#Webarchiver Webarchiver allows you to create Safari .webarchive files from the command line. Webarchives are a convenient way to store a webpage and its associated files (images, css, javascript, etc) in a single file. It is very simple to use: ./webarchiver -url http://www.google.com -output google.webarchive ##Usage $./webarchiver webarchiver 0.2 Usage: webarchiver -url URL -output FILE Example: webarchiver -url http://www.google.com -output google.webarchive -url http:// or path to local file -output File to write webarchive to</code> Do not forget the ‘http://’ if you want to archive a webpage. If no ‘http://’ is present then webarchiver attempts to archive a local file. ##Download The easiest way to install webarchiver is using [MacPorts][][:][MacPorts] `sudo port install webarchiver` ##Release notes Version 0.5 : More robust KBWebArchiver ([Keith Blount][] and [Jan Weiß][]). Version 0.4 : Code maintenance and cleanup ([Jan Weiß][]). Version 0.3 : Changed URL and sorted out source for git. Version 0.2 : [John Winter][] fixed page loading issue. Version 0.1 : Initial release. ##Credits - Most of the credit for this goes to [Keith Blount][] for his very useful KBWebArchiver class. - [Jan Weiß][] for his code fixes, clean up and 0.4 release. - [John Winter][] for testing and bug fixing. Thanks John. - [Rob Griffiths][] for hosting a copy of the source when my blog was down. - Boey Maun Suang for creating a MacPort [MacPorts]: http://www.macports.org/ [Jan Weiß]: https://github.com/JanX2/webarchiver [John Winter]: http://www.shipsomecode.com/ [Keith Blount]: http://www.literatureandlatte.com/ [Rob Griffiths]: http://www.macosxhints.com/
sidorov-panda/webarchiver
Webarchiver allows you to create Safari .webarchive files from the command line.
Objective-C