adb5d4ade3
These are files that are not present on the remote source any more, but still present locally. They also show up in the report. |
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.github/workflows | ||
PFERD | ||
scripts | ||
.gitignore | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
CONFIG.md | ||
DEV.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
mypy.ini | ||
pferd.py | ||
pyproject.toml | ||
README.md | ||
setup.cfg |
PFERD
Programm zum Flotten, Einfachen Runterladen von Dateien
Other resources:
Installation
Direct download
Binaries for Linux, Windows and Mac can be downloaded directly from the latest release.
With pip
Ensure you have at least Python 3.8 installed. Run the following command to install PFERD or upgrade it to the latest version:
$ pip install --upgrade git+https://github.com/Garmelon/PFERD@latest
The use of venv is recommended.
Basic usage
PFERD can be run directly from the command line with no config file.
Run pferd -h
to get an overview of available commands and options.
Run pferd <command> -h
to see which options a command has.
For example, you can download your personal desktop from the KIT ILIAS like this:
$ pferd kit-ilias-web desktop <output_directory>
Also, you can download most ILIAS pages directly like this:
$ pferd kit-ilias-web <url> <output_directory>
However, the CLI only lets you download a single thing at a time, and the resulting command can grow long quite quickly. Because of this, PFERD can also be used with a config file.
To get started, just take a command you've been using and add --dump-config
directly after pferd
, like this:
$ pferd --dump-config kit-ilias-web <url> <output_directory>
This will make PFERD write its current configuration to its default config file
path. You can then run pferd
without a command and it will execute the config
file. Alternatively, you can use --dump-config-to
and specify a path yourself.
Using --dump-config-to -
will print the configuration to stdout instead of a
file, which is a good way to see what is actually going on when using a CLI
command.
Another good way to see what PFERD is doing is the --explain
option. When
enabled, PFERD explains in detail what it is doing and why. This can help with
debugging your own config, for example.
If you don't want to run all crawlers from your config file, you can specify the
crawlers you want to run with --crawler
or -C
, like this:
$ pferd -C crawler1 -C crawler2
Advanced usage
PFERD supports lots of different options. For example, you can configure PFERD to use your system's keyring instead of prompting you for your username and password. PFERD also supports transformation rules that let you rename or exclude certain files.
For more details, see the comprehensive config format documentation.
Example
This example downloads a few courses from the KIT ILIAS with a common keyring authenticator. It reorganizes and ignores some files.
[DEFAULT]
# All paths will be relative to this.
# The crawler output directories will be <working_dir>/Foo and <working_dir>/Bar.
working_dir = ~/stud
# If files vanish from ILIAS the local files are not deleted, allowing us to
# take a look at them before deleting them ourselves.
on_conflict = no-delete
[auth:ilias]
type = keyring
username = foo
[crawl:Foo]
type = kit-ilias-web
auth = auth:ilias
# Crawl a course by its ID (found as `ref_id=ID` in the URL)
target = 1234567
# Plaintext files are easier to read by other tools
links = plaintext
transform =
# Ignore unneeded folders
Online-Tests --> !
Vorlesungswerbung --> !
# Move exercises to own folder. Rename them to "Blatt-XX.pdf" to make them sort properly
"Übungsunterlagen/(\d+). Übungsblatt.pdf" -re-> Blätter/Blatt-{i1:02}.pdf
# Move solutions to own folder. Rename them to "Blatt-XX-Lösung.pdf" to make them sort properly
"Übungsunterlagen/(\d+). Übungsblatt.*Musterlösung.pdf" -re-> Blätter/Blatt-{i1:02}-Lösung.pdf
# The course has nested folders with the same name - flatten them
"Übungsunterlagen/(.+?)/\\1/(.*)" -re-> Übung/{g1}/{g2}
# Rename remaining folders
Übungsunterlagen --> Übung
Lehrbücher --> Vorlesung
[crawl:Bar]
type = kit-ilias-web
auth = auth:ilias
target = 1337420