static site checker

content

introduction
try
download
README
usage
known issues
build
source
boot notes
copyright & licence


introduction

The static stite checker is an opinionated HTML nitpicker, a command–line tool to validate static HTML & XHTML websites. I built it to nitpick my hand–coded identity website. I’m making it available should others find it useful.

It should not be used on untrusted content; its parsers are holier than Robin’s cow.

Dylan Harris
October 2021


try







        

NOTE: SSC is a site checker, not a page checker, but, here, you can only input a page, at most. It is not the best possible illustration of the program’s abilities, but it is better than nothing. Testing a web site would require proof of control of that site, and I’m not going there for a simple demo.


download

github

These downloads are NOT signed (I’ve not got my act together). Source is available below and on Github.

binaries (0.0.114)

linux : centos 8 amd64 / ubuntu 20.04 amd64
macos (intel) : big sur / high sierra
openbsd 6.8 : amd64
windows 10 : x86 / x64

additional documentation

The specifications used to build ssc were acquired from various public websites. To avoid confusion when discussing details, here is a recent collection of these documents.


README

Static Site Checker
(an opinionated HTML nitpicker)
version 0.0.115
https://ssc.lu/


(c) 2020,2021 dylan harris
see LICENCE.txt for copyright & licence notice
see W3-LICENCE.txt for additional copyright & licence information


WARNING: this code is:
- incomplete
- pre-alpha
- IT PROBABLY WON'T BEHAVE AS YOU EXPECT :-)
- do NOT feed it untrusted data


ssc analyses static HTML snippets, files and sites:
- HTML 1.0/+/2.0/3.0/3.2/4.00/4.01/5.0/5.1/5.2/5.3-draft
- HTML living standard, Jan 2005 to Oct 2021
- SVG 1.0/1.1/1.2 Tiny/1.2 Full/2.0/2.x draft Apr 2021
- MathML 1/2/3/4-draft
- XHTML 1.0/1.1/2.0/5.x
- finds broken links (external links require curl)
- processes server side includes, mostly
- analyses schema.org microdata 2.0 to 13.0
- analyses microformats v1 & v2

with opinions on:
- standard english where dialect is required
- perfectly legal but sloppy HTML
- abhorrent rudeness such as autoplay on videos

It does NOT:
- behave securely: its parser is holier than robin's cow
- analyse or understand scripts
- analyse or understand styles, beyond nicking class names from CSS
- analyse or understand XML or derivatives except as noted above

It can output:
- 'repaired' HTML (not XHTML)
- HTML with resolved Server Side Includes
- JSON summaries of microformat and microdata content
- website statistical information
- updated website with datafile deduplication


ssc -h
for a usage summary.

ssc -f config_file
analyse site using preprepared configuration

ssc directory
analyse website based in directory


To build & run:
1. Set the environment variable SSCPATH to point to the ssc root directory (the one containing recipe)
2. If need be download, build and install ICU 63_1 or better (perhaps from icu-project.org)
3. Set the environment variable ICUPATH to point to the ICU home directory
4. If need be download, build and install boost 1.67 or better (perhaps from boost.org)
5. Set the environment variable BOOST to point to the BOOST home directory
6. -EITHER- build with CMake 3.11 or better ("cd recipe/tea" "cmake ." "make" "ctest" "make install")
7. -OR- build with recipe\tea\ssc201?.sln in Visual Studios 2017/2019 under Windows
8. If need be, download, build and install curl (perhaps from curl.haxx.se)
9. Gleefully run ssc. It will break if you are insufficiently gleeful.


NOTE
SSC can be run in a CGI environment. This is intended for use with OpenBSD's native httpd web server
(https://man.openbsd.org/httpd.8). You are reminded that SSC is pre-alpha software. Do NOT expose it
to untrusted data sources, such as the open web, without taking serious precautions. SSC probably has
more bugs than the Creator's Ultimate All-Beetle Extravaganza (J.B.S. Haldane, apocryphal : "[the
Creator has] an inordinate fondness for beetles.").


written by dylan harris
mail@ssc.lu
October 2021

usage

NAME
ssc - analyse static web site source


SYNOPSIS
ssc [...] directory
ssc -f config
ssc


DESCRIPTION
ssc (the Static Site Checker) is an opinionated HTML nit-picker, intended for
people, such as its author, who hand code websites. It doesn't just check
static websites for broken links, dubious syntax, and bad semantic data, it
will actively complain about things that are perfectly legal but just a little
bit untidy.

Except when serving CGI queries, it recursively scans the directory looking
for HTML source files to analyse. It produces a list of errors, warnings,
comments, and other hints of imperfection. Once complete, it summarises
internal site inconsistencies, and can produce some simple statistics.

ssc ignores scripts.


COMMAND LINE ONLY SWITCHES

These options are only available on the command line:

-f file                 Load configuration from file, which should be in .INI
                        file format. See CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT below.

-F                      Load the configuration file .ssc/config in the current
                        directory.

-h                      Show a summary of switches and exit.

-V                      Show version details and exit.

--validation            Show attribute extensions and exits. Attribute
                        extensions are additional values that can be
                        associated with attributes on many X/HTML elements.


COMMAND LINE AND CONFIGURATION FILES SWITCHES

These options are available on the command line and in configuration files:

--corpus.article        Prefer the content of 
when gathering corpus text. --corpus.body Prefer the content of when gathering corpus text. This is the default. --corpus.main Prefer the content of
when gathering corpus text. --corpus.output file Dump XML corpus of site into file. This is intended for use by a local search engine. If none of --corpus.article, --corpus.body, or --corpus.main are specified, the content of is used. If more than one are specified, then the text collected depends on a page's content. This is incompatible with --shadow.update. --general.css Do NOT process .css files. --general.custom EL Define a custom element for verifying the IS attribute. May be repeated. --general.datapath dir Look for any configuration, caches, and other useful -p dir files, in this directory. --general.error x If nits of the specified category or worse are -E generated, then exit with an error code. Values are: 'catastrophe', 'error' (the default), 'warning', 'info', or 'comment'. --general.ignored EL ignore attributes and content of the element . May be repeated. --general.lang LA If an X/HTML file does not have a language / dialect specified (e.g. "en" for generic English, "en_IE" for Irish English, "lb_LU" for Luxembourgish, etc.), default to 'LA'. If not given, the default is your system default, or, if none, then "en_US" (standard American English). --general.maxfilesize n Do not process HTML source files that exceed n bytes in size (default: 4M). Specify 0 for unlimited, although be warned that ssc is stunningly stupid in such circumstances and may even attempt to load files that exceed available memory. --general.output Output to the specified file. If this switch is not -o file used, standard output is used. --general.nochange Report what ssc would do, but don't do it. -n --general.progress Dump progress information to standard output. This can -D intefere with formatted output. --general.rdf Check RDF attributes. This option currently underperforms. An extension to properly support RDF and RDFa is en route. --general.rel Only mention REL values, found neither in the living standard nor at microformats.org, in debug output. --general.slob Ignore perfectly legal but inefficient, indeed thoroughly slobby, HTML, such as being far too lazy to get round to bothering to close elements. --general.ssi Process Server Side Includes. Although ssc can process -I many server side includes, it cannot process those containing formulae. Note that processing SSIs may cause incorrect line numbers to be mentioned when an issue is described. --general.verbose x Output nits to the specified verbosity: 'catastrophe', -v 'error', 'warning', 'info', 'comment' (the default), or '0' for silence. Additional values are available when debugging. Each level includes its preceding level, so, for example, 'warning' will also output 'catastrophe' and 'error' nits. --html.rfc1867 Ignore the RFC 1867 (INPUT=FILE) extension when processing HTML 2.0 --html.rfc1942 Ignore the RFC 1942 (tables) extension when processing HTML 2.0. --html.rfc19802 Ignore the RFC 1980 (client side image maps) extension when processing HTML 2.0. --html.rfc2070 Ignore the RFC 2070 (internationalisation) extension when processing HTML 2.0. --html.tags When an HTML file is loaded that contains no DOCTYPE, ssc normally presumes it's an HTML 1 file. This switch tells it to presume the file follows an earlier HTML Tags specification (the one at CERN). This is overridden by --html.version. --html.title n If <TITLE> text is longer than n characters, say so. -z n This applies to child text of a header <TITLE> element, not the value of TITLE attributes. --html.version X If no doctype (or xml header) is specified, presume version X of HTML. X can be: tags HTML tags (1991, informal), 1.0 HTML 1.0 (June 1993 draft), + HTML Plus (November 1993 draft), 2.0 HTML 2.0 (RFC 1860), 3.0 HTML 3.0 (March 1995 draft), 3.2 HTML 3.2, 4.0 HTML 4.0, 4.1 HTML 4.01, 4.2 XHTML 1.0, 4.3 XHTML 1.1 core, 4.4 XHTML 2.0 (December 2010 draft), 5.0 W3 HTML 5.0, 5.1 W3 HTML 5.1, 5.2 W3 HTML 5.2, 5.3 W3 HTML 5.3 (October 2018 draft), 2005/1/1 WhatWG WebApps draft (January 2005), ... 2007/1/1 WhatWG WebApps draft (January 2007), 2007/7/1 WhatWG HTML 5 (July 2007), ... 2021/10/1 WhatWG HTML 5 (October 2021), XHTML 1.0 XHTML 1.0, XHTML 1.1 XHTML 1.1 core, XHTML 2.0 (December 2010 draft), XHTML 5.x XHTML corresponding to equivalent W3 HTML. Although you can specify exact dates for versions of the WhatWG HTML 5 living standard, currently only broad versions published in January and July are supported (and April & October 2021). It is expected that, as the standard develops, more precision will be applied to changes in ssc analysis. Certain versions of HTML offer variants, such as loose and strict definitions. ssc picks those up from the <!DOCTYPE …> in the HTML file, if any, and carelessly ignores them. Validation of XHTML is not strict. Just to remind you, there are no guarantees of accuracy (or inaccuracy). Copies of the appropriate standards can be found online at source. --link.301 Normally, when ssc checks external links -3 (--link.external), it does not report http forwarding errors 301 and 308. Use this switch to have it do so. --link.external Check external links, e.g. those not on the site being -e checked. This requires a copy of curl on the path. Note that, no matter what the switch, ssc will NOT check certain special site names, such as example.com. --link.internal Check internal links, e.g. those within the website -l being checked. --link.once Only report each broken external link once. If, for -O example, the site has a number of references to a page that does not exist, ssc will only report the first instance of the broken link. Note that, even if it reports every occurrence of the link, it will only check it the first time it encounters it (requires --link.external). --link.revoke Do not check whether https links' certificates have -r been revoked (requires --link.external). --link.xlink Check crosslink IDs on the site being analysed. For -X example, if a link goes to /index.html#id, then, when this switch is set, ssc will verify that the id exists and that it is not hidden. --math.version Presume this version of MathML (1, 2 or 3). The following versions are supported: 0 work it out from the (HTML) version of the file being analysed, 1 MathML 1, 2 MathML 2, 3 MathML 3, 4 MathML 4 (December 2020 draft). --microdata.microdata Check microdata found in WhatWG microdata attributes -m (itemprop, itemtype, etc.). Note that ssc only knows about schema.org and n.whatwg.org microdata. --microdata.export Export schema.org microdata encountered. This data is exported in JSON format. --microdata.root DIR When exporting microdata with --microdata.export, write files into the directory DIR. ssc will create the directory tree structure as appropriate. --microdata.version x.y Test for schema.org microdata version X.Y The following values are valid: version 2: 2.0 to 2.2; version 3: 3.0 to 3.9; versions 4.0, 5.0, 6.0; version 7: 7.0 to 7.04; versions 8.0, 9.0, 10.0, 11.0, 12.0, 13.0. If .Y is omitted, .0 is presumed. --microdata.virtual v=d When exporting microdata using --microdata.export, export the contents of virtual directory 'v' to 'd'. 'v' must match a directory identified with --site.virtual. For example: --microdata.virtual virtual=X:\virtual. --microformat.verify Verify Microformats data in class and rel attributes -M (see https://microformats.org/). --microformat.export Export microformat data encountered in JSON format. This option will write files in the same directory as the source, with the extension .json. --microformat.version x Presume microformats version x. The following values are current accepted: 1 microformats version 1 only, 2 microformats version 2 only, 3 both microformats versions 1 and 2. --nits.catastrophe n redefine nit n as a catastrophe; may be repeated (the value of n can be determined using --nits.nids below). --nits.codes Output nit codes. --nits.comment n Redefine nit n as a comment; may be repeated (the value of n can be determined using --nits.nids). --nits.debug n Redefine nit n as a debug message; may be repeated (the value of n can be determined using --nits.nids). --nits.error n Redefine nit n as an error; may be repeated (the value of n can be determined using --nits.nids). --nits.format F Specify the output format; F is a template file (see OUTPUT TEMPLATE below). --nits.info n Redefine nit n as information; may be repeated (the value of n can be determined using --nits.nids). --nits.nids Output nit ids, which can be used to redefine nits. --nits.quote X Specify quote style when using nit.format. X can be one of 'text' or 'html'. --nits.silence n Silence nit n; may be repeated (the value of n can be determined using --nits.nids). --nits.warning n Redefine nit n as a warning; may be repeated (the value of n can be determined using --nits.nids). --shadow.changed When shadowing a site that has been previously shadowed, only copy/link files that have changed. --shadow.comment Do not delete comments when writing shadow pages. --shadow.copy X Create a shadow directory structure from source HTML files, with errors removed and some things tidied up. X can be: no copy nothing (default); pages write 'fixed' source files, ignore non source files; hard set up hard links to non-source files (requires source and shadow directories to be on the same disk); soft set up soft links to non-source files; all copy non HTML files too; dedu copy non HTML files too, but deduplicate them, changing links in HTML source if necessary; report only report duplicates (no shadowing). ssc cannot convert between versions of HTML, nor between HTML and XHTML. The soft and hard link options are only available on systems that support them. --shadow.enable Enable shadowing (set by other shadow options). If shadowing is enabled, but shadow.root is not set, SSC will litter the site source directories with .ndx files. --shadow.file f Write ssc's shadow cache to file f, to accelerate future shadowing of the same content. --shadow.ignore ext When shadowing, ignore files with this extension (may be repeated). --shadow.info Add a comment at or near the top of each shadowed HTML file noting its generation time. --shadow.msg text Insert a comment containing the text at the top of every generated page. Note that, if any SSI included file is updated, the comment will appear whether or not the original page is updated. --shadow.root dir Where to write the shadowed site. --shadow.ssi Do NOT resolve SSIs when shadowing, even if --general.ssi is set. --shadow.space Leave excess/repeated spaces and blank lines in the shadowed files untidily untouched. --shadow.update Only examine files that have changed since the last -u time ssc ran. This is incompatible with --corpus.file. This requires --shadow.file. Nits of files that have not changed will not be reported. --shadow.virtual v=d When shadowing virtual directories, output the shadow of virtual directory 'v' to directory 'd'. 'v' must match a directory set up using --site.virtual. --site.domain domain The domain name of the site is 'domain'. This can be -S domain repeated. This is used to identify any URL that is apparently external but is actually internal to the site. --site.extension ext Treat files with this extension as X/HTML source -x ext files. This may be repeated. Files with extension .html are always checked. --site.index file This is the name of the index file in a directory. -i file This can be repeated. This is used for checking internal links. --site.root dir This is the root of the website to analyse. ssc will -g dir recursively scan the directory analysing any HTML files it finds. The default is the current directory. --site.virtual v=d The HTML virtual directory 'v' is located in actual -L v=d directory 'd' on the local filesystem. For example: --site.virtual virtual=D:\actual --stats.meta Produce statistics on <META> usage in <HEAD>. Note that pragmas reported (http-equiv) are those found in the HTML source, not those returned by the HTTP protocol. Remember that many web servers (not all) will remove some pragmas when serving pages. --stats.page Produce statistics for each source file encountered. --stats.summary Produce a summary of overall statistics for the website. --svg.version x Presume any SVG code encountered is this version, unless the SVG code itself specifies a version. Versions recognised: 1.0, 1.1, 1.2 (really 1.2/tiny), 1.2/tiny, 1.2/full (May 2004 draft, incomplete, any conflict with tiny always resolved in favour of tiny), 2.0, 2.1 (april 2021 draft). If this switch is not used, and some SVG code does not identify its version, the version is derived from the version of the host X/HTML code. --validation.minor x When validating W3 HTML 5 source code, using this -m x minor version of W3 HTML 5. Valid values are 0, 1, 2, and 3. WhatWG versions are determined by date, corresponding roughly to the date of the (online) publication of the specific version. See the --html.version switch. --validation.microdata Validate (schema.org) microdata. --validation.* Add a permitted value to a particular HTML enumeration. Can be repeated. Extendable enumerations include charset, class (valid values may also be picked up from CSS files), colour, currency, http-equiv, lang, metaname, mimetype, rel, SGML, and many others. A full set of possible enumerations can be listed using the --validation switch. CONFIGURATION FILE FORMAT If a configuration file is used, it should be in INI file format. All content is optional. Section and option names are derived from the long form switch name, which consists of SECTION.OPTION, laid out in the format: [SECTION] OPTION=yes OPTION=123456 Switches that do not have a long form version cannot be used in a configuration file. Each ssc tests (in the toast folder) has a configuration file; browse them for examples. ENVIRONMENT QUERY_STRING Run under OpenBSD's httpd server. See notes below. SSC_CONFIG If no configuration file is given on the command line, use this one SSC_ARGS Preliminary command line parameters If, when SSC is run, the environment variable QUERY_STRING is set to an OpenBSD httpd server CGI value that includes the parameter html.snippet, then SSC will nitpick that snippet only. Some other parameters are processed, including general.verbose and html.version. EXIT STATUS If no significant nits are found, ssc exits with 0, otherwise it exits with a value > 0. OUTPUT TEMPLATE Warning: output templates is work in progress, and may be subject to significant breaking change in future versions of ssc. The --nit.format switch allows control of output format. It takes a file name. The format of that text file is a sequence of fixed section names, enclosed in square brackets on their own lines, each optionally followed by text. In that text, certain specific identifiers, enclosed in brace pairs, are substituted. For example: [dog-section] My pet dog {{dog-name}} is a {{bad-dog}}. For examples, browse toast/output/*.nit If no file is specified, or if the file cannot be loaded, a default template is used. Note also the --nit.quote switch. EXAMPLES To verify the version of ssc: ssc -V To check the static web side source directory /home/site/wwwroot: ssc /home/site/wwwroot To check a static website for example.com, in the current directory, that uses server side includes, including verification of external links, with very verbose output: ssc -e -I -x html -x shtml -s example.com -v 5 -i index.shtml To check a static web side in the current directory, with a virtual directory, verifying microformats: ssc -L vitual=/home/site/virtual -M To check a static web site using a configuration file: ssc -f config.file A simple configuration file might contain: [general] verbose=4 output=simple.out [site] domain=example.edu extension=html index=index.html root=simple A configuration file to check a site against HTML 5.2 and SVG 1.1 might contain: [general] output=site.out class=yes [link] check=yes [site] domain=example.edu extension=html index=index.html root=site [html] version=5.2 [svg] version=1.1 A configuration file to check against a particular WhatWG living standard, gathering statistics: [general] output=jan21.out [html] version=2021/01/01 [link] check=yes [microdata] version=11.0 [site] domain=example.edu extension=html index=index.html root=site [stats] summary=yes meta=yes A configuration file to shadow copy and deduplicate a site might contain: [general] output=dedu.out class=yes [site] domain=example.edu extension=html index=index.html root=site [shadow] copy=5 root=shadow file=dedu.ndx A configuration file to export microdata preparing against schema.org version 7.2 might contain: [general] output=export.out class=yes [site] domain=example.edu extension=html index=index.html root=site [link] check=yes [microdata] export=yes root=export version=7.2 PREPARING and UPDATING a SITE These files are based on the steps I take to update an OpenBSD website. Presumine a directory containing the following: site.conf ssc configuration file for a website site shadow output produced by ssc Then I run a script like this: ssc -f site.conf upload.sh site /var/www/site-upload server user 0 ssh user@server "cd /var/www ; mv site x ; mv site-upload site ; mv x site-upload ; ln -sf site htdocs" upload.sh is a macos bash script that can be found among the source code. Note that I have rather naughtily replaced OpenBSD's httpd document directory /var/www/htdocs with a link. Here is site.conf: [general] verbose=info class=yes output=site.out ssi=yes ignore=pre rpt=yes [html] version=2021/04/01 [link] check=yes xlink=yes [microformat] verify=yes [site] domain=example.com extension=html extension=shtml index=index.shtml root=corrupt_source [stats] summary=yes [shadow] copy=dedu root=site file=site.ndx ignore=inc info=yes SEE ALSO tidy linkchecker HISTORY ssc is written by Dylan Harris, https://ssc.lu/.

known issues

SSC is pre–alpha software. It doesn’t do what it’s supposed to do, and what it’s supposed to do is wrong.

Note that github hosts a list of known issues.


build

introduction

SSC can be built from the unix command line using CMake version 3.11 or better, with a C++ 17 compiler such as appropriate versions of gcc or clang. It can also be built under Windows using Visual Studio 2017 or 2019.

operating systems

I’ve successfully built ssc under:

I see no reason why it wouldn’t build under similar environments, but I make no promises.

libraries

Before you can build SSC, you may need to install and build boost version 1.75 or better (I use 1.77), and ICU 60.0 or better (I use 69.1).

You may need to set some environment variables:
SSCPATH to point to the ssc directory;
BOOST_ROOT to point to the boost root directory.
ICU_PATH to point to the ICU root directory.

Many contemporary unii have standard packages that can install Boost and ICU. These are often sufficient for building scc. When using standard packages, it is not necessary to set the environment variables for those packages.

windows 10

To build from Visual Studio, navigate to recipe\tea, open the appropriate .sln, and build. I’ve built for Windows 8.1 / 10 using Visual Studios 2017 / 2019 / 2022 preview respectively. I’ve built successfully for x86 and x64; I am unable to test an ARM build.

openbsd / macos / centos

You will need CMake 3.11 or better. You may need to configure the environment variables noted above. For macOS, I used the standard xcode command line tools. In OpenBSD, I used the default version of clang; I usually had to build boost and ICU myself. Under Centos, I used gcc 8.3.1. Gcc is not the fastest for compilation.

From the home ssc directory:

cd recipe/tea
cmake .
make
ctest -V
make install

notes

If everything works correctly, then everything will be built, a series of tests run, with a final result at the very end saying no failures. Having said that, given SSC is pre–alpha, don’t be too surprised to see some warnings or some final test errors. I wouldn’t have made a release if I didn’t think it worked, so don’t be too concerned about any test failures on systems known to work.


source

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    boot notes

    Notes on folder names:


    copyright & licence

    
    SSC
    
    ssc, static site checker, https://ssc.lu/
    copyright (c) 2020,2021 dylan harris
    
    This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
    it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
    the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
    any later version.
    
    This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
    but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
    MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
    GNU General Public License for more details.
    
    You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
    License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
    Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
    
    
    W3
    
    Some test files come from w3.org (some directly, in W3 documents, etc.), and are licensed as follows:
    
    License
    
    By obtaining and/or copying this work, you (the licensee) agree that you have read, understood, and will comply with the following terms and conditions.
    
    Permission to copy, modify, and distribute this work, with or without modification, for any purpose and without fee or royalty is hereby granted, provided that you include the following on ALL copies of the work or portions thereof, including modifications:
    
        The full text of this NOTICE in a location viewable to users of the redistributed or derivative work.
        Any pre-existing intellectual property disclaimers, notices, or terms and conditions. If none exist, the W3C Software and Document Short Notice should be included.
        Notice of any changes or modifications, through a copyright statement on the new code or document such as "This software or document includes material copied from or derived from [title and URI of the W3C document]. Copyright © [YEAR] W3CÆ (MIT, ERCIM, Keio, Beihang)."
    
    Disclaimers
    
    THIS WORK IS PROVIDED "AS IS," AND COPYRIGHT HOLDERS MAKE NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR THAT THE USE OF THE SOFTWARE OR DOCUMENT WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY THIRD PARTY PATENTS, COPYRIGHTS, TRADEMARKS OR OTHER RIGHTS.
    
    COPYRIGHT HOLDERS WILL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF ANY USE OF THE SOFTWARE OR DOCUMENT.
    
    The name and trademarks of copyright holders may NOT be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to the work without specific, written prior permission. Title to copyright in this work will at all times remain with copyright holders.
    Notes
    
    This version: http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/2015/copyright-software-and-document
    
    Previous version: http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/2002/copyright-software-20021231
    
    This version makes clear that the license is applicable to both software and text, by changing the name and substituting "work" for instances of "software and its documentation." It moves "notice of changes or modifications to the files" to the copyright notice, to make clear that the license is compatible with other liberal licenses.
    
    
    WhatWG
    
    Some test files come from whatwg.org (some directly, in WhatWG documents, etc.), and are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. See https://whatwg.org/ for details.
    
    
    corruptpress.com
    
    Some test files are derived from pages at corruptpress.com. They are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Browse https://corruptpress.com/ for details.
    
    
    dylanharris.org
    
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