836

I am downloading a file from www.examplesite.com/textfile.txt

When running the following command

wget www.examplesite.com/textfile.txt

the file is saved as textfile. How can I save it as newfile.txt?

8
  • 73
    It's wget -O newfile.txt. May 21, 2013 at 20:04
  • but wget -o will simply give you the progress of downloading as a logfile. I tried wget -o.
    – noobcoder
    May 21, 2013 at 20:04
  • 41
    wget -o will output log information to a file. wget -O will output the downloaded content. man wget will tell you all of this and more.
    – Andy Ross
    May 21, 2013 at 20:06
  • 4
    What @AndyRoss said: mind the capitalisation; it's commonly MEANINGFUL in unix/linux land.
    – tink
    May 21, 2013 at 20:07
  • 1
    This does not answer the question at all. The OUTPUT of the command will be saved to -o file, but the file itself will be downloaded with the same name and not "saved as".
    – John Mikic
    Aug 22, 2015 at 18:26

6 Answers 6

1204

Use the -O file option.

E.g.

wget google.com
...
16:07:52 (538.47 MB/s) - `index.html' saved [10728]

vs.

wget -O foo.html google.com
...
16:08:00 (1.57 MB/s) - `foo.html' saved [10728]
8
  • 43
    Man pages reveal: "Use of -O is not intended to mean simply 'use the name file instead of the one in the URL;' rather, it is analogous to shell redirection: wget -O file http://foo is intended to work like wget -O - http://foo > file; file will be truncated immediately, and all downloaded content will be written there."
    – user2913694
    Jul 28, 2015 at 15:35
  • 1
    How would one append to foo.html instead of overwriting it? Jun 25, 2016 at 21:51
  • 4
    @CraigJacobs you can output wget in console and append it to file. For example wget -O - -o /dev/null http://google.com >> foo.html. Reference Aug 6, 2016 at 10:47
  • 3
    This approach would render --timestamping ineffective
    – Hamy
    Jun 20, 2017 at 5:11
  • 1
    This command won't create the file if the directory doesn't exist before
    – Freedo
    Jun 2, 2019 at 14:57
155

Also notice the order of parameters on the command line. At least on some systems (e.g. CentOS 6):

wget -O FILE URL

works. But:

wget URL -O FILE

does not work.

0
45

You would use the command Mechanical snail listed. Notice the uppercase O. Full command line to use could be:

wget www.examplesite.com/textfile.txt --output-document=newfile.txt

or

wget www.examplesite.com/textfile.txt -O newfile.txt

Hope that helps.

1
  • 1
    --output-document=newfile.txt is what worked for me. All attempts to use -O failed with the error Resolving webmin_1.630_all.deb (webmin_1.630_all.deb)... failed: Name or service not known.
    – KalenGi
    Feb 18, 2021 at 14:14
30

Either curl or wget can be used in this case. All 3 of these commands do the same thing, downloading the file at http://path/to/file.txt and saving it locally into "my_file.txt".

Note that in all commands below, I also recommend using the -L or --location option with curl in order to follow HTML 302 redirects to the new location of the file, if it has moved. wget requires no additional options to do this, as it does this automatically.

# save the file locally as my_file.txt

wget http://path/to/file.txt -O my_file.txt  # my favorite--it has a progress bar
curl -L http://path/to/file.txt -o my_file.txt
curl -L http://path/to/file.txt > my_file.txt

Alternatively, to save the file as the same name locally as it is remotely, use either wget by itself, or curl with -O or --remote-name:

# save the file locally as file.txt

wget http://path/to/file.txt
curl -LO http://path/to/file.txt
curl -L --remote-name http://path/to/file.txt

Notice that the -O in all of the commands above is the capital letter "O".

The nice thing about the wget command is it shows a nice progress bar.

You can prove the files downloaded by each of the sets of 3 techniques above are exactly identical by comparing their sha512 hashes. Running sha512sum my_file.txt after running each of the commands above, and comparing the results, reveals all 3 files to have the exact same sha hashes (sha sums), meaning the files are exactly identical, byte-for-byte.

References

  1. I learned about the -L option with curl here: Is there a way to follow redirects with command line cURL?

See also: How to capture cURL output to a file?

25
wget -O yourfilename.zip remote-storage.url/theirfilename.zip

will do the trick for you.

Note:

a) its a capital O.

b) wget -O filename url will only work. Putting -O last will not.

12

Using CentOS Linux I found that the easiest syntax would be:

wget "link" -O file.ext

where "link" is the web address you want to save and "file.ext" is the filename and extension of your choice.

1
  • 8
    I dont understand answering an already-answered-question with the same answer 2 years later..
    – alegria
    Nov 19, 2020 at 18:41

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