* Changes in Wget 1.11.4
** Fixed an issue (apparently a regression) where -O would refuse to
download when -nc was given, even though the file didn't exist.
** Fixed a situation where Wget could abort with --continue if the
remote server gives a content-length of zero when the file exists
locally with content.
** Fixed a crash on some systems, due to Wget casting a pointer-to-long
to a pointer-to-time_t.
** Translation updates for Catalan.
* Changes in Wget 1.11.3
** Downgraded -N with -O to a warning, rather than an error.
* Changes in Wget 1.11.2
** Fixed a problem in authenticating over HTTPS through a proxy.
(Regression in 1.11 over 1.10.2.)
** The combination of -r or -p with -O, which was disallowed in 1.11,
has been downgraded to a warning in 1.11.2. (-O and -N, which was never
meaningful, is still an error.)
** Further improvements to progress bar displays in non-English locales
(too many spaces could be inserted, causing the display to scroll).
** Successive invocations of Wget on FTP URLS, with --no-remove-listing
and --continue, was causing Wget to append, rather than replace,
information in the .listing file, and thereby download the same files
multiple times. This has been fixed in 1.11.2.
** Wget 1.11 no longer allowed ".." to persist at the beginning of URLs,
for improved conformance with RFC 3986. However, this behavior presents
problems for some FTP setups, and so they are now preserved again, for
FTP URLs only.
* Changes in Wget 1.11.1.
** Interrupted downloads no longer result in renaming the file
(regression in 1.11 over 1.10.2).
** Progress bar now displays correctly in non-English locales (and a
related assertion failure was fixed).
** Wget no longer issues a GET request over HTTP for files it should
know it's not going to download (regression in 1.11 over 1.10.2).
** Added option --auth-no-challenge, to support broken pre-1.11
authentication-before-server-challenge, which turns out to still be
useful for some limited cases.
** Documentation of accept/reject lists in the manual's "Types of
Files" section now explains various aspects of their behavior that may
be surprising, and notes that they may change in the future.
** Documentation of --no-parents now explains how a trailing slash, or
lack thereof, in the specified URL, will affect behavior.
* Changes in Wget 1.11.
** Timestamping now uses the value from the most recent HTTP response,
rather than the first one it got.
** Authentication information is no longer sent as part of the Referer
header in recursive fetches.
** No authentication credentials are sent until a challenge is issued,
for improved security. Authentication handling is still not
RFC-compliant, as once a Basic challenge has been received, it will
assume it can send credentials to any URL at that same host, and not
just the ones at or below the original authenticated location.
Credentials for Digest authentication are still never saved or issued
automatically, and continue to require a challenge for each resource.
** Added --max-redirect option, allowing the user to specify what should
be the maximum number of HTTP redirects to follow.
** Wget now supports saving HTTP downloads using file names specified by
the `Content-Disposition' header. This is a standard way of specifying
the file name used by many web dynamically generated pages. However, the
current implementation is inefficient, and known to have bugs. It is
EXPERIMENTAL only, and not enabled by default. Use --content-disposition
to enable it.
** The new option `--ignore-case' makes Wget ignore case when
matching files, directories, and wildcards. This affects the -X, -I,
-A, and -R options, as well as globbing in FTP URLs.
** ETA projection is now displayed in "dot" progress output as well as
in the default progress bar. (The dot progress is used by default when
logging Wget's output to file using the `-o' option.)
** The "lockable boolean" argument type is no longer supported. It
was only used by the passive_ftp .wgetrc setting. If you're running
broken scripts or Perl modules that unconditionally specify
`--passive-ftp' and your firewall disallows it, you can override them
by replacing wget with a script that execs wget "$@" --no-passive-ftp.
** The source code has been migrated to Mercurial. The repositories are
available at http://hg.addictivecode.org/. Prior to this, the source
code was hosted on Subversion (migrated from the original CVS); you can
still get access to older tags and branches for Wget in the Subversion
repository at http://addictivecode.org/svn/wget/.
PKGLOCALEDIR and which install their locale files directly under
${PREFIX}/${PKGLOCALEDIR} and sort the PLIST file entries. From now
on, pkgsrc/mk/plist/plist-locale.awk will automatically handle
transforming the PLIST to refer to the correct locale directory.
developer is officially maintaining the package.
The rationale for changing this from "tech-pkg" to "pkgsrc-users" is
that it implies that any user can try to maintain the package (by
submitting patches to the mailing list). Since the folks most likely
to care about the package are the folks that want to use it or are
already using it, this would leverage the energy of users who aren't
developers.
* Changes in Wget 1.10.
** Downloading files larger than 2GB, sometimes referred to as "large
files", now works on systems that support them. This includes the
majority of modern Unixes, as well as MS Windows.
** IPv6 is now supported by Wget. Unlike the experimental code in
1.9, this version supports dual-family systems. The new flags
`--inet4' and `--inet6' (or `-4' and `-6' for short) force the use of
IPv4 and IPv6 respectively. Note that IPv6 support has not yet been
tested on Windows.
** Microsoft's proprietary "NTLM" method of HTTP authentication is now
supported. This authentication method is undocumented and only used
by IIS. Note that *proxy* authentication is not supported in this
release; you can only authenticate to the target web site.
** Wget no longer truncates partially downloaded files when download
has to start over because the server doesn't support Range. Instead,
with such servers Wget now simply ignores the data up to the byte
where the last attempt left off, and only then continues appending to
the file. That way the downloaded file never shrinks, and download
retries from servers without support for partial downloads work even
when downloading to stdout.
** SSL/TLS changes:
*** SSL/TLS downloads now attempt to verify the server's certificate
against the recognized certificate authorities. This requires CA
certificates to have been installed in a location visible to the
OpenSSL library. If this is not the case, you can get the bundle
yourself from a source you trust (for example, the bundle extracted
from Mozilla available at http://curl.haxx.se/docs/caextract.html),
and point Wget to the PEM file using the `--ca-certificate'
command-line option or the corresponding `.wgetrc' command.
*** Secure downloads now verify that the host name in the URL matches
the "common name" in the certificate presented by the server.
*** Although the above checks provide more secure downloads, they
unavoidably break interoperability with some sites that worked with
previous versions, particularly those using self-signed, expired, or
otherwise invalid certificates. If you encounter "certificate
verification" errors or complaints that "common name doesn't match
requested host name" and are convinced of the site's authenticity, you
can use `--no-check-certificate' to bypass both checks.
*** Talking to SSL/TLS servers over proxies now actually works.
Previous versions of Wget erroneously sent GET requests for https
URLs. Wget 1.10 utilizes the CONNECT method designed for this
purpose.
*** The SSL/TLS-related options have been redesigned and, for the
first time, documented in the manual. The old, undocumented, options
are no longer supported.
** Passive FTP is now the default FTP transfer mode. Use
`--no-passive-ftp' or specify `passive_ftp = off' in your init file to
revert to the old behavior.
** The `--header' option can now be used to override generated
headers. For example, `wget --header="Host: foo.bar"
http://127.0.0.1' tells Wget to connect to localhost, but to specify
"foo.bar" in the `Host' header. In previous versions such use of
`--header' lead to duplicate headers in HTTP requests.
** The responses without headers, aka "HTTP 0.9" responses, are
detected and handled. Although HTTP 0.9 has long been obsolete, it is
still occasionally used, sometimes by accident.
** The progress bar is now updated regularly even when the data does
not arrive from the network.
** Wget no longer preserves permissions of files retrieved by FTP by
default. Anonymous FTP servers frequently use permissions like "664",
which might not be what the user wants. The new option
`--preserve-permissions' and the corresponding `.wgetrc' variable can
be used to revert to the old behavior.
** The new option `--protocol-directories' instructs Wget to also use
the protocol name as a directory component of local file names.
** Options that previously unconditionally set or unset various flags
are now boolean options that can be invoked as either `--OPTION' or
`--no-OPTION'. Options that required an argument "on" or "off" have
also been changed this way, but they still accept the old syntax for
backward compatibility. For example, instead of `--glob=off' you can
write `--no-glob'.
Allowing `--no-OPTION' for every `--OPTION' and the other way around
is useful because it allows the user to override non-default behavior
specified via `.wgetrc'.
** The new option `--keep-session-cookies' causes `--save-cookies' to
save session cookies (normally only kept in memory) along with the
permanent ones. This is useful because many sites track important
information, such as whether the user has authenticated, in session
cookies. With this option multiple Wget runs are treated as a single
browser session.
** Wget now supports the --ftp-user and --ftp-password command
switches to set username and password for FTP, and the --user and
--password command switches to set username and password for both FTP
and HTTP. The --http-passwd and --proxy-passwd command switches have
been renamed to --http-password and --proxy-password respectively, and
the related http_passwd and proxy_passwd .wgetrc commands to
http_password and proxy_password respectively. The login and passwd
.wgetrc commands have been deprecated.
* `wget -b' now works correctly under Windows.
others OS as well. Patch wget so that it won't try to use ipv6-mapped ipv4
addresses, but uses INET4 socket sockets instead. Bump pkgrev.
Fix issues with v6-enabled wget reported on tech-pkg.
in the process. (More information on tech-pkg.)
Bump PKGREVISION and BUILDLINK_DEPENDS of all packages using libtool and
installing .la files.
Bump PKGREVISION (only) of all packages depending directly on the above
via a buildlink3 include.
* Wget 1.9.1 is a bugfix release with no user-visible changes.
* Changes in Wget 1.9.
** It is now possible to specify that POST method be used for HTTP
requests. For example, `wget --post-data="id=foo&data=bar" URL' will
send a POST request with the specified contents.
** IPv6 support is available, although it's still experimental.
** The `--timeout' option now also affects DNS lookup and establishing
the TCP connection. Previously it only affected reading and writing
data. Those three timeouts can be set separately using
`--dns-timeout', `--connection-timeout', and `--read-timeout',
respectively.
** Download speed shown by the progress bar is based on the data
recently read, rather than the average speed of the entire download.
The ETA projection is still based on the overall average.
** It is now possible to connect to FTP servers through FWTK
firewalls. Set ftp_proxy to an FTP URL, and Wget will automatically
log on to the proxy as "username@host".
** The new option `--retry-connrefused' makes Wget retry downloads
even in the face of refused connections, which are otherwise
considered a fatal error.
** The new option `--dns-cache=off' may be used to prevent Wget from
caching DNS lookups.
** Wget no longer escapes characters in local file names based on
whether they're appropriate in URLs. Escaping can still occur for
nonprintable characters or for '/', but no longer for frequent
characters such as space. You can use the new option
--restrict-file-names to relax or strengthen these rules, which can be
useful if you dislike the default or if you're downloading to
non-native partitions.
** Handling of HTML comments has been dumbed down to conform to what
users expect and other browsers do: instead of being treated as SGML
declaration, a comment is terminated at the first occurrence of "-->".
Use `--strict-comments' to revert to the old behavior.
** Wget now correctly handles relative URIs that begin with "//", such
as "//img.foo.com/foo.jpg".
** Boolean options in `.wgetrc' and on the command line now accept
values "yes" and "no" along with the traditional "on" and "off".
** It is now possible to specify decimal values for timeouts, waiting
periods, and download rate. For instance, `--wait=0.5' now works as
expected, as does `--dns-timeout=0.5' and even `--limit-rate=2.5k'.
Ensure that RPATH_FLAG is seen by configure (fixes build).
Include bsd.prefs.mk for the WGET_USE_SSL variable and add it to BUILD_DEFS.
Some Makefile cleanup.
have it be automatically included by bsd.pkg.mk if USE_PKGINSTALL is set
to "YES". This enforces the requirement that bsd.pkg.install.mk be
included at the end of a package Makefile. Idea suggested by Julio M.
Merino Vidal <jmmv at menta.net>.