Kiwix is an offline Wikipedia viewer. See the official site: https://www.kiwix.org/
This is a browser extension developed in HTML5/Javascript.
You can search among the article titles, and read any of them without any Internet access. All the content of Wikipedia is inside your device (including the images). It might also work with other content in the OpenZIM format: https://wiki.openzim.org/wiki/OpenZIM , but has been only tested on the Mediawiki-based (Wikipedia, Wikivoyage, etc) and StackExchange ZIM files.
If your Internet access is expensive/rare/slow/unreliable/watched/censored, you still can browse this amazing repository of knowledge and culture.
It uses ZIM files that you can download from https://download.kiwix.org/
You have to download them separately, store them in your filesystem, and manually select them after starting the application. It is unfortunately not technically possible to "remember" the selected ZIM file and open it automatically (the browsers refuse that for security reasons).
Technically, after reading an article from a ZIM file, there is a need to "inject" the dependencies (images, css, etc). For compatibility reasons, there are several ways to do it :
- the "jQuery" mode parses the DOM to find the HTML tags of these dependencies and modifies them to put the Base64 content in it. It is compatible with any browser. It works well on Mediawiki-based content but can miss some dependencies on some contents
- the "ServiceWorker" mode uses a Service Worker to catch any HTTP request the page would send and reply with content read from the ZIM file. It is a generic and much cleaner way than jQuery mode, but it does not work on all browsers. And ServiceWorkers are currently disabled by Mozilla in Firefox extensions.
This is written in HTML/javascript so it should work on many recent browser engines.
- Mozilla Firefox >=45 (as an extension : https://addons.mozilla.org/fr/firefox/addon/kiwix-offline/)
- Google Chrome (or Chromium) >=58 (as an extension : https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/kiwix/donaljnlmapmngakoipdmehbfcioahhk)
- Firefox OS >=1.2 (needs to be installed manually on the device with WebIDE)
- Microsoft Edge >=40 (needs to run a local copy of the source code)
- Windows Mobile >=10 (as a UWP application : see https://github.com/kiwix/kiwix-js-windows/)
- Ubuntu Touch (as an application : https://open.uappexplorer.com/app/kiwix)
These platforms are not officially supported but are currently working. We'll try to keep compatibility as long as it's not too complicated :
- Microsoft Internet Explorer 11
This application is released under the GPL v3 license. See http://www.gnu.org/licenses/ or the included LICENSE-GPLv3.txt file The source code can be found at https://github.com/kiwix/kiwix-js
Unit tests can be run by opening tests.html file on Firefox or Edge (or Chromium/Chrome with some tweaks).
The browser extensions are distributed through the stores of each vendor (see links above). But the packages are also saved in https://download.kiwix.org/release/browsers/ if necessary.
Some nightly builds are generated, and should only be used for testing purpose: https://download.kiwix.org/nightly/
The first versions of this application were originally part of the Evopedia project: http://www.evopedia.info (now discontinued). There was a "articles nearby" feature, that was able to find articles around your location. It has been deleted from the source code with everything related to Evopedia (but still in git history in versions<=2.0.0) These first versions were targeting Firefox OS (now discontinued too: we're not lucky ;-) ). Some Phonegap/Cordova port was started but never finished (see in git history in versions<=2.0.0).
See CHANGELOG.md for the detail of previous versions.