1

I'm trying to save the contents of an entire Wordpress site using python and without ftp / server access. In other words, I want to save a "complete copy, or closest possible" of the Wordpress site to disk and I can't download everything from ftp / server.

I've found some options to iterate through the various pages that make up the site, but nothing that will "save the site as a whole."

1
  • I would start by simply downloading the full html pages and storing them in a directory structure that maps to the site (this will by its very nature capture a "complete copy" of the site). You can easily write a Python script to do that. Then you can work out what further processing you want to do offline.
    – Endophage
    Nov 11, 2014 at 17:47

3 Answers 3

2

If you really want to use Python and nothing else, you could use wpull, which is a wget clone written in Python. They have an example for archiving/downloading an entire website in their docs.

wpull billy.blogsite.example --warc-file blogsite-billy \
--no-check-certificate \
--no-robots --user-agent "InconspiuousWebBrowser/1.0" \
--wait 0.5 --random-wait --waitretry 600 \
--page-requisites --recursive --level inf \
--span-hosts --domains blogsitecdn.example,cloudspeeder.example \
--hostnames billy.blogsite.example \
--reject-regex "/login\.php"  \
--tries inf --retry-connrefused --retry-dns-error \
--delete-after --database blogsite-billy.db \
--quiet --output-file blogsite-billy.log
2

Not using python (although I'm sure you could hack up something -- or possibly find something on pypi), but why not just use wget. Something like:

wget -rkp -l3 -np -nH --cut-dirs=1 http://example.com

Of course if you REALLY want to do it in python, you could:

import subprocess
subprocess.call(['wget', '-rkp', '-l3', '-np', '-nH', '--cut-dirs=1', 'http://example.com'])
1
  • This worked for me in a case I would had expected not. Much thanks :)
    – btc4cash
    Nov 1, 2019 at 1:45
1

If you can, and you should, mantain all WordPress modeling tables, you might want to use a WordPress feature (also plugin) called Migrate...You might have it, so, if you can go to your Administration Panel (aka /wp-admin) you can loggin and use http://yourdomain.com/wp-admin/export.php This way, you will get a XML that you can use to import to your python project. There are also some plugins that export a full .sql file

Remember, all content is basically into the MySQL tables, so that all you need there

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.