Check for broken links in markup files. Currently html
and markdown
files are supported. The Markup Link Checker can easily be integrated in your CI pipeline to prevent broken links in your markup docs.
- Find and check links in
markdown
andhtml
files - Support HTML links and plain URLs in
markdown
files - Validated absolute and relative file paths and URLs
- User friendly command line interface
- Easy CI pipeline integration
- Very fast execution using async
- Efficient link resolving strategy which tries with minimized network load
- Throttle option to prevent 429 Too Many Requests errors
- Configure via config file
- Report broken links via GitHub workflow commands
There are different ways to install and use mlc.
Use rust's package manager cargo to install mlc from crates.io:
cargo install mlc
To download a compiled binary version of mlc go to github releases and download the binaries compiled for x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
and x86_64-apple-darwin
.
You can install from the official repositories using pacman:
pacman -S markuplinkchecker
Use mlc in GitHub using the GitHub-Action from the Marketplace.
- name: Markup Link Checker (mlc)
uses: becheran/[email protected]
Use mlc command line arguments using the with
argument:
- name: Markup Link Checker (mlc)
uses: becheran/[email protected]
with:
args: ./README.md
The action does uses GitHub workflow commands to highlight broken links:
To integrate mlc in your CI pipeline running in a linux x86_64 environment you can add the following commands to download the tool:
curl -L https://github.com/becheran/mlc/releases/download/v0.19.0/mlc-x86_64-linux -o mlc
chmod +x mlc
For example take a look at the ntest repo which uses mlc in the CI pipeline.
Use the mlc docker image from the docker hub which includes mlc.
Once you have mlc installed, it can be called from the command line. The following call will check all links in markup files found in the current folder and all subdirectories:
mlc
Another example is to call mlc on a certain directory or file:
mlc ./docs
Alternatively you may want to ignore all files currently ignored by git
(requires git
binary to be found on $PATH) and set a root-dir for relative links:
mlc --gitignore --root-dir .
Call mlc with the --help
flag to display all available cli arguments:
mlc -h
The following arguments are available:
Argument | Short | Description |
---|---|---|
<directory> |
Only positional argument. Path to directory which shall be checked with all sub-dirs. Can also be a specific filename which shall be checked. | |
--help |
-h |
Print help |
--debug |
-d |
Show verbose debug information |
--do-not-warn-for-redirect-to |
Do not warn for links which redirect to the given URL. Allows the same link format as --ignore-links . For example, --do-not-warn-for-redirect-to "http*://crates.io*" will not warn for links which redirect to the crates.io website. |
|
--offline |
-o |
Do not check any web links. Renamed from --no-web-links which is still an alias for downwards compatibility |
--match-file-extension |
-e |
Set the flag, if the file extension shall be checked as well. For example the following markup link [link](dir/file) matches if for example a file called file.md exists in dir , but would fail when the --match-file-extension flag is set. |
--version |
-V |
Print current version of mlc |
--ignore-path |
-p |
Comma separated list of directories or files which shall be ignored. For example |
--gitignore |
-g |
Ignore all files currently ignored by git (requires git binary to be available on $PATH). |
--gituntracked |
-u |
Ignore all files currently untracked by git (requires git binary to be available on $PATH). |
--ignore-links |
-i |
Comma separated list of links which shall be ignored. Use simple ? and * wildcards. For example --ignore-links "http*://crates.io*" will skip all links to the crates.io website. See the used lib for more information. |
--markup-types |
-t |
Comma separated list list of markup types which shall be checked [possible values: md, html] |
--root-dir |
-r |
All links to the file system starting with a slash on linux or backslash on windows will use another virtual root dir. For example the link in a file [link](/dir/other/file.md) checked with the cli arg --root-dir /env/another/dir will let mlc check the existence of /env/another/dir/dir/other/file.md . |
--throttle |
-T |
Number of milliseconds to wait in between web requests to the same host. Default is zero which means no throttling. Set this if you need to slow down the web request frequency to avoid 429 - Too Many Requests responses. For example with --throttle 15 , between each http check to the same host, 15 ms will be waited. Note that this setting can slow down the link checker. |
All optional arguments which can be passed via the command line can also be configured via the .mlc.toml
config file in the working dir where mlc is started:
# Print debug information to console
debug = true
# Do not warn for links which redirect to the given URL
do-not-warn-for-redirect-to=["http*://crates.io*"]
# Do not check web links
offline = true
# Check the exact file extension when searching for a file
match-file-extension= true
# List of files and directories which will be ignored
ignore-path=["./ignore-me","./src"]
# Ignore all files ignored by git
gitignore = true
# List of links which will be ignored
ignore-links=["http://ignore-me.de/*","http://*.ignoresub-domain/*"]
# List of markup types which shall be checked
markup-types=["Markdown","Html"]
# Wait time in milliseconds between http request to the same host
throttle= 100
# Path to the root folder used to resolve all relative paths
root-dir="./"
Checkout the changelog file to see the changes between different versions.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for more details.