Either way, it will prompt you for your Livejournal username and password,
then download all your journal entries, comments, and userpics.
+You may optionally download entries from a different journal (a community)
+where you are a member. If you are a community maintainer, you can also
+download comments from the community.
+
If you want to save your username and password so you don't have to type
it every time you run ljdump, you can save it in the configuration file.
password - The account password. This password is never sent in the
clear; the livejournal "challenge" password mechanism is used.
+ journal - Optional: The journal to download entries from. If this is
+ not specified, the "username" journal is downloaded. If this
+ is specified, then only the named journals will be downloaded
+ (this element may be specified more than once to download
+ multiple journals).
+
This program may be run as often as needed to bring the backup copy up
to date. Both new and updated items are downloaded.
The community http://ljdump.livejournal.com has been set up for questions
or comments.
+
+-----
+
+convertdump - convert ljdump format to wordpress importer format
+Contributed by Sean M. Graham (www.sean-graham.com) and others
+
+This will convert a pydump archive into something compatible with the
+WordPress LiveJournal importer. This is the same format used by the Windows
+ljArchive exporter.
+
+Arguments:
+ -u --user username of archive to process [required]
+ -l --limit limit the number of entries in each xml file (default 250)
+ -i --insecure include private and protected entries in the output
+ -h --help show this help page
+
+Example:
+ ./convertdump.py --user stevemartin --limit 200 --insecure