  • lolpython an hour ago

    This is cool. I could see myself downloading the articles behind the first couple pages of hacker news with this, for viewing on a flight or long distance train ride with spotty internet

  • latexr 27 minutes ago

    For those with an eReader, one thing that works really well is using pandoc to download and convert a webpage to EPUB that you can then load to your reader.

      pandoc --from html --to epub --output /PATH/TO/FILE.epub https://example.com
  • rahimnathwani 2 hours ago

    So this is like using wget --mirror except that it works on pages that require javascript, right?

    • tamnd 2 hours ago

      Yeah, it is. For example, openai.com is rendered with Next.js, so I will try to mirror it tomorrow.

  • daviding an hour ago

    Nice idea! fwiw, false positives and all, but the Windows 11 default Windows Security doesn't like it: `leakless.exe: Operation did not complete successfully because the file contains a virus or potentially unwanted software.`

  • delduca an hour ago

    curl can do this

  • grahamstanes17 2 hours ago

    nice