makestat_time throttles the makestat/maketrack stats to once per minute: the wait loop compares time_local() against it and, when it fires, writes it back to the local. But the field is by-value in the extended context, so it can't round-trip through ENGINE_SAVE_CONTEXT, while ENGINE_SET_CONTEXT re-read it from the load-once baseline on every loop iteration. That reset the local before the next compare, so under -%v / maketrack the throttle never held and the stats line plus the full back-stack dump were emitted every iteration. Drop makestat_time (and the never-changing makestat_fp) from SET_CONTEXT; they belong to the load-once set. Wrapped the macro in clang-format off/on for the same backslash-realignment reason as HT_ADD_END. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com> Signed-off-by: Xavier Roche <roche@httrack.com>
HTTrack Website Copier - Development Repository
About
Copy websites to your computer (Offline browser)
HTTrack is an offline browser utility, allowing you to download a World Wide website from the Internet to a local directory, building recursively all directories, getting html, images, and other files from the server to your computer.
HTTrack arranges the original site's relative link-structure. Simply open a page of the "mirrored" website in your browser, and you can browse the site from link to link, as if you were viewing it online.
HTTrack can also update an existing mirrored site, and resume interrupted downloads. HTTrack is fully configurable, and has an integrated help system.
WinHTTrack is the Windows 2000/XP/Vista/Seven release of HTTrack, and WebHTTrack the Linux/Unix/BSD release.
Website
Main Website: http://www.httrack.com/
Compile trunk release
A git checkout ships only the autotools sources, so ./bootstrap (which runs
autoreconf) regenerates configure first; this needs autoconf, automake and
libtool. Released tarballs already include configure, so building from a
tarball skips ./bootstrap.
git clone https://github.com/xroche/httrack.git --recurse-submodules
cd httrack
./bootstrap
./configure --prefix=$HOME/usr && make -j8 && make install
Or use the one-shot wrapper (bootstrap + configure + make), which forwards its
arguments to configure:
./build.sh --prefix=$HOME/usr