Provided by: linkchecker_10.0.1-2build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       linkchecker - command line client to check HTML documents and websites for broken links

SYNOPSIS

       linkchecker [options] [file-or-url]...

DESCRIPTION

       LinkChecker features

       • recursive and multithreaded checking

       • output  in  colored  or normal text, HTML, SQL, CSV, XML or a sitemap graph in different
         formats

       • support for HTTP/1.1, HTTPS, FTP, mailto:, news:, nntp:, Telnet and local file links

       • restriction of link checking with URL filters

       • proxy support

       • username/password authorization for HTTP, FTP and Telnet

       • support for robots.txt exclusion protocol

       • support for Cookies

       • support for HTML5

       • HTML and CSS syntax check

       • Antivirus check

       • a command line and web interface

EXAMPLES

       The most common use checks the given domain recursively:

          $ linkchecker http://www.example.com/

       Beware that this checks the whole site which can have thousands of URLs. Use the -r option
       to restrict the recursion depth.

       Don't check URLs with /secret in its name. All other links are checked as usual:

          $ linkchecker --ignore-url=/secret mysite.example.com

       Checking a local HTML file on Unix:

          $ linkchecker ../bla.html

       Checking a local HTML file on Windows:

          C:\> linkchecker c:empest.html

       You can skip the http:// url part if the domain starts with www.:

          $ linkchecker www.example.com

       You can skip the ftp:// url part if the domain starts with ftp.:

          $ linkchecker -r0 ftp.example.com

       Generate a sitemap graph and convert it with the graphviz dot utility:

          $ linkchecker -odot -v www.example.com | dot -Tps > sitemap.ps

OPTIONS

   General options
       -f FILENAME, --config=FILENAME
              Use    FILENAME    as    configuration    file.   By   default   LinkChecker   uses
              ~/.linkchecker/linkcheckerrc.

       -h, --help
              Help me! Print usage information for this program.

       --stdin
              Read list of white-space separated URLs to check from stdin.

       -t NUMBER, --threads=NUMBER
              Generate no more than the given number of threads. Default number of threads is 10.
              To disable threading specify a non-positive number.

       -V, --version
              Print version and exit.

       --list-plugins
              Print available check plugins and exit.

   Output options
       -D STRING, --debug=STRING
              Print  debugging  output  for  the  given  logger.  Available  loggers are cmdline,
              checking, cache, dns, plugin and all. Specifying all is an alias for specifying all
              available  loggers.  The option can be given multiple times to debug with more than
              one logger. For accurate results, threading will be disabled during debug runs.

       -F TYPE[/ENCODING][/FILENAME], --file-output=TYPE[/ENCODING][/FILENAME]
              Output to a file  linkchecker-out.TYPE,  $HOME/.linkchecker/failures  for  failures
              output,  or  FILENAME if specified. The ENCODING specifies the output encoding, the
              default   is   that   of   your   locale.   Valid   encodings   are    listed    at
              https://docs.python.org/library/codecs.html#standard-encodings.   The  FILENAME and
              ENCODING parts of the none output type will be ignored, else if  the  file  already
              exists,  it will be overwritten.  You can specify this option more than once. Valid
              file output TYPEs are text, html,  sql,  csv,  gml,  dot,  xml,  sitemap,  none  or
              failures.  Default  is  no  file  output.   The various output types are documented
              below. Note that you can suppress all console output with the option -o none.

       --no-status
              Do not print check status messages.

       --no-warnings
              Don't log warnings. Default is to log warnings.

       -o TYPE[/ENCODING], --output=TYPE[/ENCODING]
              Specify output type as text, html, sql,  csv,  gml,  dot,  xml,  sitemap,  none  or
              failures.   Default  type  is  text. The various output types are documented below.
              The ENCODING specifies the output encoding, the default is  that  of  your  locale.
              Valid               encodings               are              listed              at
              https://docs.python.org/library/codecs.html#standard-encodings.

       -q, --quiet
              Quiet operation, an alias for -o none. This is only useful with -F.

       -v, --verbose
              Log all checked URLs. Default is to log only errors and warnings.

       -W REGEX, --warning-regex=REGEX
              Define a regular expression which prints a warning if it matches any content of the
              checked  link.  This applies only to valid pages, so we can get their content.  Use
              this to check for pages that contain some form of error, for example "This page has
              moved" or "Oracle Application error".  Note that multiple values can be combined in
              the regular expression,  for  example  "(This  page  has  moved|Oracle  Application
              error)".  See section REGULAR EXPRESSIONS for more info.

   Checking options
       --cookiefile=FILENAME
              Read a file with initial cookie data. The cookie data format is explained below.

       --check-extern
              Check external URLs.

       --ignore-url=REGEX
              URLs  matching  the  given  regular  expression  will only be syntax checked.  This
              option can be given multiple times.  See section REGULAR EXPRESSIONS for more info.

       -N STRING, --nntp-server=STRING
              Specify an NNTP server  for  news:  links.  Default  is  the  environment  variable
              NNTP_SERVER. If no host is given, only the syntax of the link is checked.

       --no-follow-url=REGEX
              Check  but  do  not  recurse into URLs matching the given regular expression.  This
              option can be given multiple times.  See section REGULAR EXPRESSIONS for more info.

       --no-robots
              Check URLs regardless of any robots.txt files.

       -p, --password
              Read a password from console and use it for HTTP and FTP authorization. For FTP the
              default password is anonymous@. For HTTP there is no default password. See also -u.

       -r NUMBER, --recursion-level=NUMBER
              Check  recursively  all  links  up  to  given  depth.  A negative depth will enable
              infinite recursion. Default depth is infinite.

       --timeout=NUMBER
              Set the timeout for connection attempts in  seconds.  The  default  timeout  is  60
              seconds.

       -u STRING, --user=STRING
              Try the given username for HTTP and FTP authorization. For FTP the default username
              is anonymous. For HTTP there is no default username. See also -p.

       --user-agent=STRING
              Specify  the  User-Agent  string  to  send  to  the  HTTP   server,   for   example
              "Mozilla/4.0". The default is "LinkChecker/X.Y" where X.Y is the current version of
              LinkChecker.

CONFIGURATION FILES

       Configuration files can specify all options above. They can also specify some options that
       cannot be set on the command line. See linkcheckerrc(5) for more info.

OUTPUT TYPES

       Note  that  by  default  only  errors  and  warnings are logged. You should use the option
       --verbose to get the complete URL list, especially when outputting a sitemap graph format.

       text   Standard text logger, logging URLs in keyword: argument fashion.

       html   Log URLs in keyword: argument fashion, formatted as HTML.  Additionally  has  links
              to  the  referenced  pages.  Invalid  URLs  have  HTML  and  CSS syntax check links
              appended.

       csv    Log check result in CSV format with one URL per line.

       gml    Log parent-child relations between linked URLs as a GML sitemap graph.

       dot    Log parent-child relations between linked URLs as a DOT sitemap graph.

       gxml   Log check result as a GraphXML sitemap graph.

       xml    Log check result as machine-readable XML.

       sitemap
              Log  check  result  as  an  XML   sitemap   whose   protocol   is   documented   at
              https://www.sitemaps.org/protocol.html.

       sql    Log  check  result  as SQL script with INSERT commands. An example script to create
              the initial SQL table is included as create.sql.

       failures
              Suitable for cron jobs. Logs the check result into a  file  ~/.linkchecker/failures
              which  only  contains  entries  with invalid URLs and the number of times they have
              failed.

       none   Logs nothing. Suitable for debugging or checking the exit code.

REGULAR EXPRESSIONS

       LinkChecker        accepts         Python         regular         expressions.         See
       https://docs.python.org/howto/regex.html  for  an  introduction.   An  addition  is that a
       leading exclamation mark negates the regular expression.

COOKIE FILES

       A cookie file contains standard HTTP header (RFC 2616) data with  the  following  possible
       names:

       Host (required)
              Sets the domain the cookies are valid for.

       Path (optional)
              Gives the path the cookies are value for; default path is /.

       Set-cookie (required)
              Set cookie name/value. Can be given more than once.

       Multiple entries are separated by a blank line. The example below will send two cookies to
       all URLs starting with  http://example.com/hello/  and  one  to  all  URLs  starting  with
       https://example.org/:

          Host: example.com
          Path: /hello
          Set-cookie: ID="smee"
          Set-cookie: spam="egg"

          Host: example.org
          Set-cookie: baggage="elitist"; comment="hologram"

PROXY SUPPORT

       To use a proxy on Unix or Windows set the http_proxy, https_proxy or ftp_proxy environment
       variables to the proxy URL. The URL should be of the form  http://[user:pass@]host[:port].
       LinkChecker also detects manual proxy settings of Internet Explorer under Windows systems,
       and GNOME or KDE on Linux systems. On a Mac use the Internet Config  to  select  a  proxy.
       You  can  also  set a comma-separated domain list in the no_proxy environment variables to
       ignore any proxy settings for these domains.

       Setting a HTTP proxy on Unix for example looks like this:

          $ export http_proxy="http://proxy.example.com:8080"

       Proxy authentication is also supported:

          $ export http_proxy="http://user1:mypass@proxy.example.org:8081"

       Setting a proxy on the Windows command prompt:

          C:\> set http_proxy=http://proxy.example.com:8080

PERFORMED CHECKS

       All URLs have to pass a preliminary syntax test.  Minor  quoting  mistakes  will  issue  a
       warning,  all  other  invalid syntax issues are errors. After the syntax check passes, the
       URL is queued for connection checking. All connection check types are described below.

       HTTP links (http:, https:)
              After connecting to the given HTTP server the given path or query is requested. All
              redirections  are  followed,  and  if  user/password  is  given  it will be used as
              authorization when necessary. All final  HTTP  status  codes  other  than  2xx  are
              errors.

              HTML page contents are checked for recursion.

       Local files (file:)
              A  regular, readable file that can be opened is valid. A readable directory is also
              valid. All other files, for example device files, unreadable or non-existing  files
              are errors.

              HTML or other parseable file contents are checked for recursion.

       Mail links (mailto:)
              A  mailto:  link  eventually resolves to a list of email addresses.  If one address
              fails, the whole list will fail. For each  mail  address  we  check  the  following
              things:

              1. Check the address syntax, both the parts before and after the @ sign.

              2. Look up the MX DNS records. If we found no MX record, print an error.

              3. Check  if  one  of  the  mail  hosts accept an SMTP connection. Check hosts with
                 higher priority first. If no host accepts SMTP, we print a warning.

              4. Try to verify the address with the VRFY command. If we got an answer, print  the
                 verified address as an info.

       FTP links (ftp:)
              For FTP links we do:

              1. connect to the specified host

              2. try  to  login  with the given user and password. The default user is anonymous,
                 the default password is anonymous@.

              3. try to change to the given directory

              4. list the file with the NLST command

       Telnet links (telnet:)
              We try to connect and if user/password are given, login to the given telnet server.

       NNTP links (news:, snews:, nntp)
              We try to connect to the  given  NNTP  server.  If  a  news  group  or  article  is
              specified, try to request it from the server.

       Unsupported links (javascript:, etc.)
              An unsupported link will only print a warning. No further checking will be made.

              The  complete  list  of  recognized,  but  unsupported  links  can  be found in the
              linkcheck/checker/unknownurl.py source file. The most prominent of them  should  be
              JavaScript links.

PLUGINS

       There  are  two  plugin  types: connection and content plugins. Connection plugins are run
       after a successful connection to the URL host. Content plugins are run if the URL type has
       content  (mailto: URLs have no content for example) and if the check is not forbidden (ie.
       by HTTP robots.txt).  Use the option --list-plugins  for  a  list  of  plugins  and  their
       documentation. All plugins are enabled via the linkcheckerrc(5) configuration file.

RECURSION

       Before  descending  recursively into a URL, it has to fulfill several conditions. They are
       checked in this order:

       1. A URL must be valid.

       2. A URL must be parseable. This currently includes HTML files, Opera bookmarks files, and
          directories. If a file type cannot be determined (for example it does not have a common
          HTML file extension, and the content does not look like HTML),  it  is  assumed  to  be
          non-parseable.

       3. The  URL  content  must  be  retrievable.  This  is usually the case except for example
          mailto: or unknown URL types.

       4. The  maximum  recursion  level  must  not  be  exceeded.  It  is  configured  with  the
          --recursion-level option and is unlimited per default.

       5. It  must  not  match  the  ignored  URL  list. This is controlled with the --ignore-url
          option.

       6. The Robots Exclusion Protocol must allow links in the URL to be  followed  recursively.
          This is checked by searching for a "nofollow" directive in the HTML header data.

       Note  that  the  directory  recursion reads all files in that directory, not just a subset
       like index.htm.

NOTES

       URLs on the commandline starting with ftp. are treated like ftp://ftp., URLs starting with
       www.  are  treated  like  http://www.. You can also give local files as arguments.  If you
       have your system configured to automatically establish a connection to the internet  (e.g.
       with  diald), it will connect when checking links not pointing to your local host. Use the
       --ignore-url option to prevent this.

       Javascript links are not supported.

       If your platform does not support threading, LinkChecker disables it automatically.

       You can supply multiple user/password pairs in a configuration file.

       When checking news: links the given NNTP host doesn't need to be the same as the  host  of
       the user browsing your pages.

ENVIRONMENT

       NNTP_SERVER
              specifies default NNTP server

       http_proxy
              specifies default HTTP proxy server

       ftp_proxy
              specifies default FTP proxy server

       no_proxy
              comma-separated list of domains to not contact over a proxy server

       LC_MESSAGES, LANG, LANGUAGE
              specify output language

RETURN VALUE

       The return value is 2 when

       • a program error occurred.

       The return value is 1 when

       • invalid links were found or

       • link warnings were found and warnings are enabled

       Else the return value is zero.

LIMITATIONS

       LinkChecker  consumes  memory  for each queued URL to check. With thousands of queued URLs
       the amount of consumed memory can become quite large.  This might slow down the program or
       even the whole system.

FILES

       ~/.linkchecker/linkcheckerrc - default configuration file

       ~/.linkchecker/failures - default failures logger output filename

       linkchecker-out.TYPE - default logger file output name

SEE ALSO

       linkcheckerrc(5)

       https://docs.python.org/library/codecs.html#standard-encodings - valid output encodings

       https://docs.python.org/howto/regex.html - regular expression documentation

AUTHOR

       Bastian Kleineidam <bastian.kleineidam@web.de>

COPYRIGHT

       2000-2016 Bastian Kleineidam, 2010-2021 LinkChecker Authors