SyntaxT3rr0r
SyntaxT3rr0r

Reputation: 28293

OS X: equivalent of Linux's wget

How can I do an HTTP GET from a Un*x shell script on a stock OS X system? (installing third-party software is not an option, for this has to run on a lot of different systems which I don't have control on).

For example if I start the Mercurial server locally doing a hg serve:

... $ hg serve 

And then, from a Linux that has the wget command I do a wget:

... $  wget http://127.0.0.1:8000
--2010-12-31 22:18:25--  http://127.0.0.1:8000/
Connecting to 127.0.0.1:8000... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 Script output follows
Length: unspecified [text/html]
Saving to: `index.html

And on the terminal in which I launched the "hg serve" command, I can indeed see that an HTTP GET made its way:

127.0.0.1 - - [30/Dec/2010 22:18:17] "GET / HTTP/1.0" 200 -

So on Linux one way to do an HTTP GET from a shell script is to use wget (if that command is installed of course).

What other ways are there to do the equivalent of a wget? I'm looking, in particular, for something that would work on stock OS X installs.

Upvotes: 664

Views: 786592

Answers (10)

SiegeX
SiegeX

Reputation: 140327

The following native command will work:

curl http://127.0.0.1:8000 -o outfile

Note that curl does not follow redirects by default. To tell it to do so, add -L to the argument list.

Upvotes: 930

Eric Hartford
Eric Hartford

Reputation: 17962

brew install wget

Homebrew is a package manager for OSX analogous to yum, apt-get, choco, emerge, etc. Be aware that you will also need to install Xcode and the Command Line Tools. Virtually anyone who uses the command line in OSX will want to install these things anyway.

If you can't or don't want to use homebrew, you could also:

Install wget manually:

curl -# "http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/wget/wget-1.17.1.tar.xz" -o "wget.tar.xz"
tar xf wget.tar.xz
cd wget-1.17.1
./configure --with-ssl=openssl -with-libssl-prefix=/usr/local/ssl && make -j8 && make install

Or, use a bash alias:

function _wget() { curl "${1}" -o $(basename "${1}") ; };
alias wget='_wget'

Upvotes: 616

Beejor
Beejor

Reputation: 9398

wget Precompiled Mac Binary

For those looking for a quick wget install on Mac, check out Quentin Stafford-Fraser's precompiled binary here, which has been around for over a decade:

https://statusq.org/archives/2008/07/30/1954/

MD5 for 2008 wget.zip: 24a35d499704eecedd09e0dd52175582
MD5 for 2005 wget.zip: c7b48ec3ff929d9bd28ddb87e1a76ffb

No make/install/port/brew/curl junk. Just download, install, and run. Works with Mac OS X 10.3-10.12+.

Upvotes: 2

Jaya Konduru
Jaya Konduru

Reputation: 195

Instead of going with equivalent, you can try "brew install wget" and use wget.

You need to have brew installed in your mac.

Upvotes: 6

Hammad Haleem
Hammad Haleem

Reputation: 1394

You can either build wget on the mac machine or use MacPorts to install it directly.

sudo port install wget 

This would work like a charm, also you can update to the latest version as soon as it's available. Port is much more stable than brew, although has a lot less number of formula and ports.

You can install MacPorts from https://www.macports.org/install.php you can download the .pkg file and install it.

Upvotes: 5

Eamon Straughn
Eamon Straughn

Reputation: 487

1) on your mac type

nano /usr/bin/wget

2) paste the following in

#!/bin/bash
curl -L $1 -o $2

3) close then make it executable

chmod 777 /usr/bin/wget

That's it.

Upvotes: 45

Ed Henderson
Ed Henderson

Reputation: 1284

Curl has a mode that is almost equivalent to the default wget.

curl -O <url>

This works just like

wget <url>

And, if you like, you can add this to your .bashrc:

alias wget='curl -O'

It's not 100% compatible, but it works for the most common wget usage (IMO)

Upvotes: 116

Oliver Schafeld
Oliver Schafeld

Reputation: 19256

Here's the Mac OS X equivalent of Linux's wget.

For Linux, for instance Ubuntu on an AWS instance, use:

wget http://example.com/textfile.txt

On a Mac, i.e. for local development, use this:

curl http://example.com/textfile.txt -o textfile.txt

The -o parameter is required on a Mac for output into a file instead of on screen. Specify a different target name for renaming the downloaded file.

Use capital -O for renaming with wget. Lowercase -o will specify output file for transfer log.

Upvotes: 18

ismail
ismail

Reputation: 47592

Use curl;

curl http://127.0.0.1:8000 -o index.html

Upvotes: 20

James Sumners
James Sumners

Reputation: 14777

You could use curl instead. It is installed by default into /usr/bin.

Upvotes: 4

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