![]() (There’s no need to use Drupal here, as I no longer update that website, and I don’t accept comments there.) I just did the same thing with my website, which is basically an online version of a children’s book that I haven’t modified in many years. In my case I used this command because I don’t want to use Drupal to serve that website any more, so I used wget to convert the original Drupal website into a series of static HTML files that can be served by Nginx or Apache. Another thing you can do is manually download the rollover images. ![]() I haven’t investigated how to fix this yet, but the easiest thing to do is to copy the /images directory from the server, assuming that you’re making a static copy of your own website, as I am doing. ![]() Update: One thing I learned about this command is that it doesn’t make a copy of “rollover” images, i.e., images that are changed by JavaScript when the user rolls over them. ![]() As a short note today, if you want to make an offline copy/mirror of a website using the GNU/Linux wget command, a command like this will do the trick for you: ![]()
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