NAME
elinks - lynx-like alternative character mode WWW
browser
SYNOPSIS
elinks [OPTION]... [URL]...
DESCRIPTION
ELinks is a text mode WWW browser, supporting colors,
table rendering, background downloading, menu driven configuration
interface, tabbed browsing and slim code.
Frames are supported. You can have different file formats
associated with external viewers. mailto: and telnet: are supported
via external clients.
ELinks can handle both local files and remote URLs. The main
supported remote URL protocols are HTTP, HTTPS (with
SSL support compiled in) and FTP. Additional protocol
support exists for BitTorrent finger, Gopher,
SMB and NNTP.
The homepage of ELinks can be found at <http://elinks.cz/>, where the ELinks
manual is also hosted.
OPTIONS
Most options can be set in the user interface or config file, so
usually you do not need to care about them. Note that this list is
roughly equivalent to the output of running ELinks with the option
--long-help.
- -anonymous [0|1] (default: 0)
- Restricts ELinks so it can run on an anonymous account.
Local file browsing, downloads, and modification of options will be
disabled. Execution of viewers is allowed, but entries in the
association table can't be added or modified.
- -auto-submit [0|1] (default: 0)
- Automatically submit the first form in the given URLs.
- -base-session <num> (default: 0)
- Used internally when opening ELinks instances in new
windows. The ID maps to information that will be used when creating
the new instance. You don't want to use it.
- -config-dir <str> (default: "")
- Path of the directory ELinks will read and write its
config and runtime state files to instead of ~/.elinks. If the path
does not begin with a '/' it is assumed to be relative to your
HOME directory.
- -config-dump
- Print a configuration file with options set to the built-in
defaults to stdout.
- -config-file <str> (default: "elinks.conf")
- Name of the configuration file that all configuration options
will be read from and written to. It should be relative to
config-dir.
- -config-help
- Print help for configuration options and exit.
- -default-mime-type (alias for mime.default_type)
- The default MIME type used for documents of unknown type.
- -default-keys [0|1] (default: 0)
- When set, all keybindings from configuration files will be
ignored. It forces use of default keybindings and will reset
user-defined ones on save.
- -dump [0|1] (default: 0)
- Print formatted plain-text versions of given URLs to stdout.
- -dump-charset (alias for document.dump.codepage)
- Codepage used when formatting dump output.
- -dump-width (alias for document.dump.width)
- Width of the dump output.
- -eval
- Specify configuration file directives on the command-line which
will be evaluated after all configuration files has been read.
Example usage:
-eval 'set protocol.file.allow_special_files = 1'
- -force-html
- Makes ELinks assume documents of unknown types are HTML.
Useful when using ELinks as an external viewer from MUAs.
This is equivalent to -default-mime-type text/html.
- -?, -h, -help
- Print usage help and exit.
- -localhost [0|1] (default: 0)
- Restricts ELinks to work offline and only connect to
servers with local addresses (ie. 127.0.0.1). No connections to
remote servers will be permitted.
- -long-help
- Print detailed usage help and exit.
- -lookup
- Look up specified host and print all DNS resolved IP addresses.
- -no-connect [0|1] (default: 0)
- Run ELinks as a separate instance instead of connecting
to an existing instance. Note that normally no runtime state files
(bookmarks, history, etc.) are written to the disk when this option
is used. See also -touch-files.
- -no-home [0|1] (default: 0)
- Disables creation and use of files in the user specific home
configuration directory (~/.elinks). It forces default
configuration values to be used and disables saving of runtime
state files.
- -no-numbering (alias for document.dump.numbering)
- Prevents printing of link number in dump output. Note that this
really affects only -dump, nothing else.
- -no-references (alias for document.dump.references)
- Prevents printing of references (URIs) of document links in
dump output. Note that this really affects only -dump, nothing
else.
- -remote
- Control a remote ELinks instance by passing commands to
it. The option takes an additional argument containing the method
which should be invoked and any parameters that should be passed to
it. For ease of use, the additional method argument can be omitted
in which case any URL arguments will be opened in new tabs in the
remote instance. Following is a list of the supported methods:
-
- *
-
ping(): look for a remote instance
- *
-
openURL(): prompt URL in current tab
- *
-
openURL(URL): open URL in current tab
- *
-
openURL(URL, new-tab): open URL in new tab
- *
-
openURL(URL, new-window): open URL in new window
- *
-
addBookmark(URL): bookmark URL
- *
-
infoBox(text): show text in a message box
- *
-
xfeDoCommand(openBrowser): open new window
- -session-ring <num> (default: 0)
- ID of session ring this ELinks session should connect
to. ELinks works in so-called session rings, whereby all
instances of ELinks are interconnected and share state
(cache, bookmarks, cookies, and so on). By default, all
ELinks instances connect to session ring 0. You can change
that behaviour with this switch and form as many session rings as
you want. Obviously, if the session-ring with this number doesn't
exist yet, it's created and this 'ELinks' instance will become the
master instance (that usually doesn't matter for you as a user
much). Note that you usually don't want to use this unless you're a
developer and you want to do some testing - if you want the
ELinks instances each running standalone, rather use the
-no-connect command-line option. Also note that normally no runtime
state files are written to the disk when this option is used. See
also -touch-files.
- -source [0|1] (default: 0)
- Print given URLs in source form to stdout.
- -touch-files [0|1] (default: 0)
- When enabled, runtime state files (bookmarks, history, etc.)
are written to disk, even when -no-connect or -session-ring is
used. The option has no effect if not used in conjunction with any
of these options.
- -verbose <num> (default: 1)
- The verbose level controls what messages are shown at start up
and while running:
-
- *
- 0: means only show serious errors
- *
- 1: means show serious errors and warnings
- *
- 2: means show all messages
- -version
- Print ELinks version information and exit.
Generated using output from ELinks version
0.11.0.GIT.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
- COMSPEC, SHELL
- The shell used for File -> OS Shell on DOS/Windows and UNIX,
respectively.
- EDITOR
- The program to use for external editor (when editing
textareas).
- ELINKS_CONFDIR
- The location of the directory containing configuration files.
If not set the default is ~/.elinks/.
- ELINKS_TWTERM, LINKS_TWTERM
- The command to run when selecting File -> New window and if
TWDISPLAY is defined (default twterm -e)
- ELINKS_XTERM, LINKS_XTERM
- The command to run when selecting File -> New window and if
DISPLAY is defined (default xterm -e)
- FTP_PROXY, HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY
- The host to proxy the various protocol traffic through.
- NO_PROXY
- A comma separated list of URLs which should not be proxied.
- HOME
- The path to the users home directory. Used when expanding ~/.
- WWW_HOME
- Homepage location (as in lynx(1)).
FILES
- /etc/elinks.conf
- Site-wide configuration file.
- ~/.elinks/elinks.conf
- Per-user config file, loaded after site-wide configuration.
- ~/.elinks/bookmarks
- Bookmarks file.
- ~/.elinks/cookies
- Cookies file.
- ~/.elinks/exmodehist
- Exmode history file.
- ~/.elinks/formhist
- Form history file.
- ~/.elinks/globhist
- History file containing most recently visited URLs.
- ~/.elinks/gotohist
- GoTo URL dialog history file.
- ~/.elinks/hooks.{js,lua,pl,py,rb,scm}
- Browser scripting hooks.
- ~/.elinks/searchhist
- Search history file.
- ~/.elinks/socket
- Internal ELinks socket for communication between its
instances.
- ~/.mailcap
- Mappings of MIME types to external handlers.
- ~/.mime.types
- Mappings of file extensions to MIME types.
Other files that ELinks uses from ~/.elinks/ includes the
user defined CSS stylesheet. The name of the file can set in the
document.css.stylesheet option.
PLATFORMS
ELinks is known to work on Linux, FreeBSD,
OpenBSD, Solaris, IRIX, HPUX,
Digital Unix, AIX, OS/2, BeOS and
RISC OS. Port for Win32 is in state of beta testing.
BUGS
Please report any other bugs you find to the either the ELinks
mailing list at <elinks-users@linuxfromscratch.org>
or if you prefer enter them into the bug tracking system
<http://bugzilla.elinks.or.cz/>.
More information about how to get in contact with developers and
getting help can be found on the community page <http://elinks.or.cz/community.html>.
LICENSE
ELinks is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
<http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html>
as published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the
License.
AUTHORS
The Links browser - on which ELinks is based - was
written by Mikulas Patocka <mikulas@artax.karlin.mff.cuni.cz>.
ELinks was written by Petr Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>. See file AUTHORS in the
source tree for a list of people contributing to this project.
This manual page was written by Peter Gervai <grin@tolna.net>, using excerpts from
a (yet?) unknown Links fan for the Debian GNU/Linux
system (but may be used by others). Contributions from Francis
A. Holop. Extended, clarified and made more up-to-date by Petr
Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>.
Updated by Zas <zas@norz.org>. The conversion to
Asciidoc and trimming was done by Jonas Fonseca <fonseca@diku.dk>.
SEE ALSO
(5),
(5),
links(1),
lynx(1),
w3m(1),
wget(1)