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I often have to work with fragile legacy websites that break in unexpected ways when logic or configuration are updated.

I don't have the time or knowledge of the system needed to create a Selenium script. Besides, I don't want to check a specific use case - I want to verify every link and page on the site.

I would like to create an automated system test that will spider through a site and check for broken links and crashes. Ideally, there would be a tool that I could use to achieve this. It should have as many as possible of the following features, in descending order of priority:

  • Triggered via script
  • Does not require human interaction
  • Follows all links including anchor tags and links to CSS and js files
  • Produces a log of all found 404s, 500s etc.
  • Can be deployed locally to check sites on intranets
  • Supports cookie/form-based authentication
  • Free/Open source

There are many partial solutions out there, like FitNesse, Firefox's LinkChecker and the W3C link checker, but none of them do everything I need.

I would like to use this test with projects using a range of technologies and platforms, so the more portable the solution the better.

I realise this is no substitute for proper system testing, but it would be very useful if I had a convenient and automatable way of verifying that no part of the site was obviously broken.

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9 Answers

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I use Xenu's Link Sleuth for this sort of thing. Quickly check for no deadlinks etc. on a/any site. Just point it at any URI and it'll spider all links on that site.

Desription from site:

Xenu's Link Sleuth (TM) checks Web sites for broken links. Link verification is done on "normal" links, images, frames, plug-ins, backgrounds, local image maps, style sheets, scripts and java applets. It displays a continously updated list of URLs which you can sort by different criteria. A report can be produced at any time.

It meets all you're requirements apart from being scriptable as it's a windows app that requires manually starting.

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I have used this program and it works really well! – meme Nov 2 at 19:41
it's also not open source. – Zac Thompson Nov 3 at 5:07
It's not open source, but it is free (it includes some advertising links in reports which I;ve always happily ignored.) – Matt Lacey Nov 3 at 9:55
Xenu's Link Sleuth's website says that operating the program for the command line is available for "a $300 donation" donated to a cause Tilman supports. – ctford Nov 7 at 13:59
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Have you looked at WaTiR? It's Web Applications Testing in Ruby (WatiJ and others also exist). A nice quick-to-build scripting solution, and very few limitations - the only frustation is that it can't access data inside Java Appliest - but as far as I'm aware only QTP does that successfully.

http://watir.com/

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Thanks for your suggestion, but I was hoping to find a tool that would spider through the site checking each link it came across. I am after a lightweight test that will check for broken links and crashes, but that I don't have to program specific actions into. – ctford Oct 29 at 8:57
Watir is equivalent to Selenium, so doesn't help the poster – orip Oct 31 at 13:51
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InSite is a commercial program that seems to do what you want (haven't used it).

If I was in your shoes, I'd probably write this sort of spider myself...

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Writing it myself might be an option, but I'm surprised that there doesn't seem to be such a tool out there already. I would have thought it was a common need. – ctford Oct 31 at 14:19
I agree, I was surprised when I looked for one after your question. I thought, "I could use something like this", but no cigar. – orip Oct 31 at 21:50
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What part of your list does the W3C link checker not meet? That would be the one I would use.

Alternatively, twill (python-based) is an interesting little language for this kind of thing. It has a link checker module but I don't think it works recursively, so that's not so good for spidering. But you could modify it if you're comfortable with that. And I could be wrong, there might be a recursive option. Worth checking out, anyway.

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From a preliminary look the W3C Link Checker does the checking meaning it fails: "Can be deployed locally to check sites on intranets" – Adam Nov 2 at 19:34
@Adam: Not at all - there is a download link right at the bottom of the page linked to in the question! search.cpan.org/dist/W3C-LinkChecker – Zac Thompson Nov 3 at 5:11
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You might want to try using wget for this. It can spider a site including the "page requisites" (i.e. files) and can be configured to log errors. I don't know if it will have enough information for you but it's Free and available on Windows (cygwin) as well as unix.

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I'm not sure that it supports form authentication but it will handle cookies if you can get it going on the site and otherwise I think Checkbot will do everything on your list. I've used as a step in build process before to check that nothing broken on a site. There's an example output on the website.

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We use and really like Linkchecker:

http://linkchecker.sourceforge.net/

It's open-source, Python, command-line, internally deployable, and outputs to a variety of formats. The developer has been very helpful when we've contacted him with issues.

We have a Ruby script that queries our database of internal websites, kicks off LinkChecker with appropriate parameters for each site, and parses the XML that LinkChecker gives us to create a custom error report for each site in our CMS.

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This looks promising. – artlung Nov 7 at 8:56
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I have always liked linklint for checking links on a site. However, I don't think it meets all your criteria, particularly the aspects that may be JavaScript dependent. I also think it will miss the images called from inside CSS.

But for spidering all anchors, it works great.

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Try SortSite. It's not free, but seems to do everything you need and more.

Alternatively, PowerMapper from the same company has a similar-but-different approach. The latter will give you less information about detailed optimisation of your pages, but will still identify any broken links, etc.

Disclaimer: I have a financial interest in the company that makes these products.

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