![]() The -i is powerful, it creates a fulltext index which will allow you to search the offline Website, even if the original site did not have such. Perhaps there is no favicon.ico but imgs/favicon.png, just look at the /index.html and check for zimwriterfs (also rather download the binary) you can create your own ZIM file: CLI & web-server, multiple ZIM files aka library support.zim/ZIM.pm my own solution written in Perl (2020/04), very experimental:.kiwix-tools/kiwix-serve supports multiple ZIM files aka library but lacks RESTful interface for fulltext search (download the binaries, compiling is tedious).Kiwix Desktop (Windows, Mac, Linux), a bit clumsy UI.Zim/ZIM.pm: ZIM Catalog zim/ZIM.pm: Multi-Indices Search Readersįollowing platforms are supported so you can read your ZIM files: people asking questions and people answering those.StackOverflow: 71M articles, stackoverflow_en_all_2019-02.zim (136GB).public domain books (txt, html, pdf, epub).Gutenberg Project: 1M books, gutenberg_en_all_2018-10.zim (54GB).English Wikipedia: 19M articles, wikipedia_en_all_maxi.zim (76GB).Nowadays (but not earlier) the ZIM files contain a fulltext- and often also title-index based on Xapian, which allows the ZIM Reader to provide fulltext search, and this is the main advantage over mirroring worthwhile web-sites yourself and open it with your browser as it will not give you an offline search engine otherwise. contains mixed media like text, images, audio, videos.Well, the people at did that for you using their mwoffliner, and addressed low bandwidth or offline world and still have access to Wikipedia, and invented a file-format called ZIM format: The past years I worked on a semantic analysis and indexing framework all on-premise, which meant to run Wikidata (Wikipedia for machines) instance locally, and hopefully Wikipedia, Wiktionary as well to lookup those as well – but how? To mirror would take a long time.
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