Find broken links on web sites
Description
Xenu's
Link Sleuth (TM) checks Web sites for broken links.
Link verification is done on "normal" links, images, frames, plug-ins,
backgrounds, local image maps, style sheets, scripts and java applets.
It displays a continously updated list of URLs which you can sort by different
criteria. A report can be produced at any time.
Additional features:
-
Simple, no-frills user-interface
-
Can re-check broken links (useful for temporary network errors)
-
Simple report format, can also be e-mailed
-
Executable file smaller than 1MB
-
Supports SSL websites ("https:// ")
-
Partial testing of ftp and gopher sites
-
Detects and reports redirected URLs
-
Site Map
Download
By downloading you are acknowledging
that:
-
You will personally check the software for viruses before starting it (I
do the same with software I download with Norton AntiVirus)
-
You will not make me responsible for damages (lost time, crashed computer,
etc)
System requirement: Microsoft Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP/Vista, WININET.DLL
required (is usually included). No, it won't work on Windows 3.11, not
even with Win32s. No, I won't make a Java, MacOS, Linux, Knoppix, Ubuntu, Beos, Palm,
C64 or SAP version. Don't even ask! (However I have been told that it will run
faultlessly under Red Hat 8 and Ubuntu via wine, and under Crossover on a Mac :-))
Ok, I have read all that, I want
to download! (current version: 1.2j from October 8th,
2007)
Getting started:
Unzip it and install it wherever you want. To
check a site, click the toolbar icon on the left and enter a WWW address.
If the address finishes with a directory name, don't forget to put a /
at the end or you will possibly get the whole parent directory spidered.
Incorrect:
http://www.host.com/user
Correct:
http://www.host.com/user/
You can also click the "browse" button to check
a local HTML file. If you do not already use IE for browsing and are sitting
behind a company firewall, don't forget to configure
your proxy before you start. If you are using a personal firewall
(like ZoneAlarm or Outpost) you must enable Microsoft Internet Explorer
by starting it, entering a URL and then "allowing" the application (you
may also have to enable Xenu - see example for Norton Intenet
Security). To find out what the software can do, simply try out the
menu choices, the toolbar and the right mouse key. Or read this
small
third-party manual, another small one, a big
third-party manual with many pictures, a video, a third-party report (How
I check over 6,000 links every seven to ten days), or a german
description and another.
Good luck! If you find the software useful, please
click
here.
Test everything. Hold on to the
good.
(1 Thessalonians 5:21)
|
Join the Update
Announcements mailing list at Yahoo Groups! To subscribe, send an empty
e-mail to linksleuthupdates-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.
You can also join the user
group by sending an e-mail to xenu-usergroup-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.
If you like to use a button for Xenu's Link Sleuth on your web page,
link to this page with these buttons: ![[Linkcheck by Xenu!]](xenu_button.gif)
If you like to use a banner for Xenu's Link Sleuth on your web page,
link to this page with this banner:

The address of this web page is http://home.snafu.de/tilman/xenulink.html
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
1. Who is Xenu?
See here.
2. Is Xenu's Link Sleuth (TM) better than WebAnalyzer?
Yes and No. Xenu's Link Sleuth (TM) does not have
the graphic capabilities of WebAnalyzer 2.0 ("Wavefront view"). But here
are some of the advantages of Xenu's Link Sleuth (TM):
-
It is free
-
Simple user-interface
-
Better error reports (not just "network error")
-
"Save" works also while the software is busy
-
The "broken links view" shows only broken links; In WebAnalyzer you'd have
to press the button again and again as the window fills with crap.
-
While Xenu does not offer an "update" facility (which doesn't work anyway),
it has a "recheck broken links" function that works fine.
-
It is small, written by one person experienced in Windows software development
since 1993 and who works as a professional software developer since 1983.
This means that bugs will be corrected quickly. This is a matter of honour.
-
The report can be viewed easily, even when you have long URLs.
-
Uses much less disk space for intermediate files, executable file much
smaller
-
Loading of saved files much faster (WebAnalyzer loses time by displaying
the extra graphics)
-
Supports SSL websites ("https:// ")
-
Partial testing of ftp and gopher sites
-
Search for local orphan files
-
Special handling of redirected URLs
-
Site Map
-
Randomization of checking order, means less concurrent requests on a single
server
Xenu sez: check your website both with
this product and with another product (Linkbot,
LinkScan,
LinkAlarm
and Web Link Validator offer
trial versions - WebAnalyzer is no longer available since February 2002
and hasn't been updated for years), and decide what you need and what you
are willing to pay.
3. Is Xenu's Link Sleuth (TM) better than Net
Mechanic?
Years ago, Net Mechanic was a free WWW based service, and was useful to
check
very small web sites. It is no longer free. The free trial
is too small, and reports about all links, instead just the broken ones.
4. Can I support the author financially?
No need to. If you feel the software is useful, you may donate money to
causes I support.
-
International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA)
is a nonprofit, tax-exempt
research center and educational organization founded in 1979. ICSA's mission
is to study psychological manipulation and cultic groups, to educate the
public and professionals, and to assist those who have been adversely affected
by a cult-related experience. I suggest a donation of $20 for individuals
and $200 for corporations. In the US, your donation can be deducted from
your income. (ICSA does not endorse this site in any way, did not develop
this software, does not sell this software, and the use of this software
does not depend whether or not you make a donation.)
Germans can make a tax deductible donation to the Dialog
Zentrum Berlin e.V., Konto-Nr. 1551390051, Bank für Kirche und
Diakonie BLZ 35060190.
Or visit the Xenu bookstore.
Or send me a T-Shirt of your city, university, employer in XL size. Please don't send anything that is more expensive than $40 (including shipping). Take into consideration that I'll be wearing your T-Shirt at work. USPS "airmail letter post" is fast, reliable and unexpensive (and large sizes are allowed!), so please don't use FedEx or UPS, because this could result in me having to pay money for customs.
Or send me a "thank you" letter on company paper, if you work for a well-known company. Make sure that you are authorized to send such a letter. This is my street address:
Tilman Hausherr
Hauptstrasse 15
10827 Berlin
Germany
5. Why does Xenu's Link Sleuth (TM) report http://www.site.com/../page/index.html
as broken?
The key is the "../" part. It means
you have e.g. a top level page that links to a page in a directory above,
which doesn't exist. It is true that Mozilla will not have any problems
with such a page; but I am less tolerant.
6. How can I configure a proxy?
You can configure a proxy in the control application of Windows. Double-Click
on the "internet" symbol, then click on the "card" of the dialog box that
is named "Connection". You may need a proxy if you are sitting "behind
a firewall". This is usually so in big corporate networks.
One user with Windows 2000 always had a timeout, he solved it by checking
"Use HTTP 1.1" and also "Use HTTP 1.1 through proxy connections"
in the "Advanced" tab of the Internet Options in the control panel. However,
this may not work for everyone, because some web servers do not support
HTTP 1.1.
7. Why does Xenu's Link Sleuth(TM) report a URL with
a space in it?
Either because you do have a space in the URL, or because you have a carriage
return / newline in it. Although Mozilla tolerates this, I do not.
8. I use Mozilla 3.0 Gold and can't get rid of file:
URLs for images. What can I do?
Re-edit the page, double-click on the picture, remove file:
from the picture location and take care to uncheck "copy image to document's
location" in the "properties" dialog box (at the bottom left) before you
save and exit the dialog box.
9. What is the maximum number of websites that can be checked?
There is no maximum. It is limited by the memory on your computer.
10. Can the software check my site locally?
Since september 1998 (1.0n), you can do so without a local web server (your
address would then be http://127.0.0.1).
Use the "Browse" button in the "New" dialog box.
The results will not always be the same as a "remote" check:
-
Sometimes you'll get "error 3". It happens because the WININET.DLL is unable
to handle directories, i.e. links that end with "/". You can avoid this
by linking to the actual "main file", usually
index.html or default.html.
That your browser can handle local directories and display them nicely,
is because he does additional work, which I do not.
-
Mixups of higher/lower case characters in links won't be found, since Windows
does not make a difference. But UNIX does!
-
The main reason that you still need to make occasional "remote" checks
is because you might have forgotten to upload your files to your WWW server.
A user of IE 4.0 reported that when not online, the software checks every
"remote" URL like a local file. This is a problem of the newer version
of the WININET.DLL; the version with IE 3.0 reports "no connection" or
"no such host" instead, which is more logical.
11. Does it work on Windows NT 3.51?
One user said it worked fine after he copied a version of WININET.DLL from
a Windows 95 system standing nearby, and put it into the directory where
Xenu's Link Sleuth(TM) was installed.
12. How is it so damn fast?
Because it uses a (possibly
patented, see patents here
and here)
technique known as preemptive multithreading. It means that the
link checking software retrieves several web pages at the same time; the
competition uses the same technique. The maximum count of threads is initially
set to 30, but you can configure it to any number between 1 and 100. A
number that is too high might result in failed connections or in timeouts,
which means you will have to recheck the broken links. At the time I had
a dial-up connection, I got good results with 70. Now I have a DSL connection,
and I have to set the number to 1-5. I suspect that my DSL provider has
installed a brake somewhere to prevent "commercial" customers from using
the unexpensive "private" service.
13. Can I have the source code?
Hahahahahaha!
14. Can I buy the source code?
Sure, make me "an offer I can't refuse".
15. Just for fun, I checked Tilman's web site, and found many broken links.
Why?
I check my own web site every week on friday. Nevertheless there are always
broken links:
-
Links that I know to be broken: I keep them like that to remind me to find
these people some day. The web page itself has a notice that the link is
broken.
-
Temporary unreachable hosts: these are temporary routing errors.
-
Really broken links: I will usually correct the link or remove it within
the next few days.
16. How do I correct broken links?
Repairing broken links (i.e. getting the correct ones) is a difficult task
that takes time, but with experience, you'll get it done faster and faster.
-
if you have the e-mail address of the site owner (because you know him),
try an e-mail. Sometimes the address still works, even if the web site
is gone.
-
find the home page of the site you link to, to see if the site has a "sorry
we moved" message. If you linked to http://www.host.com/user/page888.html
and this is broken, look at http://www.host.com/user/ to see if
there is a message, or to see if the site has been reorganized. Some sites
reorganize their user pages differently, e.g. http://www.host.com/homepages/users/page888.html.
Sometimes the web switches changes between the two methods. Other sites
are owned by the user himself, e.g. www.user.com, so the home
page is the root page. If the site exists but you cannot find your page,
send an e-mail to the owner.
-
use search engines to find the site or the name of the site owner (if you
know). To find where the site is, use web search engines (like Google
or the Internet Archive) and usenet
search engines (like Google Groups).
-
You find the site you searched for
-
You find a site that links to the site you searched for
-
You find the site in the Google Cache or the Internet Archive (simply enter
the URL in the search box!), and can use the contents to search for the
name of the owner
-
You find a site that links to the site you searched for, but is also broken.
E-mail the site owner, and tell him that the link is broken. Bookmark the
site and revisit it in a week, to see if the other person has found it.
If not, you have nevertheless succeeded in making the other person feel
as bad as you, which brings some relief :-)
-
You find the new e-mail address of the user. Either e-mail him, or try
to construct the URL yourself (user@host.com leads to http://www.host.com/user/)
-
post a message in a newsgroup that deals with the topic. Hopefully the
site owner or one of his friends reads the messages there.
-
if you are still unsuccessful, either delete your link to the site or repeat
your attempts after a month (some sites might reappear in a search engine
after some time). Sometimes it happens that a host is reorganizing its
hard disk, and all user pages get back within a few days.
17. What about ftp and gopher sites?
Starting with version 1.0k I have implemented a new ftp checking method
that is 100% reliable. Sadly, this method does
not work with proxies. The previous method I used (and still use for
gopher) was unreliable, as it did not detect certain errors.
The method for checking gopher sites is still unreliable. When an ftp
or gopher site is accessed through a proxy, this proxy builds up a web
page. Sadly, it doesn't always bring up the information whether the URL
exists or not. When you access a gopher site without a proxy, it brings
an error message, but not an error code. This seems to be a bug
of the OpenURL() function of WININET.DLL.
The output lists ftp and gopher sites as links, which allows you to
make a manual check of these sites.
18. Why can't I launch URLs?
Starting with version 1.0g (Christmas 1997), URLs are launched with DDE
("dynamic data exchange", a windows method of communication between applications),
to open many browser windows but to prevent the opening of several Netscape
applications. This is done with the help of the Registry, by searching
for HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\http\shell\open. This has the path for the
browser, the DDE application name (e.g. "Netscape", "IExplore"), the DDE
topic (usually "WWW_OpenURL"), and a template for the DDE item
(usually "%1"). If you cannot launch a URL, do not panic - export
and e-mail me the segment of your registry (start REGEDIT.EXE, and search
for "http"). Additionally, send me the file XENULOG.TXT which you will find in your %TEMP% directory.
The cause is usually that you have not installed your browser properly
(maybe you just transferred the files from another computer). Solution:
update or reinstall your browser.
Starting with version 1.1b, I have stopped displaying an error message
when the registry is incomplete, because there were too many complaints.
Instead, the browser will simply be launched with the page. This has the
disadvantage that the page won't be displayed in an extra window of the
current active browser application.
One user was unable to launch URLs ("Unable to open browser for 'URL': error 5: permission denied").
The cause was COMODO Firewall Pro 3.0.25.378. Without the firewall, it worked fine.
18a. Why does the browser not open a new window?
This is a problem with Microsoft Internet Explorer. Open your registry
and search for HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\http\shell\open\ddeexec. If the
key value is "%1",,-1,0,,,, then change it to "%1",,0,0,,,,
(i.e. you change the -1 to 0).
18b. Why does Link Sleuth freeze when launching the report?
If Link Sleuth freezes when launching the report, but not when double-clicking
on a URL, the reason might be the site map. A site map can be HUGE if
the site goes very "deep" (high level, see the "level" column in the Link
Sleuth window). A very "deep" site can happen if you have a forum.
Solution: disable the site map in the options dialog, or exclude the
"deep" parts of your website (e.g. a forum) in the initial dialog box.
18c. Why does Link Sleuth freeze when launching the report or a URL?
I do not know why this happens, but I have experienced this myself with
Windows ME (but not with Windows XP), and have received similar reports
from users. The problem goes away by rebooting Windows, but comes back
later. You can also get rid of the problem by making a change in the XENU.INI
file below the line with [Options], enter this:
UseDDE=0
The only disadvantage is that it will not open a new window in the
browser.
19. What about cookies?
By default, cookies are disabled, and Xenu rejects all cookies.
If you need cookies because
-
you have used Internet Explorer to authenticate yourself before starting
a run
-
to prevent the server to deliver URLs with new session id's
then you can enable the cookies in the advanced options dialog.
(This has been available since Version 1.2g)
Warning:
You should not use this option if you have links that delete
data, e.g. a database or a shop - you are risking data loss!!!
20. Why are some links reported as "broken" by Xenu, that can be displayed
within my browser?
Some servers read the "User Agent", i.e. the name of the software that
tries to access a website. Some websites are programmed only for Netscape
and Internet Explorer, and refuse everything else. Some may even specifically
refuse Xenu because of past misuse. Andi has a list
of websites that deny access to Xenu. A user-configurable "User Agent"
would be the solution, but this would make abuse possible.
21. Why can't I connect to "secure" (https) sites ?
If you have set your proxy correctly, try to connect
with IE. If this doesn't work, read
this usenet post for help. If this still doesn't work and you use Windows
NT 4.0, install the latest
NT service packs (up to SP5).
22. Any known problems with Windows 95?
Some people have reported crashes. These problems were usually solved by
installing IE 3.0 (or higher) or the following service packs:
One guy had problems with the WININET.DLL (v. 4.70.1300) installed with
OEM Windows 95 (v. 95 4.00.950 C). Changing to version 4.70.1335 solved
the problem.
A simpler solution is to go to http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com
and install whatever they tell you (you need to have IE 4.0 or higher on
your system)
23. Any known problems with Windows 2000?
Although I received many reports that it runs fine, one user reported a
problem and a solution:
Windows 2000 automatically sets a configuration option to use HTTP 1.1
for connecting to web sites. Many, many web sites do not use that version
but continue to use HTTP 1.0, so the automatic setting may prevent connections.
This is the reason why Xenu would not run for me. When I disabled that
setting, Xenu performed properly.
To disable that setting: Control Panel -> Internet Options -> Advanced
(tab) -> HTTP 1.1 settings (list heading) -> Use HTTP 1.1 (checkbox: uncheck
it)
24. Can I configure the timeout?
Enter the number of seconds in the [Options] segment in XENU.INI,
e.g. as timeout=120. The default value is 60. Note that this isn't
"perfect". Microsoft Windows has a bug
so that the timeout can't be set the way it should. I am using a workaround
advice from Microsoft. However I have observed that it doesn't work
if the timeout "hits" while trying to find out if a host name exists.
Alternatively, try this:
-
Start the Registry Editor (REGEDIT.EXE)
-
Go to HKEY_CURRENT_USER \ Software \ Microsoft \ Windows \ CurrentVersion
\ InternetSettings
-
Select New > DWORD from the Edit menu
-
Call it ReceiveTimeout with a value of <number of seconds> * 1000
(The "hidden" default is 300000, i.e. five minutes, which is too long)
-
Restart your system
Some users have complained that if one URL hits a timeout or a failed connection, all URLs from that host also do. Starting with version 1.2h, this behaviour can be disabled by unchecking "fail all URLs with same failed host" in the advanced options dialog. (The default behaviour is "checked")
25. What about JavaScript?
JavaScript is a programming language, not a formatting language. This makes
web pages dynamic; they might depend on the mouse type, the screen size,
etc... I have been begged to check simple JavaScript links that have the
form javascript:function('address',param1,param2,...,paramN)
My solution, which was first announced
in the user group, requires a change in the XENU.INI file. You need
a basic understanding of regular expressions (regexp). You must put your
regexp in the INI file, like this:
[Options]
Javascript=javascript:.*\(['"](.*(/|s?html?|gif|jpe?g|png|jsp|cfm|zip|exe|aspx?|pl|pdf|xml|ra|asx|ram|swf|php)(\?.*)?)['"](.*)
In the example above, the substring within the first (....) must contain
the valid URL.
Frank Visser suggested
an improved regexp:
[Options]
Javascript=[j|J]avascript:[_a-zA-Z0-9]+ *\( *['"]([^'"]+)['"]
Frank Visser has also written a better
description on his site.
Note: there may be no blank between within "javascript:function", because
the regexp wouldn't work.
26. What about passwords entered in a FORM?
The software is not able to enter passwords in a FORM. I just don't see
a way to acomplish this easily. I assume it is possible if one combines
a set of variable names, values, and a web page that would accept them
with a POST command. But some alternatives might work:
- Log in with Internet Explorer, start Xenu, then enable cookies in the advanced options dialog (read the details), then start the check
- If the server accepts authentication with GET (should work with the Tomcat server), try sending such a URL. However, you might still have to activate cookies.
27. How about a WAP version?
Xenu does check .wml files since February 2001.
28. What about these error codes?
I identify only a subset of all possible error codes in the "Status" column.
If you get an unknown error code in the Xenu application window, you can
scroll to the right for an explanation text.
More information:
29. Why do I get broken links with filelist.xml, editdata.mso
and oledata.mso?
Because Microsoft creates these broken links :-( Don't bother with them,
or read Knowledge Base article Q219694: Saving
Office HTML File to a FrontPage Web Results in a Broken Hyperlink.
Or try this tool: Office
2000 HTML Filter 2.0
You can also get rid of the problem by excluding them in the advanced options dialog.
Xenu will exclude URLs that end with /filelist.xml, /editdata.mso
and /oledata.mso. (This feature has been available since Version
1.2g)
30. Why do I get "file not found" on remote checks?
There may be several causes for this:
-
Your Internet Explorer isn't working properly, or is in offline mode, or
is blocked by your firewall. Enter the URL you want to check into IE and
see if it works.
-
One user got it working by starting Internet Explorer first, and then starting
Xenu. I believe that the cause is a broken setup of Windows, or of Internet
Explorer.
-
Your temporary directory is full: enter %TEMP% (not "c:\temp" !) into the
Windows Explorer, check if there are many TGH*.* files, and delete them.
31. Can I make a foreign language version?
No, please don't. There's no guarantee that any of the message texts will
be kept in the next version. The other problem is that I didn't write the
software in a way to be language-independent. I could have done it - but
I think most people on the web do understand english.
32. Why isn't Xenu detecting missing URLs?
A web server should return HTTP error 404 for non-existant URLs. Some servers
are poorly configured: some redirect to an existing URL with an error message
(bad!), others do show an error page, but the server doesn't return the
404 error (very bad!).
One user had the problem that his Microsoft IIS server didn't return
the 404 error. He found help on this
page, and then sent me his solution, which only works in .ASP under
IIS:
<%@LANGUAGE="VBScript"%>
<% Response.Status = "404 Not Found"
On Error Resume Next 'important in an error page to prevent another error
strTarget = Request.ServerVariables("QUERY_STRING")
strReferer = Request.ServerVariables("HTTP_REFERER") %>
<HTML><BODY>The page doesn't exist, sorry dude!<BR></BODY></HTML>
The Apache web server has a different (and better) method of doing the
same thing using native HTML code for the webpage. You simply set the correct
config items in the http.conf file on your box.
33. Running Xenu with Norton Internet Security
A user had trouble to use Xenu with Norton Internet Security 7, and got
error 12007 (no such host). After he added Xenu, it worked. This is what
he did:
-
added Xenu by opening Norton Internet Security by double clicking the Norton
"Globe" Icon
-
In right side panel, "Personal Firewall", Click CONFIGURE
-
In the Personal Firewall pop-up, Click PROGRAMS
-
In PROGRAM CONTROLS MENU
-
Settings for - "Home (Active)"
-
click "Turn on Automatic Program Control" box
-
Under "Manual Program Controls"
-
Scroll to "Xenu.exe"
-
Click Xenu once to Highlight it
-
Click MODIFY
-
in the pop-up:
-
Click PERMIT
-
Click OK
-
Click Ok again
-
Run Xenu
34. Why timeouts?
This is difficult to answer. The cause might be network overload; it might help to set a lower amount of threads, or to fine-tune the DoS detection of your firewall.
Check your firewall logs to see whether it detected a "SYN flood" DoS attack by you. SYN is the first data packet that is sent to a host when starting a connection. Theoretically, Xenu might send up to 100 SYN packets that are not immediately answered, so a firewall (that counts "unanswered" SYN packets) might think something "evil" is going on. My firewall once claimed to have detected a SYN flood when I opened many newspaper articles in background browser windows.
35. Any Spyware, Adware, Malware?
This software exists since 1997 and never had any type of malware. It does not "phone home" or return any statistics to me. There are random "ads" in the HTML report for causes I support; however I don't get paid for this. Any passwords that you enter in the software (e.g. for orphan search) are not "remembered" after you close Xenu, nor are they passed to me.
Some debug output is stored in the file XENULOG.TXT which you will find in your %TEMP% directory. That file does not contain any passwords and it is used for support (I will sometimes ask you to attach it to an e-mail to me), primarly for problems with the launch of URLs in your browser (especially the report). The file is human-readable, so feel free to have a look. The file is not sent to me by Xenu, it just sits there and you can delete it if you wish.
Here's a green review by McAfee Siteadvisor about Xenu's Link Sleuth. Note that until before July 11 2008, Yahoo Search (which uses input from McAfee SiteAdvisor) was redflagging every URL of the whole snafu.de domain, including my user site (this seems to have been corrected now). McAfee SiteAdvisor has redflagged the snafu.de domain, but not the user pages. This was related to three downloads (CuteFTP, GoZilla and Nok2Phone) on the customer support ftp site of snafu.de, who has been my ISP for over a decade. These downloads have been removed since then and both Yahoo and McAfee have been notified. On July 30 2008, I noticed that the snafu.de domain has been greenflagged.
If you have any more questions about security, don't hesitate to contact me. If you want to report a bug, click here.
Bug List
The software works pretty well, but here the list of things that shouldn't
be.
-
the thread count is sometimes incorrect if the maximum is changed while
active
-
the thread count is sometimes incorrect at the end of the session
-
The </A> closing tag must not have spaces or newlines inside
-
<applet code="myclass.class" archive="jump.zip"> will produce
a broken link if myclass.class exists, but only in the archive
-
leftover TGH*.* files in the %TEMP% directory
-
weird effects when INI file >64K
If you find another bug, e-mail
me a description, please include the URL you are checking, and if
possible try to save your work in a .XEN file and attach it. Also check
http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com
to make sure that your system has all the updates. If you want to e-mail
a suggestion, click here. You can also join the user
group by sending an e-mail to xenu-usergroup-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.
Future feature List
Things I will do in the future (maybe when hell freezes over!):
-
ROBOTS.TXT
support
-
Detect remote
loading of images (geocities
sabotages this)
-
Solution for leftover TGH*.* files in temp directory
-
Command-line parameters (actually, this has already been done, for a client
who agreed to pay my development time to two people I support. If you need
something similar, e-mail me, the price is a $300 donation to be sent to
a person I support)
-
Names of last checked URLs in also file menu
-
Automatic saving every minute
-
A correctly working "Update" feature that rechecks changed sites (tricky,
so I will never do it)
-
Ideas from Chris:
-
What about identifying how many steps it takes to reach a particular page
from the home page and how much kb had to be downloaded before one could
reach there.
[TH: useful e.g. to which steps a user must take to reach the page
of a particular product]
-
Read RFCs
-
Your
suggestions: e-mail me also if there is something of the above you'd
like to have, and persuade me to do it. If you want to report a bug,
click
here.
The Story of Xenu's Link Sleuth(TM)
(for fellow software developers)
In April and May 1997 my employer assigned me on an out-of-town job, because
another department needed a guy with MFC experience. So from monday to
friday I was away, and on the evenings I was bored to death. Every week-end
I was back home, and I usually checked my web site for broken links with
WebAnalyzer.
Sadly the software had a lot of bugs, and their support was ignoring my
e-mails, and I was mad as hell, as I had spent quite a lot of money on
a product that wasn't worth it. My job was also the first contact with
VC++ 4.2 (previously I had only worked with VC++ 1.5, because our customers
have a lot of 16bit systems), which had some easy-to-use Internet access
classes. I had already experience with WINSOCK programming, but these classes
would spare me a lot of time evaluating HTTP result headers and other annoying
stuff. On an evening after an excellent italian food with a good chianti
I took some hotel letter paper and wrote down a concept for checking links.
A month later I took some time to install the development software on my
computer and started working, with the help of that hotel-room concept.
The work was done on some evenings, but mostly on week-ends, when I had
more time.
My philosophy on software development has always been "smaller,
simpler, cheaper", long before the NASA realized this (in May 2002 I was
told that the actual NASA philosophy was Faster, Better, Cheaper
- oops!) Because of that, I need no fancy (but totally useless) graphics
like in WebAnalyzer. Just results. And they'd better be 100% correct or
I'd have to kill myself :-)
The
application is written in Visual C++, and uses the MFC classes as much
as possible: CDocument, CView, CListView, CObArray, CMapStringToOb, CArchive,
CInternetSession, CHttpFile, etc, etc. That saved me a lot of time!
Credits
Icons in EXE file: Martin Hunt and Paul Campbell; Icon on web page: Erik
Plummer; Idea to use banners in report: Marc Cross; Xenu logo button: Fred
C.; second Xenu logo button: Charles A.
Upsdell; Volcano animated cursor: Juan
C. Pradas-Bergnes; Idea & help with SMTP integration: Mark Findlay;
SMTP
class: P.J. Naughter; Xenu artwork: William
C. Chenoweth; Help files: Andrew Schoenhofer; Regular Expressions:
Henry
Spencer and Guy Gascoigne; Install and deinstall: Inno
Setup; help with Xenu banner: Bruno
Zacke; wildcards: Jack Handy; sort icons for list columns: Thomas Holte; new Xenu icon in May 2008: Dominic Raths of Hitflip.de.
Links for further reading
Trademarks
Xenu, Xenu's Link Sleuth and Link Sleuth are trademarks used
by Tilman Hausherr for software products and services. These products are
not associated in any way with services licensed by RTC, CoST, BPI, CSI,
etc.
![[Mozilla Open Directory Cool Site Award]](http://dmoz.org/img/cool2.gif)
![[ZDNet 4 stars Editor's pick]](http://web.archive.org/web/20001009043123/http://www.zdnet.com/downloads/images/red81.gif)
![[Lockergnome]](http://www.lockergnome.com/images/award-1.gif)
![[Completely free software, five doves award]](http://www.completelyfreesoftware.com/cfs_award5.gif)
Home | $cientology
| Magic | Mozilla
| Tilman | Deutsch
| Bookstore
tilman at snafu dot de