SingleFile can be launched from the command line by running it into a (headless) browser. It runs through Node.js as a standalone script injected into the web page instead of being embedded into a WebExtension. To connect to the browser, it can use Puppeteer or Selenium WebDriver. Alternatively, it can also emulate a browser with JavaScript disabled by using jsdom.
This is a work in progress.
geckodriver or chromedriver) for your browser and ensure it can be found through the PATH environment variable or the cli folder. Otherwise you will need to set the --web-driver-executable-path option to help SingleFile locating the binary file.PATH environment variable or the cli folder. Otherwise you will need to set the --browser-executable-path option to help SingleFile locating the binary file.
$ unzip master.zip .
cli directory.$ cd cli
$ npm install
single-file executable (Linux/Unix/BSD etc.).$ chmod +x single-file
$ ./single-file <url> [output] [options ...] (Linux/Unix/BSD etc.)
> single-file <url> [output] [options ...] (Windows)
$ ./single-file --help (Linux/Unix/BSD etc.)
> single-file --help (Windows)
Examples
$ ./single-file https://www.wikipedia.org (Linux/Unix/BSD etc.)
> single-file https://www.wikipedia.org (Windows)
wikipedia.html$ ./single-file https://www.wikipedia.org wikipedia.html (Linux/Unix/BSD etc.)
> single-file https://www.wikipedia.org wikipedia.html (Windows)
wikipedia.html with jsdom instead of Puppeteer$ ./single-file https://www.wikipedia.org wikipedia.html --back-end=jsdom (Linux/Unix/BSD etc.)
> single-file https://www.wikipedia.org wikipedia.html --back-end=jsdom (Windows)
SingleFile is licensed under AGPL and GPL. Code derived from third-party projects is licensed under MIT. Please contact me at gildas.lormeau <at> gmail.com if you are interested in licensing the SingleFile code for a commercial service or product.