- Introduction
- Presentation
- TL;DR
- Viewing the Presentation in Chromium (and WebKit) Browsers
- Creation of Polyglot Files with SingleFile
- Known Issues
- Thank You
Imagine a digital chameleon: a file that combines ZIP, HTML, and PNG into one versatile format. It can be displayed as a web page, unzipped to obtain all the page's resources, or viewed as an image.
Discover an innovative approach to sharing and storing web content, and learn how to create these polyglot files in JavaScript!
You can view the web presentation in:
Press F1
during the presentation to see the keyboard shortcuts.
- download file: demo.png.zip.html
- view page: demo.png.zip.html
This file and the presentation files are compatible with:
- HTML (displays the extracted page in no-quirks mode)
- ZIP (contains the displayed page and its resources) - rename the file to
.zip
and view it with ZIP Manager - PNG - rename the file to
.png
and view it with PNG file chunk inpector
If you are intrigued or more curious, you can also view it with HexEd.it.
The presentation explains how to generate this file and the technical challenges involved.
The image displayed at the center of the page demo.png.zip.html is the page itself, but interpreted as a PNG file (cf. the <img src="#" ...>
tag).
You should install the extension from the zip file located in util/web-extension in order to add the support of file://
URIs in the Fetch API and run the first examples from the presentation.
Alternatively, you can view the examples via an HTTP server.
This issue is addressed in the subsequent examples of the presentation.
- from the browser
Install SingleFile, select in the options page File format > format > self-extracting ZIP (universal)
and enable File format > format > embed image
.
- from the command line interface
Install single-file-cli
from NPM and run single-file
as shown below.
npm install single-file-cli
npx single-file \
--compress-content \
--self-extracting-archive \
--embedded-image=./image.png \
--dump-content \
https://www.example.com > output.png.zip.html
- A bug in "Archive Utility" on macOS prevents it from decompressing the resulting file. You can use
unzip
to get around this issue. - The HTML page cannot be viewed when opened from the filesystem on iOS because the page is displayed by default in a viewer which does not support JavaScript. Installing a third-party browser can help you get around this problem.
- Depending on the browser you're using, the presentation may be a little slow.
This presentation is dedicated to my biggest supporter on this project. Many thanks @ljonathanl, we miss your enthusiasm and creativity.