When I use either the -P
or -O
alone with wget
, everything works as advertised.
$: wget -P "test" http://www.google.com/intl/en_com/images/srpr/logo3w.png
Saving to: `test/logo3w.png'
.
$: wget -O "google.png" http://www.google.com/intl/en_com/images/srpr/logo3w.png
2012-01-23 21:47:33 (1.20 MB/s) - `google.png' saved [7007/7007]
However, combining the two causes wget
to ignore -P
.
$: wget -P "test" -O "google.png" http://www.google.com/intl/en_com/images/srpr/logo3w.png
2012-01-23 21:47:51 (5.87 MB/s) - `google.png' saved [7007/7007]
I've set a variable for both the directory (generated by the last chunk of the URL) and the filename (generated through a counting loop) such that http://www.google.com/aaa/bbb/ccc
yields file
= /directory/filename
, or, for item 1, /ccc/000.jpg
When substituting this in to the code:
Popen(['wget', '-O', file, theImg], stdout=PIPE, stderr=STDOUT)
wget
silently fails (on each iteration of the loop).
When I turn on debugging -d
and logging -a log.log
, each iteration prints
DEBUG output created by Wget 1.13.4 on darwin10.8.0.
When I remove the -O
and file
, the operation proceeds normally.
My question is:
Is there a way to
A) Specify both -P
AND -O
in wget
(preferred) or
B) Insert a string to -O
containing /
-characters that doesn't cause it to fail?
Any help would be appreciated.