[3440] | 1 | -*- text -*-
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| 2 | GNU Wget Installation Procedure
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| 3 | ===============================
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| 4 |
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| 5 | 0. Introduction
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| 6 | ---------------
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| 7 |
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| 8 | This document describes how to build Wget from source code on
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| 9 | Unix-like systems. If you want to install a precompiled Wget, this
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| 10 | document is not for you -- refer to the documentation provided by the
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| 11 | distributors instead. If you already have Wget and want to learn how
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| 12 | to use it, refer to Wget's Info documentation or man page which you
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| 13 | should have received with your system. If you are using Windows
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| 14 | (except for Cygwin), read windows/README instead. If you want to
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| 15 | compile Wget from source code on a Unix-like system, read on.
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| 16 |
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| 17 | The preferred form of building Wget is to get a release archive and
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| 18 | unpack it (which you have presumably done, since you are reading
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| 19 | this). If you have obtained the source code via the Subversion
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| 20 | repository, please follow the instructions in `README.checkout' before
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| 21 | continuing.
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| 22 |
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| 23 | 1. Dependencies
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| 24 | ---------------
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| 25 |
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| 26 | To build Wget, your system must support a Unix-like command-line
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| 27 | development environment, including the text-processing utilities (sh,
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| 28 | grep, awk, sed, etc.) and a functional C compiler. On some GNU/Linux
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| 29 | systems, this means that you will need to install packages such as
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| 30 | `gcc', `glibc-devel' (or `libc6-dev') and `make'. Most systems come
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| 31 | with these packages preinstalled, but it doesn't hurt to check. If
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| 32 | you have successfully compiled other software from source, you
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| 33 | probably have them all.
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| 34 |
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| 35 | In addition to the C development environment, Wget can use a number of
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| 36 | optional libraries to provide additional features, such as translated
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| 37 | messages and support for "https" URLs. The "external" dependencies
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| 38 | include:
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| 39 |
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| 40 | - OpenSSL -- for "https" URLs.
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| 41 | - GNU gettext -- for translated messages.
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| 42 |
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| 43 | To be usable for building Wget, the listed libraries must be installed
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| 44 | with their "development" header files. On GNU/Linux systems this
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| 45 | typically means installing the corredponsing "lib<name>-devel" or
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| 46 | "lib<name>-dev" package along with the package with "lib<name>".
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| 47 |
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| 48 | 2. Configuration
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| 49 | ----------------
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| 50 |
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| 51 | Before compiling Wget, you need to "configure" it using the
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| 52 | `configure' script provided with the distribution. Configuration
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| 53 | serves two distinct purposes: it enables Wget's build system to
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| 54 | inspect certain features of your operating system for more robust
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| 55 | compilation, and it enables you to choose which features you want the
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| 56 | resulting Wget to have.
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| 57 |
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| 58 | As is the case with most GNU software, Wget's configure script was
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| 59 | generated with GNU Autoconf. If you're not familiar with
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| 60 | Autoconf-generated scripts, read on.
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| 61 |
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| 62 | The most straightforward way to configure Wget is by running the
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| 63 | configure script without any arguments. After running some
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| 64 | compilation-related tests, it will create the Makefiles needed to
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| 65 | build Wget. However, you may wish to customize Wget's configuration
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| 66 | by providing arguments to `configure'. Wget's configure script
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| 67 | accepts standard Autoconf arguments, the most important ones being:
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| 68 |
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| 69 | --help display a help message and exit
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| 70 |
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| 71 | --prefix=PREFIX install architecture-independent files in PREFIX
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| 72 | (/usr/local by default)
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| 73 | --bindir=DIR user executables in DIR (PREFIX/bin)
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| 74 | --infodir=DIR info documentation in DIR [PREFIX/info]
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| 75 | --mandir=DIR man documentation in DIR [PREFIX/man]
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| 76 |
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| 77 | For example, if you are not root and want to install Wget in
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| 78 | subdirectories of your home directory, you can use:
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| 79 |
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| 80 | ./configure --prefix=$HOME
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| 81 |
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| 82 | In addition to the above generic options, Wget's configuration
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| 83 | supports a number of options more or less specific to Wget. Options
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| 84 | beginning with "--disable", such as `--disable-opie' or
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| 85 | `--disable-ntlm', allow you to turn off certain built-in functionality
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| 86 | you don't need in order to reduce the size of the executable. Options
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| 87 | beginning with "--with" turning off autodetection and use of external
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| 88 | software Wget can link with, such as the SSL libraries. Recognized
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| 89 | "--enable" and "--with" options include:
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| 90 |
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| 91 | --without-ssl disable SSL autodetection (used for https support)
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| 92 | --with-libssl-prefix=DIR search for libssl in DIR/lib
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| 93 | --disable-opie disable support for opie or s/key FTP login
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| 94 | --disable-digest disable support for HTTP digest authorization
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| 95 | --disable-ntlm disable support for HTTP NTLM authorization
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| 96 | --disable-debug disable support for debugging output
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| 97 | --disable-nls do not use Native Language Support
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| 98 | --disable-largefile omit support for large files
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| 99 | --disable-ipv6 disable IPv6 support
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| 100 | --disable-rpath do not hardcode runtime library paths
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| 101 |
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| 102 | You can inspect decisions made by configure by editing the generated
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| 103 | Makefiles and the `src/config.h' include file. The defaults should
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| 104 | work without intervention, but if you know what you are doing, editing
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| 105 | the generated files before compilation is fine -- they will not be
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| 106 | regenerated until you run configure again.
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| 107 |
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| 108 | `configure' will try to find a compiler in your PATH, defaulting to
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| 109 | `gcc', but falling back to `cc' if the former is unavailable. This is
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| 110 | a reasonable default on most Unix-like systems, but sometimes you
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| 111 | might want to override it. The compiler choice is overridden by
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| 112 | setting the `CC' environment variable to the desired compiler file
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| 113 | name. For example, to force compilation with the Unix `cc' compiler,
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| 114 | invoke configure like this:
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| 115 |
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| 116 | ./configure CC=cc
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| 117 |
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| 118 | This assumes that `cc' is in your path -- if it is not, simply use
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| 119 | CC=/path/to/cc instead. Note that environment variables that affect
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| 120 | configure can be set with the usual shell syntax `VAR=value
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| 121 | ./configure' (assuming sh syntax), but can also be specified as
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| 122 | arguments to configure, as shown above. The latter method, while
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| 123 | being specific to configure, works unmodified in all shells.
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| 124 |
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| 125 | Environment variables that affect `configure' include: CFLAGS for C
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| 126 | compiler flags, CPPFLAGS for C preprocessor flags, LDFLAGS for linker
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| 127 | flags, and LIBS for libraries.
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| 128 |
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| 129 | Barring the use of --without-* flags, configure will try to autodetect
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| 130 | external libraries needed by Wget, currently only the OpenSSL
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| 131 | libraries. If they are installed in the system library directories or
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| 132 | in the same prefix where you plan to install Wget, configure should be
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| 133 | able to autodetect them. If they are installed elsewhere, use the
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| 134 | `--with-libNAME' option to specify the root directory under which
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| 135 | libraries reside in the `lib/' subdirectory and the corresponding
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| 136 | header files reside in the `include/' subdirectory. For example, if
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| 137 | the OpenSSL libraries are installed under the /usr/local/ssl prefix,
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| 138 | use `--with-libssl=/usr/local/ssl'.
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| 139 |
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| 140 | Sometimes external libraries will be installed on the system, but the
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| 141 | header files will be missing. This often happens on GNU/Linux if you
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| 142 | forget to install the "-devel" or "-dev" package that corresponds to
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| 143 | the library and that is typically *not* installed by default. In that
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| 144 | case configure will not find the library and you will not be able to
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| 145 | use the features provided by the library until you install the devel
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| 146 | package and rerun configure. If you believe you have the necessary
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| 147 | headers, but configure still fails to detect the library, please
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| 148 | report it as a bug.
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| 149 |
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| 150 | 3. Compilation
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| 151 | --------------
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| 152 |
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| 153 | To compile GNU Wget after it has been configured, simply type make.
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| 154 | If your compiler is too old to handle function prototypes, Wget will
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| 155 | try to K&R-ize its sources on the fly. This should make GNU Wget
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| 156 | compilable on almost any Unix-like system you are likely to encounter.
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| 157 |
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| 158 | After the compilation a ready-to-use `wget' executable should reside
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| 159 | in the src directory. At this point there is no formal test suite for
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| 160 | testing the binary, but it should be easy enough to test whether the
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| 161 | basic functionality works.
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| 162 |
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| 163 | 4. Installation
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| 164 | ---------------
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| 165 |
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| 166 | Use `make install' to install GNU Wget to directories specified to
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| 167 | configure. To install it in a system directory (which is the
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| 168 | default), you will need to be root. The standard prefix is
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| 169 | "/usr/local/", which can be changed using the `--prefix' configure
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| 170 | option.
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| 171 |
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| 172 | The installation process will copy the wget binary to $PREFIX/bin,
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| 173 | install the wget.info* info pages to $PREFIX/info, the generated
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| 174 | manual page (where available) wget.1 to $PREFIX/man/man1, and the
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| 175 | default config file to $PREFIX/etc, unless a config file already
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| 176 | exists there. You can customize these directories either through the
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| 177 | configuration process or making the necessary changes in the Makefile.
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| 178 |
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| 179 | To delete the files created by Wget installation, you can use `make
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| 180 | uninstall'.
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