* src/progress.c (create_image): progress only when in foreground
Sometimes I start wget, but the remote site is too slow, so I rather
want to run it in background, however when I simply use job control
for that, wget will keep spewing the progress bar all over my
terminal. I have found the SIGHUP/SIGUSR1 feature to redirect output
to a log file, but I think the following small patch is even more
useful, since the progress bar will simply resume when wget is
foregrounded again (also, the final message is still printed to the
terminal in any case):
* progress.c (update_speed_ring): The comment for the function
incorrectly stated that the function uses thirty samples from the
past instead of twenty.
Reported-By: Yi Li <lovelylich@gmail.com>
This commit causes the --show-progress option to print the progress bar
to stderr even when a logfile was explicitly provided on the command
line. Such a combination allows a user to log the output of Wget while
simultaneously keeping track of the download status.
MIN and MAx are macros that a developer will universally expect
throughout the source. Yet, they were being defined in multiple places
across the source. Instead, define them in a single location in the
common wget.h header file and use them consistently everywhere.
This commit introduces two new changes to how the progress bar looks:
1. Support the --progress=bar:noscroll option which will prevent the filename
from scrolling in the progress bar
2. Print human readable value for the amount already downloaded for any file
This is a relatively large commit that implements two major features:
1. Implement --show-progress switch to force the display of the progress bar in
any verbosity level
2. Edit the implementation of the progress bar so that the filename is displayed
in the same line.