HTTrack is an easy-to-use offline browser utility. It allows you to download a Web site from the Internet to a local directory, building recursively all directories, getting HTML, images, and other files from the server to your computer. HTTrack arranges the original site's relative link-structure. Simply open a page of the mirrored Web site in your browser, and you can browse the site from link to link, as if you were viewing it online. HTTrack can also update an existing mirrored site, and resume interrupted downloads. WebHTTrack is a Web-based GUI for HTTrack.
| Tags | Internet Web Browsers Indexing/Search Site Management Link Checking Archiving Mirroring |
|---|---|
| Licenses | GPL |
| Operating Systems | Windows Windows POSIX Unix Linux BSD Other |
Recent releases


Release Notes: When gently interrupting an update/continue mirror session, previously downloaded content should not be deleted now, and another bug related to re-transfer of previously downloaded data (especially redirect/error pages) has also been fixed.


Release Notes: Minor security fixes (malformed formats, uninitialized variables) to build with hardened flags. Clever ^C handling (now finish pending transfers and exit).


Release Notes: A horrible bug in which files were randomly corrupted during updates was fixed. The cryptic engine messages that this bug caused were "engine: warning: entry cleaned up, but no trace on heap" and "Unexpected 412/416 error".


Release Notes: A possible buffer overflow while repairing a previous cache was fixed; this could cause crashes on large mirror updates at the begining. Several Linux-related fixes have been added, including desktop menu fixes and icecat/iceweasel spawn issues.


Release Notes: Many small fixes were merged, including URL encoding bugs with filenames containing "%" characters, MacPorts Darwin/Mac fixes to webhttrack, and a random decompression error caused by temporary file generation bug. The Flash (swf) link extraction has been improved a bit.
Measurement of your heart rate from just looking at your screen.