Demos: [ Instal PWA on Desktop ] [ Install and use: Android ] [ Install and use: Firefox Android ] [ Picking a folder of archives ] [ File handling (desktop) ] [ Demo all OPFS features ] [ Adding app to Edge sidebar ]
Kiwix is an offline browser for Wikipedia, Project Gutenberg, TED Talks, Wikivoyage, Stackexchange, and many other sites and resources. It makes knowledge available, in many different languages, to people with limited or no Internet access. The software and the content are free for anyone to use. Get the app and download your choice of offline content (ZIM archives, which can be downloaded free in-app). There are hundreds of multilingual archives to choose from, on many different topics and subjects. Build a whole digital library of offline knowledge!
Part of the Kiwix family, this app is available either as an offline-capable, installable Progressive Web App (PWA), for almost all modern browsers and devices, or else as app packages for various Windows and Linux operating systems: see Kiwix JS for Windows and Linux. For Mac and iOS, use the offline PWA.
We also have packaged apps of WikiMed by Kiwix (a complete medical encyclopaedia), and Wikivoyage by Kiwix (a complete travel guide) in English -- no extra download needed! (You can, however, download other languages in these apps.)
If you are using Windows 10 or 11, then all three apps are conveniently available in the Microsoft Store: Kiwix JS UWP, WikiMed by Kiwix, and Wikivoyage by Kiwix. They will automatically update when a new package is available. If you are using Linux, then the Electron AppImage package of Kiwix JS also (optionally) self-updates, as does the installable Windows Electron package. Other apps will notify you when an update is available.
Don't like stores or packages? We've got you covered! Launch this app instantly by opening the installable, offline-capable PWA (Progressive Web App) in your browser right now at pwa.kiwix.org. This works in any browser that supports Service Workers: modern Chrome, Edge, Firefox and Safari (note that on iOS devices, you must use Safari because Apple bans the use of Service Workers in any other browser on i-devices).
Get a free ZIM archive to use with the PWA from the Configuration page of the app, or you can preview a ZIM at library.kiwix.org before you download one. Once installed, bookmarked or added to your home screen, the PWA works even when your device is fully offline! Take a look at our demo that shows how quick and easy it is to install the PWA.
If you want it with images, then please be aware that it's a big download: the English version is around 97 Gigabytes! We recommend you try it out first with one of the themed, much smaller, archives, like Astronomy, Chemistry, Maths, Physics, etc. In-app, you'll find a handy dropdown that allows you to choose your language and your theme, and then download it. The archive will download in your browser.
If you really want full English Wikipedia with images, then we strongly recommend you use the open-source app qBittorrent to download it on a PC with plenty of disk space. First install qBittorrent. Then, when you select a large archive for download in the app, it will provide you with a torrent link. Click the link and allow your browser to download and open the torrent file. This small file will open in qBittorrent and you'll be asked where you want to save the archive you want to download. It's much easier than it sounds!
Zimit is a service that allows any Web site to be archived as a ZIM, although there are lots of exciting pre-crawled Zimit-based ZIMs for you to use (see below). If you want to make your own, try it out at https://youzim.it/. The Kiwix JS PWA and Electron apps have full support for Zimit-based archives as of v.2.8.5 using the open-source Replay Web Archive reader, and already support the forthcoming Zimit v2 format. Please note that most Zimit archives will require ServiceWorker mode, due to their highly dynamic content.
The Kiwix download library (available in-app) publishes a number of fantastically useful refernce sites in the Zimit file format, such as the Ready.Gov disaster preparedness site, the fascinating Low-Tech magazine, the CIA World Factbook, the Harmony Project library of sheet music, and the Internet Encyclopaedia of Philosophy -- amongst many others. Just open the Zimit directory in the in-app library.
We pride ourselves in maintaining support for old browsers and platforms, given that an important target audience for this app consists of users in the developing world who may only have access to old devices with outdated software. We test the app frequently on older browsers and operating systems. The app will usually detect which features don't work on a given browser, and disable them or work around them. However, in some cases (e.g. Firefox <= 59), the app will set itself to Service Worker mode, but this mode will silently fail. If affected, please try switching the app to Restricted mode (see Content injection mode in Configuration).
-
As a Progressive Web App (PWA) on Linux, Windows, Android, iOS, macOS:
- Google Chrome / Chromium >= 59 (and many browsers based on Chromium, e.g. Opera, Samsung Internet)
- Microsoft Edge (Chromium) >= 79
- Mozilla Firefox >= 68 (but see note about Android
*
) - Apple Safari >= 11.3 for iOS and macOS (full-text search only works on iOS 15+)
- Microsoft Edge Legacy 18 (Windows only)
-
As an application implemented with the following frameworks:
- Electron >= 1.8.0 (Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, OpenSUSE, AppImage, Windows): GitHub release
- Universal Windows Platform (UWP) >=10.0.10240: Microsoft Store app or GitHub release - Windows 10/11 (Electron), Windows on ARM, Xbox, Windows 10 Mobile
- NWJS >= 0.23.0 (Windows 7/8/10/11): GitHub release
- NWJS 0.14.7 (Windows XP/Vista only): GitHub release
*
With Firefox on Android, the app is only useable with files stored in the Origin Private File System. There is a Firefox bug whereby the browser
attempts to read the entire ZIM archive into memory if opening it from the user-visible file system.
Although deprecated, we will keep support for as long as is practical:
- Internet Explorer 11 (Restricted mode only, no offline use of PWA)
- Edge Legacy <= 17 (Restricted mode only, no offline use of PWA)
- Firefox 45-67 (some versions require the user to switch manually to Restricted mode, and some are unable to display WebP images)
- Chromium 49-58 (some versions only run in Restricted mode)
Please use this repository's issue tracker to report any bugs you have found with the software. Open a new ticket (after checking that the issue you identified doesn't have a ticket already). Please state clearly the version number you are using (at the top of the Configuration page in the app), and which browser or platform you are using.
If you are having difficulties with the software, or would like to see a new feature, please also open a ticket. Alternatively, see the Feedback section on the About page in the app for other ways of getting technical support for your issue. Feel free to get in contact (see About page of app) if you would just like to provide feedback, or leave a review if you obtained the app from a Store. If you like the app, please star this Repostiory (see top)!
This repository is for development of the Kiwix JS app for PWA, Electron, NWJS and Windows 10/11 Universal Windows Platform (UWP). The latest code is usually on the main branch, but this is used for active development and may be several commits ahead of releases. Installable and portable versions for Windows (XP/Vista/7/8/10/11) and Linux (32bit and 64bit) are available from releases. Unstable nightly builds of the Electron and NWJS apps are available together with a development deployment, but code may be buggy and change rapidly. Additionally, nightly Windows binaries are unsigned.
The code is based on Kiwix JS, a lightweight HTML/JavaScript port of the Kiwix Offline reader. Significant development has gone into packaging this app for various frameworks, and to add some features which are often backported upstream. The PWA can be installed as a fully integrated system app if opened in a modern Chromium browser, and it uses the File System Access API and the File Handling API for a native-like experience in browsers supporting those APIs. For more info about these APIs, see the bottom of this page: File System Access API and File Handling.
The apps are also available in the WinGet Package Manager. You can sideload the UWP version (in Windows 10/11) by opening a Command
Prompt or PowerShell terminal and typing winget install kiwix.kiwixjs
(this version will not auto-update, but it will let you know when
a new update is ready to install). Alternative sideloading instructions are available in the
release notes. The Electron version can be installed with
winget install kiwix.kiwixjs.electron
, or else by downloading a package from
Releases. For testing, the Store, Electron and NWJS versions come packaged with a
mini archive of the top 100 Wikipedia articles (without images and with only the lede paragraph).
Some ZIM archives are very large indeed, so the underlyin limits of the File System can be a consideration. For most storage types (including microSD cards) that are formatted as exFAT or NTFS, you can store even these very large files in the storage with no problem. However, if you plan to store your ZIM file on an SD card formatted as FAT32, and you wish to use an archive larger than 4GB, then you will need to split the ZIM: see file splitting instructions.
A lot of development for this app happens upstream in the Kiwix JS repository to which I ontribute actively. Without Kiwix JS, this app would be impossible, and huge thanks goes to the original developers of first the Evopedia app and then Kiwix HTML5, which eventually became Kiwix JS. The port and further development of Kiwix JS PWA and other apps is by Geoffrey Kantaris. I can be contacted by email: egk10 at cam ac uk.
If you have coding experience and are interested in contributing to this project, we suggest you start by contributing to the upstream Kiwix JS repository, as much of the code contributed there is subsequently ported to this repository. Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for details. If you wish to contribute to a specific Kiwix JS PWA feature, then please open an issue on this repository explaining the feature or other code you aim to contribute and how you propose this should be done. You should be comfortable creating PRs and have good knowledge of JavaScript. Follow the same contributing guidelines as for Kiwix JS.
We have now transitioned this app to ES6 code, which is transpiled by rollup.js and Babel to code that is compatible with older browsers. Brief instructions:
- Clone this repo and run
npm install
to get the Node dependencies; - To serve the app with Vite.js, which includes Hot Module Replacement, run
npm run serve
; - You MUST turn on the option to Bypass the app cache in Configuration under Troubleshooting and development. If the app loads in a disordered way, you should still be able to access this setting so long as the app is in ServiceWorker mode (if it isn't turn it on under Content injection mode). Refresh the app with Ctrl-R;
- Vite will watch for changes and will refresh the app when you make any and save them;
- To preview the bundled version of the app, run
npm run preview
, and Vite will build the app and open a browser window to view the bundled version; - To fully build the app, run
npm run build
. The built app will be saved to a directory calleddist
in your cloned repo; - To run the app in the Electron framework, you can use
npm start
. This will run the unbundled app in the Electron version specified inpackage.json
. See various scripts to build the bundled version of the app for Electron inpackage.json
(you can only build it for the OS you are currently on, though the Linux app can be built on Windows with WSL).
If you like this project and would like to contribute financially towards keeping it running, you can make one-off or regular donations on the Kiwix Support page. Donations help pay for servers, coding certificates, maintenance, etc. If you would like to contribute time and expertise rather than money, and you have good knowledge of a foreign language, you can help with translations of Kiwix projects. Alternatively, you can help improve Wikimedia projects by making edits or corrections to Wikipedia or Wikivoyage articles.
This Privacy Policy applies to the Kiwix JS Progressive Web App and versions of it packaged for the Electron, NWJS and UWP frameworks that are published on Kiwix servers, and by official Kiwix accounts on GitHub and other third-party vendor stores ("app stores").
When installed, this application is capable of working entirely offline. It does not collect or record any of your personal data, though if you installed it from a Store, the Store operator may collect anonymous usage data (see below). The app only remembers your browsing history for the duration of a session (for the purpose of returning to previously viewed pages). This history is lost on exiting the app with the optional exception of the last-visited page.
If you access this application from a secure web server (e.g. the PWA server), it will only work offline if your browser is capable of installing a Service Worker. If you install or bookmark the PWA version in Service Worker mode, then it will work offline, but note that by design any PWA will periodically check the PWA server (in this case, https://pwa.kiwix.org/), if it is available, to check for an updated Service Worker.
Versions of the app that are not installed via a Store or that are not PWAs, will offer to check the GitHub Releases API for updates on startup, but this functionality is optional and can be kept off. Some Electron apps will also optionally self-update (via the same API), if you allow them to check for updates. This applies to the installer (setup) version for Windows, and to the AppImage version for Linux. The Store version and the PWA also self-update, but this is not controllable within the app.
By default, this application will remember your last-visited page between sessions using local stoarage or a cookie that is accessible only on this device. If you are accessing sensitive information that you do not wish to be displayed next time you open this app, we recommend that you turn this option off in the Configuration options.
This application only reads the archive files that you explicitly select on your device and files included in its own package: it is not capable of reading any other files. It will only access the Kiwix archive download server if you specifically request it to access the download library for ZIM archives on the Configuration page. If you run the app as a PWA, it will cache its own code from the secure PWA server and then can be used offline. Some ZIM archives contain active content (scripts) which may, in rare circumstances, attempt to contact external servers for incidental files such as fonts. We block these with a Content Security Policy injected into articles, but in some cases, if the article already has a CSP, ours may be overwritten. Note that scripts only run if you enable Service Worker mode in Configuration.
If you believe your Internet access is insecure, or is being observed or censored, we recommend that you completely shut down your Internet access (Data or WiFi) before using the application.
Additionally, if you obtained this app from a vendor store (including extensions), then the Store operator may track your usage of the app (e.g. download, install, uninstall, date and number/duration of sessions) for the purpose of providing anonymous, aggregate usage statistics to developers. If this concerns you, you should check the relevant Store Privacy Policy for further information.
Builds of this app are available that do not use a Store or an online Service Worker. Please see:
- Releases
- NWJS version - this version is completely standalone and will never access servers unless you allow it to.