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Basically, I have a customer who wants to recreate an existing site somewhere else after a dispute with his business partner and he hasn't got the FTP server/login details and can't get hold of the original source code as it was his partner who sorted it out.
I know IE has a "Save as" option which can drill down links, but it saved it as a single file.
Just to throw a spanner in the works, the site uses Active Server Pages ...
Basically, I have a customer who wants to recreate an existing site somewhere else after a dispute with his business partner and he hasn't got the FTP server/login details and can't get hold of the original source code as it was his partner who sorted it out.
I know IE has a "Save as" option which can drill down links, but it saved it as a single file.
Just to throw a spanner in the works, the site uses Active Server Pages ...
I'm not sure if you need the admin right to the site though.
I think GetRight has the power. You can also use wget.
> You can't get your ASP code back, however you can get their finish ASP output. All you
> can retrieve is a static version of the site at any given time.
I thought as much.
Cheers for the help, guys.
I got hold of a freeware utility called Site Sucker and it managed to get the lot: images, style sheets and source code ... including the original ASP script intact.
Cool.
You're leeching porn directories, aren't you?
> Wow.
>
> I got hold of a freeware utility called Site Sucker and it managed to
> get the lot: images, style sheets and source code ... including the
> original ASP script intact.
>
> Cool.
Original ASP files?
OK, that's one MASSIVE security risk. I just hope that server had bad security on it.
Otherwise I'm miffed, it couldn't have got it via http as everything is automatically processed by the server beforehand.
I only glanced at the source before, but on closer inspection (with my eyes actually open ...) it turns out to be plain old Javascript.
Sorry ...