Help:Export/ru

Вики-страницы могут быть экспортированы в специальный XML формат для загрузки в другую Вики (если эта функция включена администратором на этой Вики) или использовать его в других целях, например, для анализа содержимого. См. также m:Syndication feeds для экспорта другой информации при просмотре веб-страниц и на загруженные страницы.

Как экспортировать страницы
Существует как минимум четыре способа экспорта страниц:


 * Вставьте название статьи в поле в Special:Export или использовать.
 * Резервное копирование скриптом dumpBackup.php для получения дампа всех страниц Вики в XML-файл. dumpBackup.php работает только на Медиавики 1.5 и выше. Вы должны иметь прямой доступ на сервер (например по SSH) для запуска этого скрипта (быть администратором сервера (а не вики)). Дампы проектов викимедиа регулярно становятся доступны в http://download.wikipedia.org.
 * Примечание: Вам может потребоваться настроить файл AdminSettings.php в для успешного запуска скрипта dumpBackup.php. См. MediaWiki для более детальной информации.
 * Существует OAI-PMH - интерфейс для выборки страниц, которые были изменены после определенного времени. Для проектов Викимедиа этот интерфейс не является общедоступным; см. . OAI-PMH содержит оболочку вокруг формата экспортируемых статей.
 * Используя Python Wikipedia Robot Framework. Это здесь не описано.

По умолчанию - включаются только текущие версии страниц. При желании вы можете получить все версии с указанием даты, времени, имени пользователя и отредактировать описание дампа. При необходимости будут также экспортированы последние версии всех шаблонов вызываемых напрямую или косвенно.

Дополнительно Вы можете скопировать базу данных SQL. Как делать дампы базы данных в версиях Медиавики менее чем 1.5, здесь не будет описанно.

Использование 'Special:Export'
To export all pages of a namespace, for example.

1. Get the names of pages to export
I feel an example is better because the description below feels quite unclear.


 * 1) Go to Special:Allpages and choose the desired article/file.
 * 2) Copy the list of page names to a text editor
 * 3) Put all page names on separate lines
 * 4) You can achieve that relatively quickly if you copy the part of the rendered page with the desired names, and paste this into say MS Word - use paste special as unformatted text - then open the replace function (CTRL+h), entering ^t in Find what, entering ^p in Replace with and then hitting Replace All button. (This relies on tabs between the page names; these are typically the result of the fact that the page names are inside td-tags in the html-source.)
 * 5) The text editor Vim also allows for a quick way to fix line breaks: after pasting the whole list, run the command :1,$s/\t/\r/g to replace all tabs by carriage returns and then :1,$s/^\n//g to remove every line containing only a newline character.
 * 6) Another approach is to copy the formated text into any editor exposing the html. Remove all   and   tags and replace all   tags to    and   tags to    the html will then be parsed into the needed format.
 * 7) If you have shell and mysql access to your server, you can use this script:

mysql -umike -pmikespassword -hlocalhost wikidbname select page_title from wiki_page where page_namespace=0 EOF

''Note, replace mike and mikespassword with your own. Also, this example shows tables with the prefix wiki_''


 * 1) Prefix the namespace to the page names (e.g. 'Help:Contents'), unless the selected namespace is the main namespace.
 * 2) Repeat the steps above for other namespaces (e.g. Category:, Template:, etc.)

A similar script for PostgreSQL databases looks like this:

$ psql -At -U wikiuser -h localhost wikidb -c "select page_title from mediawiki.page"

''Note, replace wikiuser with your own, the database will prompt you for a password. This example shows tables without the prefix wiki_ and with the namespace specified as part of the table name.''

Alternatively, a quick approach for those with access to a machine with Python installed:


 * 1) Go to Special:Allpages and choose the desired namespace.
 * 2) Save the entire webpage as index.php.htm. Some wikis may have more pages than will fit on one screen of AllPages; you will need to save each of those pages.
 * 3) Run export_all_helper.py in the same directory as the saved file. You may wish to pipe the output to a file; e.g.   to send it to a file named "main".
 * 4) Save the page names output by the script.

2. Perform the export
and finally...
 * Go to Special:Export and paste all your page names into the textbox, making sure there are no empty lines.
 * Click 'Submit query'
 * Save the resulting XML to a file using your browser's save facility.
 * Open the XML file in a text editor. Scroll to the bottom to check for error messages.

Now you can use this XML file to perform an import.

Exporting the full history
A checkbox in the Special:Export interface selects whether to export the full history (all versions of an article) or the most recent version of articles. A maximum of 100 revisions are returned; other revisions can be requested as detailed in.

Export format
The format of the XML file you receive is the same in all ways. It is codified in XML Schema at http://www.mediawiki.org/xml/export-0.10.xsd This format is not intended for viewing in a web browser. Some browsers show you pretty-printed XML with "+" and "-" links to view or hide selected parts. Alternatively the XML-source can be viewed using the "view source" feature of the browser, or after saving the XML file locally, with a program of choice. If you directly read the XML source it won't be difficult to find the actual wikitext. If you don't use a special XML editor "<" and ">" appear as &amp;lt; and &amp;gt;, to avoid a conflict with XML tags; to avoid ambiguity, "&amp;" is coded as "&amp;amp;".

In the current version the export format does not contain an XML replacement of wiki markup (see Wikipedia DTD for an older proposal). You only get the wikitext as you get when editing the article.

DTD
Here is an unofficial, short Document Type Definition version of the format. If you don't know what a DTD is just ignore it.

Processing XML export
There are undoubtedly many tools which can process the exported XML. If you process a large number of pages (for instance a whole dump) you probably won't be able to get the document in main memory so you will need a parser based on SAX or other event-driven methods.

You can also just use regular expressions to directly process parts of the XML code. This may be faster than other methods but not recommended because it's difficult to maintain.

Please list methods and tools for processing XML export here:


 * Parse::MediaWikiDump is a perl module for processing the XML dump file.
 * m:Processing MediaWiki XML with STX - Stream based XML transformation
 * The m:IBM History flow project can read it after applying a small Python program, export-historyflow-expand.py.

Details and practical advice
/mediawiki/siteinfo/namespaces/namespace
 * To determine the namespace of a page you have to match its title to the prefixes defined in
 * Possible restrictions are
 * sysop (protected pages)

Why to export
Why not just use a dynamic database download?

Suppose you are building a piece of software that at certain points displays information that came from wikipedia. If you want your program to display the information in a different way than can be seen in the live version, you'll probably need the wikicode that is used to enter it, instead of the finished html.

Also if you want to get all of the data, you'll probably want to transfer it in the most efficient way that's possible. The Wikimedia servers need to do quite a bit of work to convert the wikicode into html. That's time consuming both for you and for the Wikimedia servers, so simply spidering all pages is not the way to go.

To access any article in xml, one at a time, link to:

Special:Export/Title_of_the_article