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elinks (1)
>> elinks (1) ( Linux man: Команды и прикладные программы пользовательского уровня )
NAME
elinks - lynx-like alternative character mode WWW browser
SYNOPSIS
elinks [ options ] url
DESCRIPTION
ELinks is a text mode WWW browser, supporting colors,
table rendering, background downloading, menu driven
configuration interface, tabbed browsing and slim code.
Frames are supported. You can have different file formats associated
with external viewers. mailto: and telnet: are supported via external
clients.
ELinks can handle local (file://) or remote
(http://, ftp:// or
https:// if there's compiled-in SSL support) URLs.
It has also basic support for finger:.
OPTIONS
Most options can be set in the user interface or config file, so
usually you do not need to care about them. Note that this list is by
no means complete and it is not kept up-to-date. To get complete list
of commandline options, start ELinks with parameter
--help.
-anonymous [0|1] (default: 0)
Restrict ELinks so that it can run on an anonymous account.
No local file browsing, no downloads. Execution of viewers
is allowed, but user can't add or modify entries in
association table.
-auto-submit [0|1] (default: 0)
Go and submit the first form you'll stumble upon.
-base-session <num> (default: 0)
ID of session (ELinks instance) which we want to clone.
This is internal ELinks option, you don't want to use it.
-confdir <str> (default: "")
Set the config dir to the given path. ELinks will read
its config files and writes to it. If the path begins with
a '/' its used as an absolute path. Else it is assumed to
be relative to your HOME dir.
-conffile <str> (default: "elinks.conf")
Name of the file with configuration, from which and to
which all the configuration shall be written. It should be
relative to confdir.
-default-mime-type (alias for mime.default_type)
Default MIME type to assume for documents of unknown type.
-dump [0|1] (default: 0)
Write a plain-text version of the given HTML document to
stdout.
-dump-charset (alias for document.dump.codepage)
Codepage used in dump output.
-dump-width (alias for document.dump.width)
Width of the dump output.
-eval
Specify elinks.conf config options on the command-line:
-eval 'set protocol.file.allow_special_files = 1'
-force-html
This makes ELinks assume that the files it sees are HTML. This is
equivalent to -default-mime-type text/html.
-?, -h, -help
Print usage help and exit.
-long-help
Print detailed usage help and exit.
-config-help
Print help on configuration options and exit.
-lookup
Look up specified host.
-no-connect [0|1] (default: 0)
Run ELinks as a separate instance instead of connecting to an
existing instance. Note that normally no runtime state files
(bookmarks, history and so on) are written to the disk when
this option is used. See also -touch-files.
-no-home [0|1] (default: 0)
Don't attempt to create and/or use home rc directory (~/.elinks).
-session-ring <num> (default: 0)
ID of session ring this ELinks session should connect to. ELinks
works in so-called session rings, whereby all instances of ELinks
are interconnected and share state (cache, bookmarks, cookies,
and so on). By default, all ELinks instances connect to session
ring 0. You can change that behaviour with this switch and form as
many session rings as you want. Obviously, if the session-ring with
this number doesn't exist yet, it's created and this ELinks instance
will become the master instance (that usually doesn't matter for you
as a user much). Note that you usually don't want to use this unless
you're a developer and you want to do some testing - if you want the
ELinks instances each running standalone, rather use the -no-connect
command-line option. Also note that normally no runtime state files
are written to the disk when this option is used. See also
-touch-files.
-source [0|1] (default: 0)
Write the given HTML document in source form to stdout.
-stdin [0|1] (default: 0)
Open stdin as an HTML document - this is fully equivalent to:
-eval 'set protocol.file.allow_special_files = 1' file:///dev/stdin
Use whichever suits you more ;-). Note that reading document from
stdin WORKS ONLY WHEN YOU USE -dump OR -source!! (I would like to
know why you would use -source -stdin, though ;-)
-touch-files [0|1] (default: 0)
Set to 1 to have runtime state files (bookmarks, history, ...)
changed even when -no-connect or -session-ring is used; has no
effect if not used in connection with any of these options.
-version
Print ELinks version information and exit.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
ELinks uses the following environments variables.
COMSPEC, SHELL
The shell used for File -> OS Shell on DOS/Windows and UNIX, respectively.
EDITOR
The program to use for external editor (when editing textareas).
ELINKS_CONFDIR
The location of the directory containing configuration files.
If not set the default is ~/.elinks/.
ELINKS_TWTERM , LINKS_TWTERM
The command to run when selecting File ->
New window and if TWDISPLAY
is defined (default twterm -e)
ELINKS_XTERM , LINKS_XTERM
The command to run when selecting
File -> New window and if
DISPLAY is defined (default xterm
-e)
FTP_PROXY, HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY
The host to proxy the various protocol traffic through.
HOME
The path to the users home directory. Used when expanding ~/.
Per-user config file, loaded after site-wide configuration.
~/.elinks/bookmarks
Bookmarks file
~/.elinks/cookies
Cookies file
~/.elinks/formhist
Form history file
~/.elinks/gotohist
GoTo URL dialog history file
~/.elinks/globhist
History file containing last 4096 URLs visited
~/.elinks/searchhist
Search history file
~/.elinks/socket
Internal ELinks socket for communication between its instances.
PLATFORMS
ELinks is known to work on Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris, IRIX,
HPUX, Digital Unix, AIX, OS/2, BeOS and RISC OS. Port for Win32 is in
state of beta testing.
BUGS
See the BUGS file coming with ELinks distribution
tarball for list of known bugs.
ELinks is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your
option) any later version.
AUTHORS
Links was written by Mikulas Patocka
<[email protected]>. ELinks - which is
based on Links - was written by a team around Petr Baudis
<[email protected]>. See file AUTHORS in
the source tree for a list of people contributing to this project.
This manual page was written by Peter Gervai
<[email protected]>, using excerpts from a (yet?) unknown
Links fan for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others).
Contributions from Francis A. Holop. Extended, clarified and made more
up-to-date by Petr Baudis <[email protected]>. Updated by Zas
<[email protected]>. The conversion to DocBook for ELinks 0.5
and trimming was done by Jonas Fonseca <[email protected]>.