Files correlati : Commento : Spostamento in libraries delle librerie esterne di Campo per una maggiore pulizia e organizzazione git-svn-id: svn://10.65.10.50/branches/R_10_00@24150 c028cbd2-c16b-5b4b-a496-9718f37d4682
		
			
				
	
	
		
			2859 lines
		
	
	
		
			120 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			2859 lines
		
	
	
		
			120 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
| .\" **************************************************************************
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| .\" *                                  _   _ ____  _
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| .\" *  Project                     ___| | | |  _ \| |
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| .\" *                             / __| | | | |_) | |
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| .\" *                            | (__| |_| |  _ <| |___
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| .\" *                             \___|\___/|_| \_\_____|
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| .\" *
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| .\" * Copyright (C) 1998 - 2017, Daniel Stenberg, <daniel@haxx.se>, et al.
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| .\" *
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| .\" * This software is licensed as described in the file COPYING, which
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| .\" * you should have received as part of this distribution. The terms
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| .\" * are also available at https://curl.haxx.se/docs/copyright.html.
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| .\" *
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| .\" * You may opt to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute and/or sell
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| .\" * copies of the Software, and permit persons to whom the Software is
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| .\" * furnished to do so, under the terms of the COPYING file.
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| .\" *
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| .\" * This software is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
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| .\" * KIND, either express or implied.
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| .\" *
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| .\" **************************************************************************
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| .\"
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| .\" DO NOT EDIT. Generated by the curl project gen.pl man page generator.
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| .\"
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| .TH curl 1 "November 16, 2016" "Curl 7.56.0" "Curl Manual"
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| 
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| .SH NAME
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| curl \- transfer a URL
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| .SH SYNOPSIS
 | |
| .B curl [options]
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| .I [URL...]
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| .SH DESCRIPTION
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| .B curl
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| is a tool to transfer data from or to a server, using one of the supported
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| protocols (DICT, FILE, FTP, FTPS, GOPHER, HTTP, HTTPS, IMAP, IMAPS, LDAP,
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| LDAPS, POP3, POP3S, RTMP, RTSP, SCP, SFTP, SMB, SMBS, SMTP, SMTPS, TELNET
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| and TFTP). The command is designed to work without user interaction.
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| 
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| curl offers a busload of useful tricks like proxy support, user
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| authentication, FTP upload, HTTP post, SSL connections, cookies, file transfer
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| resume, Metalink, and more. As you will see below, the number of features will
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| make your head spin!
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| 
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| curl is powered by libcurl for all transfer-related features. See
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| \fIlibcurl(3)\fP for details.
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| .SH URL
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| The URL syntax is protocol-dependent. You'll find a detailed description in
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| RFC 3986.
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| 
 | |
| You can specify multiple URLs or parts of URLs by writing part sets within
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| braces as in:
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| 
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|   http://site.{one,two,three}.com
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| 
 | |
| or you can get sequences of alphanumeric series by using [] as in:
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| 
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|   ftp://ftp.example.com/file[1-100].txt
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| 
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|   ftp://ftp.example.com/file[001-100].txt    (with leading zeros)
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| 
 | |
|   ftp://ftp.example.com/file[a-z].txt
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| 
 | |
| Nested sequences are not supported, but you can use several ones next to each
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| other:
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| 
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|   http://example.com/archive[1996-1999]/vol[1-4]/part{a,b,c}.html
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| 
 | |
| You can specify any amount of URLs on the command line. They will be fetched
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| in a sequential manner in the specified order.
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| 
 | |
| You can specify a step counter for the ranges to get every Nth number or
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| letter:
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| 
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|   http://example.com/file[1-100:10].txt
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| 
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|   http://example.com/file[a-z:2].txt
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| 
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| When using [] or {} sequences when invoked from a command line prompt, you
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| probably have to put the full URL within double quotes to avoid the shell from
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| interfering with it. This also goes for other characters treated special, like
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| for example '&', '?' and '*'.
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| 
 | |
| Provide the IPv6 zone index in the URL with an escaped percentage sign and the
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| interface name. Like in
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| 
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|   http://[fe80::3%25eth0]/
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| 
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| If you specify URL without protocol:// prefix, curl will attempt to guess what
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| protocol you might want. It will then default to HTTP but try other protocols
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| based on often-used host name prefixes. For example, for host names starting
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| with "ftp." curl will assume you want to speak FTP.
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| 
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| curl will do its best to use what you pass to it as a URL. It is not trying to
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| validate it as a syntactically correct URL by any means but is instead
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| \fBvery\fP liberal with what it accepts.
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| 
 | |
| curl will attempt to re-use connections for multiple file transfers, so that
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| getting many files from the same server will not do multiple connects /
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| handshakes. This improves speed. Of course this is only done on files
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| specified on a single command line and cannot be used between separate curl
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| invokes.
 | |
| .SH "PROGRESS METER"
 | |
| curl normally displays a progress meter during operations, indicating the
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| amount of transferred data, transfer speeds and estimated time left, etc. The
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| progress meter displays number of bytes and the speeds are in bytes per
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| second. The suffixes (k, M, G, T, P) are 1024 based. For example 1k is 1024
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| bytes. 1M is 1048576 bytes.
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| 
 | |
| curl displays this data to the terminal by default, so if you invoke curl to
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| do an operation and it is about to write data to the terminal, it
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| \fIdisables\fP the progress meter as otherwise it would mess up the output
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| mixing progress meter and response data.
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| 
 | |
| If you want a progress meter for HTTP POST or PUT requests, you need to
 | |
| redirect the response output to a file, using shell redirect (>), \fI-o, --output\fP or
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| similar.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It is not the same case for FTP upload as that operation does not spit out
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| any response data to the terminal.
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| 
 | |
| If you prefer a progress "bar" instead of the regular meter, \fI-#, --progress-bar\fP is
 | |
| your friend. You can also disable the progress meter completely with the
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| \fI-s, --silent\fP option.
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| .SH OPTIONS
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| Options start with one or two dashes. Many of the options require an
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| additional value next to them.
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| 
 | |
| The short "single-dash" form of the options, -d for example, may be used with
 | |
| or without a space between it and its value, although a space is a recommended
 | |
| separator. The long "double-dash" form, \fI-d, --data\fP for example, requires a space
 | |
| between it and its value.
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| 
 | |
| Short version options that don't need any additional values can be used
 | |
| immediately next to each other, like for example you can specify all the
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| options -O, -L and -v at once as -OLv.
 | |
| 
 | |
| In general, all boolean options are enabled with --\fBoption\fP and yet again
 | |
| disabled with --\fBno-\fPoption. That is, you use the exact same option name
 | |
| but prefix it with "no-". However, in this list we mostly only list and show
 | |
| the --option version of them. (This concept with --no options was added in
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| 7.19.0. Previously most options were toggled on/off on repeated use of the
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| same command line option.)
 | |
| .IP "--abstract-unix-socket <path>"
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| (HTTP) Connect through an abstract Unix domain socket, instead of using the network.
 | |
| Note: netstat shows the path of an abstract socket prefixed with '@', however
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| the <path> argument should not have this leading character.
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| 
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| Added in 7.53.0.
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| .IP "--anyauth"
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| (HTTP) Tells curl to figure out authentication method by itself, and use the most
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| secure one the remote site claims to support. This is done by first doing a
 | |
| request and checking the response-headers, thus possibly inducing an extra
 | |
| network round-trip. This is used instead of setting a specific authentication
 | |
| method, which you can do with \fI--basic\fP, \fI--digest\fP, \fI--ntlm\fP, and \fI--negotiate\fP.
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| 
 | |
| Using \fI--anyauth\fP is not recommended if you do uploads from stdin, since it may
 | |
| require data to be sent twice and then the client must be able to rewind. If
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| the need should arise when uploading from stdin, the upload operation will
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| fail.
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| 
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| Used together with \fI-u, --user\fP.
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| 
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| See also \fI--proxy-anyauth\fP and \fI--basic\fP and \fI--digest\fP.
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| .IP "-a, --append"
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| (FTP SFTP) When used in an upload, this makes curl append to the target file instead of
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| overwriting it. If the remote file doesn't exist, it will be created.  Note
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| that this flag is ignored by some SFTP servers (including OpenSSH).
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| .IP "--basic"
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| (HTTP) Tells curl to use HTTP Basic authentication with the remote host. This is the
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| default and this option is usually pointless, unless you use it to override a
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| previously set option that sets a different authentication method (such as
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| \fI--ntlm\fP, \fI--digest\fP, or \fI--negotiate\fP).
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| 
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| Used together with \fI-u, --user\fP.
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| 
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| See also \fI--proxy-basic\fP.
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| .IP "--cacert <file>"
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| (TLS) Tells curl to use the specified certificate file to verify the peer. The file
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| may contain multiple CA certificates. The certificate(s) must be in PEM
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| format. Normally curl is built to use a default file for this, so this option
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| is typically used to alter that default file.
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| 
 | |
| curl recognizes the environment variable named 'CURL_CA_BUNDLE' if it is
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| set, and uses the given path as a path to a CA cert bundle. This option
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| overrides that variable.
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| 
 | |
| The windows version of curl will automatically look for a CA certs file named
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| \'curl-ca-bundle.crt\', either in the same directory as curl.exe, or in the
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| Current Working Directory, or in any folder along your PATH.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If curl is built against the NSS SSL library, the NSS PEM PKCS#11 module
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| (libnsspem.so) needs to be available for this option to work properly.
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| 
 | |
| (iOS and macOS only) If curl is built against Secure Transport, then this
 | |
| option is supported for backward compatibility with other SSL engines, but it
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| should not be set. If the option is not set, then curl will use the
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| certificates in the system and user Keychain to verify the peer, which is the
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| preferred method of verifying the peer's certificate chain.
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| 
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| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
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| .IP "--capath <dir>"
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| (TLS) Tells curl to use the specified certificate directory to verify the
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| peer. Multiple paths can be provided by separating them with ":" (e.g.
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| \&"path1:path2:path3"). The certificates must be in PEM format, and if curl is
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| built against OpenSSL, the directory must have been processed using the
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| c_rehash utility supplied with OpenSSL. Using \fI--capath\fP can allow
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| OpenSSL-powered curl to make SSL-connections much more efficiently than using
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| \fI--cacert\fP if the --cacert file contains many CA certificates.
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| 
 | |
| If this option is set, the default capath value will be ignored, and if it is
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| used several times, the last one will be used.
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| .IP "--cert-status"
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| (TLS) Tells curl to verify the status of the server certificate by using the
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| Certificate Status Request (aka. OCSP stapling) TLS extension.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is enabled and the server sends an invalid (e.g. expired)
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| response, if the response suggests that the server certificate has been revoked,
 | |
| or no response at all is received, the verification fails.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This is currently only implemented in the OpenSSL, GnuTLS and NSS backends.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.41.0.
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| .IP "--cert-type <type>"
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| (TLS) Tells curl what certificate type the provided certificate is in. PEM, DER and
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| ENG are recognized types.  If not specified, PEM is assumed.
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| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-E, --cert\fP and \fI--key\fP and \fI--key-type\fP.
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| .IP "-E, --cert <certificate[:password]>"
 | |
| (TLS) Tells curl to use the specified client certificate file when getting a file
 | |
| with HTTPS, FTPS or another SSL-based protocol. The certificate must be in
 | |
| PKCS#12 format if using Secure Transport, or PEM format if using any other
 | |
| engine.  If the optional password isn't specified, it will be queried for on
 | |
| the terminal. Note that this option assumes a \&"certificate" file that is the
 | |
| private key and the client certificate concatenated! See \fI-E, --cert\fP and \fI--key\fP to
 | |
| specify them independently.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If curl is built against the NSS SSL library then this option can tell
 | |
| curl the nickname of the certificate to use within the NSS database defined
 | |
| by the environment variable SSL_DIR (or by default /etc/pki/nssdb). If the
 | |
| NSS PEM PKCS#11 module (libnsspem.so) is available then PEM files may be
 | |
| loaded. If you want to use a file from the current directory, please precede
 | |
| it with "./" prefix, in order to avoid confusion with a nickname.  If the
 | |
| nickname contains ":", it needs to be preceded by "\\" so that it is not
 | |
| recognized as password delimiter.  If the nickname contains "\\", it needs to
 | |
| be escaped as "\\\\" so that it is not recognized as an escape character.
 | |
| 
 | |
| (iOS and macOS only) If curl is built against Secure Transport, then the
 | |
| certificate string can either be the name of a certificate/private key in the
 | |
| system or user keychain, or the path to a PKCS#12-encoded certificate and
 | |
| private key. If you want to use a file from the current directory, please
 | |
| precede it with "./" prefix, in order to avoid confusion with a nickname.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--cert-type\fP and \fI--key\fP and \fI--key-type\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--ciphers <list of ciphers>"
 | |
| (TLS) Specifies which ciphers to use in the connection. The list of ciphers must
 | |
| specify valid ciphers. Read up on SSL cipher list details on this URL:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  https://curl.haxx.se/docs/ssl-ciphers.html
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "--compressed-ssh"
 | |
| (SCP SFTP) Enables built-in SSH compression.
 | |
| This is a request, not an order; the server may or may not do it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.56.0.
 | |
| .IP "--compressed"
 | |
| (HTTP) Request a compressed response using one of the algorithms curl supports, and
 | |
| save the uncompressed document.  If this option is used and the server sends
 | |
| an unsupported encoding, curl will report an error.
 | |
| .IP "-K, --config <file>"
 | |
| 
 | |
| Specify a text file to read curl arguments from. The command line arguments
 | |
| found in the text file will be used as if they were provided on the command
 | |
| line.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Options and their parameters must be specified on the same line in the file,
 | |
| separated by whitespace, colon, or the equals sign. Long option names can
 | |
| optionally be given in the config file without the initial double dashes and
 | |
| if so, the colon or equals characters can be used as separators. If the option
 | |
| is specified with one or two dashes, there can be no colon or equals character
 | |
| between the option and its parameter.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the parameter is to contain whitespace, the parameter must be enclosed
 | |
| within quotes. Within double quotes, the following escape sequences are
 | |
| available: \\\\, \\", \\t, \\n, \\r and \\v. A backslash preceding any other
 | |
| letter is ignored. If the first column of a config line is a '#' character,
 | |
| the rest of the line will be treated as a comment. Only write one option per
 | |
| physical line in the config file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Specify the filename to \fI-K, --config\fP as '-' to make curl read the file from stdin.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that to be able to specify a URL in the config file, you need to specify
 | |
| it using the \fI--url\fP option, and not by simply writing the URL on its own
 | |
| line. So, it could look similar to this:
 | |
| 
 | |
| url = "https://curl.haxx.se/docs/"
 | |
| 
 | |
| When curl is invoked, it (unless \fI-q, --disable\fP is used) checks for a default
 | |
| config file and uses it if found. The default config file is checked for in
 | |
| the following places in this order:
 | |
| 
 | |
| 1) curl tries to find the "home dir": It first checks for the CURL_HOME and
 | |
| then the HOME environment variables. Failing that, it uses getpwuid() on
 | |
| Unix-like systems (which returns the home dir given the current user in your
 | |
| system). On Windows, it then checks for the APPDATA variable, or as a last
 | |
| resort the '%USERPROFILE%\\Application Data'.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 2) On windows, if there is no _curlrc file in the home dir, it checks for one
 | |
| in the same dir the curl executable is placed. On Unix-like systems, it will
 | |
| simply try to load .curlrc from the determined home dir.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .nf
 | |
| # --- Example file ---
 | |
| # this is a comment
 | |
| url = "example.com"
 | |
| output = "curlhere.html"
 | |
| user-agent = "superagent/1.0"
 | |
| 
 | |
| # and fetch another URL too
 | |
| url = "example.com/docs/manpage.html"
 | |
| -O
 | |
| referer = "http://nowhereatall.example.com/"
 | |
| # --- End of example file ---
 | |
| .fi
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option can be used multiple times to load multiple config files.
 | |
| .IP "--connect-timeout <seconds>"
 | |
| Maximum time in seconds that you allow curl's connection to take.  This only
 | |
| limits the connection phase, so if curl connects within the given period it
 | |
| will continue - if not it will exit.  Since version 7.32.0, this option
 | |
| accepts decimal values.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-m, --max-time\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--connect-to <HOST1:PORT1:HOST2:PORT2>"
 | |
| 
 | |
| For a request to the given HOST1:PORT1 pair, connect to HOST2:PORT2 instead.
 | |
| This option is suitable to direct requests at a specific server, e.g. at a
 | |
| specific cluster node in a cluster of servers. This option is only used to
 | |
| establish the network connection. It does NOT affect the hostname/port that is
 | |
| used for TLS/SSL (e.g. SNI, certificate verification) or for the application
 | |
| protocols. "HOST1" and "PORT1" may be the empty string, meaning "any
 | |
| host/port". "HOST2" and "PORT2" may also be the empty string, meaning "use the
 | |
| request's original host/port".
 | |
| 
 | |
| A "host" specified to this option is compared as a string, so it needs to
 | |
| match the name used in request URL. It can be either numerical such as
 | |
| "127.0.0.1" or the full host name such as "example.org".
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option can be used many times to add many connect rules.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--resolve\fP and \fI-H, --header\fP. Added in 7.49.0.
 | |
| .IP "-C, --continue-at <offset>"
 | |
| Continue/Resume a previous file transfer at the given offset. The given offset
 | |
| is the exact number of bytes that will be skipped, counting from the beginning
 | |
| of the source file before it is transferred to the destination.  If used with
 | |
| uploads, the FTP server command SIZE will not be used by curl.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Use "-C -" to tell curl to automatically find out where/how to resume the
 | |
| transfer. It then uses the given output/input files to figure that out.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-r, --range\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-c, --cookie-jar <filename>"
 | |
| (HTTP) Specify to which file you want curl to write all cookies after a completed
 | |
| operation. Curl writes all cookies from its in-memory cookie storage to the
 | |
| given file at the end of operations. If no cookies are known, no data will be
 | |
| written. The file will be written using the Netscape cookie file format. If
 | |
| you set the file name to a single dash, "-", the cookies will be written to
 | |
| stdout.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This command line option will activate the cookie engine that makes curl
 | |
| record and use cookies. Another way to activate it is to use the \fI-b, --cookie\fP
 | |
| option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the cookie jar can't be created or written to, the whole curl operation
 | |
| won't fail or even report an error clearly. Using \fI-v, --verbose\fP will get a warning
 | |
| displayed, but that is the only visible feedback you get about this possibly
 | |
| lethal situation.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last specified file name will be
 | |
| used.
 | |
| .IP "-b, --cookie <data>"
 | |
| (HTTP) Pass the data to the HTTP server in the Cookie header. It is supposedly
 | |
| the data previously received from the server in a "Set-Cookie:" line.  The
 | |
| data should be in the format "NAME1=VALUE1; NAME2=VALUE2".
 | |
| 
 | |
| If no '=' symbol is used in the argument, it is instead treated as a filename
 | |
| to read previously stored cookie from. This option also activates the cookie
 | |
| engine which will make curl record incoming cookies, which may be handy if
 | |
| you're using this in combination with the \fI-L, --location\fP option or do multiple URL
 | |
| transfers on the same invoke.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The file format of the file to read cookies from should be plain HTTP headers
 | |
| (Set-Cookie style) or the Netscape/Mozilla cookie file format.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The file specified with \fI-b, --cookie\fP is only used as input. No cookies will be
 | |
| written to the file. To store cookies, use the \fI-c, --cookie-jar\fP option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Exercise caution if you are using this option and multiple transfers may
 | |
| occur.  If you use the NAME1=VALUE1; format, or in a file use the Set-Cookie
 | |
| format and don't specify a domain, then the cookie is sent for any domain
 | |
| (even after redirects are followed) and cannot be modified by a server-set
 | |
| cookie. If the cookie engine is enabled and a server sets a cookie of the same
 | |
| name then both will be sent on a future transfer to that server, likely not
 | |
| what you intended.  To address these issues set a domain in Set-Cookie (doing
 | |
| that will include sub domains) or use the Netscape format.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Users very often want to both read cookies from a file and write updated
 | |
| cookies back to a file, so using both \fI-b, --cookie\fP and \fI-c, --cookie-jar\fP in the same
 | |
| command line is common.
 | |
| .IP "--create-dirs"
 | |
| When used in conjunction with the \fI-o, --output\fP option, curl will create the
 | |
| necessary local directory hierarchy as needed. This option creates the dirs
 | |
| mentioned with the \fI-o, --output\fP option, nothing else. If the --output file name
 | |
| uses no dir or if the dirs it mentions already exist, no dir will be created.
 | |
| 
 | |
| To create remote directories when using FTP or SFTP, try \fI--ftp-create-dirs\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--crlf"
 | |
| (FTP SMTP) Convert LF to CRLF in upload. Useful for MVS (OS/390).
 | |
| 
 | |
| (SMTP added in 7.40.0)
 | |
| .IP "--crlfile <file>"
 | |
| (TLS) Provide a file using PEM format with a Certificate Revocation List that may
 | |
| specify peer certificates that are to be considered revoked.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.19.7.
 | |
| .IP "--data-ascii <data>"
 | |
| (HTTP) This is just an alias for \fI-d, --data\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--data-binary <data>"
 | |
| (HTTP) This posts data exactly as specified with no extra processing whatsoever.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you start the data with the letter @, the rest should be a filename.  Data
 | |
| is posted in a similar manner as \fI-d, --data\fP does, except that newlines and
 | |
| carriage returns are preserved and conversions are never done.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the ones following the first will append
 | |
| data as described in \fI-d, --data\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--data-raw <data>"
 | |
| (HTTP) This posts data similarly to \fI-d, --data\fP but without the special
 | |
| interpretation of the @ character.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-d, --data\fP. Added in 7.43.0.
 | |
| .IP "--data-urlencode <data>"
 | |
| (HTTP) This posts data, similar to the other \fI-d, --data\fP options with the exception
 | |
| that this performs URL-encoding.
 | |
| 
 | |
| To be CGI-compliant, the <data> part should begin with a \fIname\fP followed
 | |
| by a separator and a content specification. The <data> part can be passed to
 | |
| curl using one of the following syntaxes:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .IP "content"
 | |
| This will make curl URL-encode the content and pass that on. Just be careful
 | |
| so that the content doesn't contain any = or @ symbols, as that will then make
 | |
| the syntax match one of the other cases below!
 | |
| .IP "=content"
 | |
| This will make curl URL-encode the content and pass that on. The preceding =
 | |
| symbol is not included in the data.
 | |
| .IP "name=content"
 | |
| This will make curl URL-encode the content part and pass that on. Note that
 | |
| the name part is expected to be URL-encoded already.
 | |
| .IP "@filename"
 | |
| This will make curl load data from the given file (including any newlines),
 | |
| URL-encode that data and pass it on in the POST.
 | |
| .IP "name@filename"
 | |
| This will make curl load data from the given file (including any newlines),
 | |
| URL-encode that data and pass it on in the POST. The name part gets an equal
 | |
| sign appended, resulting in \fIname=urlencoded-file-content\fP. Note that the
 | |
| name is expected to be URL-encoded already.
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-d, --data\fP and \fI--data-raw\fP. Added in 7.18.0.
 | |
| .IP "-d, --data <data>"
 | |
| (HTTP) Sends the specified data in a POST request to the HTTP server, in the same way
 | |
| that a browser does when a user has filled in an HTML form and presses the
 | |
| submit button. This will cause curl to pass the data to the server using the
 | |
| content-type application/x-www-form-urlencoded.  Compare to \fI-F, --form\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| \fI--data-raw\fP is almost the same but does not have a special interpretation of
 | |
| the @ character. To post data purely binary, you should instead use the
 | |
| \fI--data-binary\fP option.  To URL-encode the value of a form field you may use
 | |
| \fI--data-urlencode\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If any of these options is used more than once on the same command line, the
 | |
| data pieces specified will be merged together with a separating
 | |
| &-symbol. Thus, using '-d name=daniel -d skill=lousy' would generate a post
 | |
| chunk that looks like \&'name=daniel&skill=lousy'.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you start the data with the letter @, the rest should be a file name to
 | |
| read the data from, or - if you want curl to read the data from
 | |
| stdin. Multiple files can also be specified. Posting data from a file named
 | |
| 'foobar' would thus be done with \fI-d, --data\fP @foobar. When --data is told to read
 | |
| from a file like that, carriage returns and newlines will be stripped out. If
 | |
| you don't want the @ character to have a special interpretation use \fI--data-raw\fP
 | |
| instead.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--data-binary\fP and \fI--data-urlencode\fP and \fI--data-raw\fP. This option overrides \fI-F, --form\fP and \fI-I, --head\fP and \fI--upload\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--delegation <LEVEL>"
 | |
| (GSS/kerberos) Set LEVEL to tell the server what it is allowed to delegate when it
 | |
| comes to user credentials.
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .IP "none"
 | |
| Don't allow any delegation.
 | |
| .IP "policy"
 | |
| Delegates if and only if the OK-AS-DELEGATE flag is set in the Kerberos
 | |
| service ticket, which is a matter of realm policy.
 | |
| .IP "always"
 | |
| Unconditionally allow the server to delegate.
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .IP "--digest"
 | |
| (HTTP) Enables HTTP Digest authentication. This is an authentication scheme that
 | |
| prevents the password from being sent over the wire in clear text. Use this in
 | |
| combination with the normal \fI-u, --user\fP option to set user name and password.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, only the first one is used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-u, --user\fP and \fI--proxy-digest\fP and \fI--anyauth\fP. This option overrides \fI--basic\fP and \fI--ntlm\fP and \fI--negotiate\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--disable-eprt"
 | |
| (FTP) Tell curl to disable the use of the EPRT and LPRT commands when doing active
 | |
| FTP transfers. Curl will normally always first attempt to use EPRT, then LPRT
 | |
| before using PORT, but with this option, it will use PORT right away. EPRT and
 | |
| LPRT are extensions to the original FTP protocol, and may not work on all
 | |
| servers, but they enable more functionality in a better way than the
 | |
| traditional PORT command.
 | |
| 
 | |
| --eprt can be used to explicitly enable EPRT again and --no-eprt is an alias
 | |
| for \fI--disable-eprt\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the server is accessed using IPv6, this option will have no effect as EPRT
 | |
| is necessary then.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Disabling EPRT only changes the active behavior. If you want to switch to
 | |
| passive mode you need to not use \fI-P, --ftp-port\fP or force it with \fI--ftp-pasv\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--disable-epsv"
 | |
| (FTP) (FTP) Tell curl to disable the use of the EPSV command when doing passive FTP
 | |
| transfers. Curl will normally always first attempt to use EPSV before PASV,
 | |
| but with this option, it will not try using EPSV.
 | |
| 
 | |
| --epsv can be used to explicitly enable EPSV again and --no-epsv is an alias
 | |
| for \fI--disable-epsv\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the server is an IPv6 host, this option will have no effect as EPSV is
 | |
| necessary then.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Disabling EPSV only changes the passive behavior. If you want to switch to
 | |
| active mode you need to use \fI-P, --ftp-port\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-q, --disable"
 | |
| If used as the first parameter on the command line, the \fIcurlrc\fP config
 | |
| file will not be read and used. See the \fI-K, --config\fP for details on the default
 | |
| config file search path.
 | |
| .IP "--dns-interface <interface>"
 | |
| (DNS) Tell curl to send outgoing DNS requests through <interface>. This option is a
 | |
| counterpart to \fI--interface\fP (which does not affect DNS). The supplied string
 | |
| must be an interface name (not an address).
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--dns-ipv4-addr\fP and \fI--dns-ipv6-addr\fP. \fI--dns-interface\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support c-ares. Added in 7.33.0.
 | |
| .IP "--dns-ipv4-addr <address>"
 | |
| (DNS) Tell curl to bind to <ip-address> when making IPv4 DNS requests, so that
 | |
| the DNS requests originate from this address. The argument should be a
 | |
| single IPv4 address.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--dns-interface\fP and \fI--dns-ipv6-addr\fP. \fI--dns-ipv4-addr\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support c-ares. Added in 7.33.0.
 | |
| .IP "--dns-ipv6-addr <address>"
 | |
| (DNS) Tell curl to bind to <ip-address> when making IPv6 DNS requests, so that
 | |
| the DNS requests originate from this address. The argument should be a
 | |
| single IPv6 address.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--dns-interface\fP and \fI--dns-ipv4-addr\fP. \fI--dns-ipv6-addr\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support c-ares. Added in 7.33.0.
 | |
| .IP "--dns-servers <addresses>"
 | |
| Set the list of DNS servers to be used instead of the system default.
 | |
| The list of IP addresses should be separated with commas. Port numbers
 | |
| may also optionally be given as \fI:<port-number>\fP after each IP
 | |
| address.
 | |
| 
 | |
| \fI--dns-servers\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support c-ares. Added in 7.33.0.
 | |
| .IP "-D, --dump-header <filename>"
 | |
| (HTTP FTP) Write the received protocol headers to the specified file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option is handy to use when you want to store the headers that an HTTP
 | |
| site sends to you. Cookies from the headers could then be read in a second
 | |
| curl invocation by using the \fI-b, --cookie\fP option! The \fI-c, --cookie-jar\fP option is a
 | |
| better way to store cookies.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When used in FTP, the FTP server response lines are considered being "headers"
 | |
| and thus are saved there.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-o, --output\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--egd-file <file>"
 | |
| (TLS) Specify the path name to the Entropy Gathering Daemon socket. The socket is
 | |
| used to seed the random engine for SSL connections.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--random-file\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--engine <name>"
 | |
| (TLS) Select the OpenSSL crypto engine to use for cipher operations. Use \fI--engine\fP
 | |
| list to print a list of build-time supported engines. Note that not all (or
 | |
| none) of the engines may be available at run-time.
 | |
| .IP "--expect100-timeout <seconds>"
 | |
| (HTTP) Maximum time in seconds that you allow curl to wait for a 100-continue
 | |
| response when curl emits an Expects: 100-continue header in its request. By
 | |
| default curl will wait one second. This option accepts decimal values! When
 | |
| curl stops waiting, it will continue as if the response has been received.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--connect-timeout\fP. Added in 7.47.0.
 | |
| .IP "--fail-early"
 | |
| Fail and exit on the first detected transfer error.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When curl is used to do multiple transfers on the command line, it will
 | |
| attempt to operate on each given URL, one by one. By default, it will ignore
 | |
| errors if there are more URLs given and the last URL's success will determine
 | |
| the error code curl returns. So early failures will be "hidden" by subsequent
 | |
| successful transfers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Using this option, curl will instead return an error on the first transfer
 | |
| that fails, independent of the amount of URLs that are given on the command
 | |
| line. This way, no transfer failures go undetected by scripts and similar.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option is global and does not need to be specified for each use of \fI-:, --next\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option does not imply \fI-f, --fail\fP, which causes transfers to fail due to the
 | |
| server's HTTP status code. You can combine the two options, however note \fI-f, --fail\fP
 | |
| is not global and is therefore contained by \fI-:, --next\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "-f, --fail"
 | |
| (HTTP) Fail silently (no output at all) on server errors. This is mostly done to
 | |
| better enable scripts etc to better deal with failed attempts. In normal cases
 | |
| when an HTTP server fails to deliver a document, it returns an HTML document
 | |
| stating so (which often also describes why and more). This flag will prevent
 | |
| curl from outputting that and return error 22.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This method is not fail-safe and there are occasions where non-successful
 | |
| response codes will slip through, especially when authentication is involved
 | |
| (response codes 401 and 407).
 | |
| .IP "--false-start"
 | |
| (TLS) Tells curl to use false start during the TLS handshake. False start is a mode
 | |
| where a TLS client will start sending application data before verifying the
 | |
| server's Finished message, thus saving a round trip when performing a full
 | |
| handshake.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This is currently only implemented in the NSS and Secure Transport (on iOS 7.0
 | |
| or later, or OS X 10.9 or later) backends.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.42.0.
 | |
| .IP "--form-string <name=string>"
 | |
| (HTTP SMTP IMAP) Similar to \fI-F, --form\fP except that the value string for the named parameter is used
 | |
| literally. Leading \&'@' and \&'<' characters, and the \&';type=' string in
 | |
| the value have no special meaning. Use this in preference to \fI-F, --form\fP if
 | |
| there's any possibility that the string value may accidentally trigger the
 | |
| \&'@' or \&'<' features of \fI-F, --form\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-F, --form\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-F, --form <name=content>"
 | |
| (HTTP SMTP IMAP) For HTTP protocol family, this lets curl emulate a filled-in form in which a
 | |
| user has pressed the submit button. This causes curl to POST data using the
 | |
| Content-Type multipart/form-data according to RFC 2388.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For SMTP and IMAP protocols, this is the mean to compose a multipart mail
 | |
| message to transmit.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This enables uploading of binary
 | |
| files etc. To force the 'content' part to be a file, prefix the file name with
 | |
| an @ sign. To just get the content part from a file, prefix the file name with
 | |
| the symbol <. The difference between @ and < is then that @ makes a file get
 | |
| attached in the post as a file upload, while the < makes a text field and just
 | |
| get the contents for that text field from a file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Example: to send an image to an HTTP server, where \&'profile' is the name of
 | |
| the form-field to which portrait.jpg will be the input:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl -F profile=@portrait.jpg https://example.com/upload.cgi
 | |
| 
 | |
| To read content from stdin instead of a file, use - as the filename. This goes
 | |
| for both @ and < constructs. Unfortunately it does not support reading the
 | |
| file from a named pipe or similar, as it needs the full size before the
 | |
| transfer starts.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You can also tell curl what Content-Type to use by using 'type=', in a manner
 | |
| similar to:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl -F "web=@index.html;type=text/html" example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| or
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl -F "name=daniel;type=text/foo" example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| You can also explicitly change the name field of a file upload part by setting
 | |
| filename=, like this:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl -F "file=@localfile;filename=nameinpost" example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| If filename/path contains ',' or ';', it must be quoted by double-quotes like:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl -F "file=@\\"localfile\\";filename=\\"nameinpost\\"" example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| or
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl -F 'file=@"localfile";filename="nameinpost"' example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that if a filename/path is quoted by double-quotes, any double-quote
 | |
| or backslash within the filename must be escaped by backslash.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You can add custom headers to the field by setting headers=, like
 | |
| 
 | |
|   curl -F "submit=OK;headers=\\"X-submit-type: OK\\"" example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| or
 | |
| 
 | |
|   curl -F "submit=OK;headers=@headerfile" example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| The headers= keyword may appear more that once and above notes about quoting
 | |
| apply. When headers are read from a file, Empty lines and lines starting
 | |
| with '#' are comments and ignored; each header can be folded by splitting
 | |
| between two words and starting the continuation line with a space; embedded
 | |
| carriage-returns and trailing spaces are stripped.
 | |
| Here is an example of a header file contents:
 | |
| 
 | |
|   # This file contain two headers.
 | |
| .br
 | |
|   X-header-1: this is a header
 | |
| 
 | |
|   # The following header is folded.
 | |
| .br
 | |
|   X-header-2: this is
 | |
| .br
 | |
|    another header
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| To support sending multipart mail messages, the syntax is extended as follows:
 | |
| .br
 | |
| - name can be omitted: the equal sign is the first character of the argument,
 | |
| .br
 | |
| - if data starts with '(', this signals to start a new multipart: it can be
 | |
| followed by a content type specification.
 | |
| .br
 | |
| - a multipart can be terminated with a '=)' argument.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Example: the following command sends an SMTP mime e-mail consisting in an
 | |
| inline part in two alternative formats: plain text and HTML. It attaches a
 | |
| text file:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl -F '=(;type=multipart/alternative' \\
 | |
| .br
 | |
|          -F '=plain text message' \\
 | |
| .br
 | |
|          -F '= <body>HTML message</body>;type=text/html' \\
 | |
| .br
 | |
|       -F '=)' -F '=@textfile.txt' ...  smtp://example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| Data can be encoded for transfer using encoder=. Available encodings are
 | |
| \fIbinary\fP and \fI8bit\fP that do nothing else than adding the corresponding
 | |
| Content-Transfer-Encoding header, \fI7bit\fP that only rejects 8-bit characters
 | |
| with a transfer error, \fIquoted-printable\fP and \fIbase64\fP that encodes
 | |
| data according to the corresponding schemes, limiting lines length to
 | |
| 76 characters.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Example: send multipart mail with a quoted-printable text message and a
 | |
| base64 attached file:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl -F '=text message;encoder=quoted-printable' \\
 | |
| .br
 | |
|       -F '=@localfile;encoder=base64' ... smtp://example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| See further examples and details in the MANUAL.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option can be used multiple times.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option overrides \fI-d, --data\fP and \fI-I, --head\fP and \fI--upload\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--ftp-account <data>"
 | |
| (FTP) When an FTP server asks for "account data" after user name and password has
 | |
| been provided, this data is sent off using the ACCT command.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.13.0.
 | |
| .IP "--ftp-alternative-to-user <command>"
 | |
| (FTP) If authenticating with the USER and PASS commands fails, send this command.
 | |
| When connecting to Tumbleweed's Secure Transport server over FTPS using a
 | |
| client certificate, using "SITE AUTH" will tell the server to retrieve the
 | |
| username from the certificate.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.15.5.
 | |
| .IP "--ftp-create-dirs"
 | |
| (FTP SFTP) When an FTP or SFTP URL/operation uses a path that doesn't currently exist on
 | |
| the server, the standard behavior of curl is to fail. Using this option, curl
 | |
| will instead attempt to create missing directories.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--create-dirs\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--ftp-method <method>"
 | |
| (FTP) Control what method curl should use to reach a file on an FTP(S)
 | |
| server. The method argument should be one of the following alternatives:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .IP multicwd
 | |
| curl does a single CWD operation for each path part in the given URL. For deep
 | |
| hierarchies this means very many commands. This is how RFC 1738 says it should
 | |
| be done. This is the default but the slowest behavior.
 | |
| .IP nocwd
 | |
| curl does no CWD at all. curl will do SIZE, RETR, STOR etc and give a full
 | |
| path to the server for all these commands. This is the fastest behavior.
 | |
| .IP singlecwd
 | |
| curl does one CWD with the full target directory and then operates on the file
 | |
| \&"normally" (like in the multicwd case). This is somewhat more standards
 | |
| compliant than 'nocwd' but without the full penalty of 'multicwd'.
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.15.1.
 | |
| .IP "--ftp-pasv"
 | |
| (FTP) Use passive mode for the data connection. Passive is the internal default
 | |
| behavior, but using this option can be used to override a previous \fI-P, --ftp-port\fP
 | |
| option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, only the first one is used. Undoing an
 | |
| enforced passive really isn't doable but you must then instead enforce the
 | |
| correct \fI-P, --ftp-port\fP again.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Passive mode means that curl will try the EPSV command first and then PASV,
 | |
| unless \fI--disable-epsv\fP is used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--disable-epsv\fP. Added in 7.11.0.
 | |
| .IP "-P, --ftp-port <address>"
 | |
| (FTP) Reverses the default initiator/listener roles when connecting with FTP. This
 | |
| option makes curl use active mode. curl then tells the server to connect back
 | |
| to the client's specified address and port, while passive mode asks the server
 | |
| to setup an IP address and port for it to connect to. <address> should be one
 | |
| of:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .IP interface
 | |
| i.e "eth0" to specify which interface's IP address you want to use (Unix only)
 | |
| .IP "IP address"
 | |
| i.e "192.168.10.1" to specify the exact IP address
 | |
| .IP "host name"
 | |
| i.e "my.host.domain" to specify the machine
 | |
| .IP "-"
 | |
| make curl pick the same IP address that is already used for the control
 | |
| connection
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used. Disable the
 | |
| use of PORT with \fI--ftp-pasv\fP. Disable the attempt to use the EPRT command
 | |
| instead of PORT by using \fI--disable-eprt\fP. EPRT is really PORT++.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.19.5, you can append \&":[start]-[end]\&" to the right of the address,
 | |
| to tell curl what TCP port range to use. That means you specify a port range,
 | |
| from a lower to a higher number. A single number works as well, but do note
 | |
| that it increases the risk of failure since the port may not be available.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--ftp-pasv\fP and \fI--disable-eprt\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--ftp-pret"
 | |
| (FTP) Tell curl to send a PRET command before PASV (and EPSV). Certain FTP servers,
 | |
| mainly drftpd, require this non-standard command for directory listings as
 | |
| well as up and downloads in PASV mode.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.20.0.
 | |
| .IP "--ftp-skip-pasv-ip"
 | |
| (FTP) Tell curl to not use the IP address the server suggests in its response
 | |
| to curl's PASV command when curl connects the data connection. Instead curl
 | |
| will re-use the same IP address it already uses for the control
 | |
| connection.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option has no effect if PORT, EPRT or EPSV is used instead of PASV.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--ftp-pasv\fP. Added in 7.14.2.
 | |
| .IP "--ftp-ssl-ccc-mode <active/passive>"
 | |
| (FTP) Sets the CCC mode. The passive mode will not initiate the shutdown, but
 | |
| instead wait for the server to do it, and will not reply to the shutdown from
 | |
| the server. The active mode initiates the shutdown and waits for a reply from
 | |
| the server.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--ftp-ssl-ccc\fP. Added in 7.16.2.
 | |
| .IP "--ftp-ssl-ccc"
 | |
| (FTP) Use CCC (Clear Command Channel) Shuts down the SSL/TLS layer after
 | |
| authenticating. The rest of the control channel communication will be
 | |
| unencrypted. This allows NAT routers to follow the FTP transaction. The
 | |
| default mode is passive.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--ssl\fP and \fI--ftp-ssl-ccc-mode\fP. Added in 7.16.1.
 | |
| .IP "--ftp-ssl-control"
 | |
| (FTP) Require SSL/TLS for the FTP login, clear for transfer.  Allows secure
 | |
| authentication, but non-encrypted data transfers for efficiency.  Fails the
 | |
| transfer if the server doesn't support SSL/TLS.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.16.0.
 | |
| .IP "-G, --get"
 | |
| When used, this option will make all data specified with \fI-d, --data\fP, \fI--data-binary\fP
 | |
| or \fI--data-urlencode\fP to be used in an HTTP GET request instead of the POST
 | |
| request that otherwise would be used. The data will be appended to the URL
 | |
| with a '?' separator.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If used in combination with \fI-I, --head\fP, the POST data will instead be appended to
 | |
| the URL with a HEAD request.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, only the first one is used. This is
 | |
| because undoing a GET doesn't make sense, but you should then instead enforce
 | |
| the alternative method you prefer.
 | |
| .IP "-g, --globoff"
 | |
| This option switches off the "URL globbing parser". When you set this option,
 | |
| you can specify URLs that contain the letters {}[] without having them being
 | |
| interpreted by curl itself. Note that these letters are not normal legal URL
 | |
| contents but they should be encoded according to the URI standard.
 | |
| .IP "-I, --head"
 | |
| (HTTP FTP FILE) Fetch the headers only! HTTP-servers feature the command HEAD which this uses
 | |
| to get nothing but the header of a document. When used on an FTP or FILE file,
 | |
| curl displays the file size and last modification time only.
 | |
| .IP "-H, --header <header/@file>"
 | |
| (HTTP) Extra header to include in the request when sending HTTP to a server. You may
 | |
| specify any number of extra headers. Note that if you should add a custom
 | |
| header that has the same name as one of the internal ones curl would use, your
 | |
| externally set header will be used instead of the internal one. This allows
 | |
| you to make even trickier stuff than curl would normally do. You should not
 | |
| replace internally set headers without knowing perfectly well what you're
 | |
| doing. Remove an internal header by giving a replacement without content on
 | |
| the right side of the colon, as in: -H \&"Host:". If you send the custom
 | |
| header with no-value then its header must be terminated with a semicolon, such
 | |
| as \-H \&"X-Custom-Header;" to send "X-Custom-Header:".
 | |
| 
 | |
| curl will make sure that each header you add/replace is sent with the proper
 | |
| end-of-line marker, you should thus \fBnot\fP add that as a part of the header
 | |
| content: do not add newlines or carriage returns, they will only mess things up
 | |
| for you.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Starting in 7.55.0, this option can take an argument in @filename style, which
 | |
| then adds a header for each line in the input file. Using @- will make curl
 | |
| read the header file from stdin.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also the \fI-A, --user-agent\fP and \fI-e, --referer\fP options.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Starting in 7.37.0, you need \fI--proxy-header\fP to send custom headers intended
 | |
| for a proxy.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Example:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl -H "X-First-Name: Joe" http://example.com/
 | |
| 
 | |
| \fBWARNING\fP: headers set with this option will be set in all requests - even
 | |
| after redirects are followed, like when told with \fI-L, --location\fP. This can lead to
 | |
| the header being sent to other hosts than the original host, so sensitive
 | |
| headers should be used with caution combined with following redirects.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option can be used multiple times to add/replace/remove multiple headers.
 | |
| .IP "-h, --help"
 | |
| Usage help. This lists all current command line options with a short
 | |
| description.
 | |
| .IP "--hostpubmd5 <md5>"
 | |
| (SFTP SCP) Pass a string containing 32 hexadecimal digits. The string should
 | |
| be the 128 bit MD5 checksum of the remote host's public key, curl will refuse
 | |
| the connection with the host unless the md5sums match.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.17.1.
 | |
| .IP "-0, --http1.0"
 | |
| (HTTP) Tells curl to use HTTP version 1.0 instead of using its internally preferred
 | |
| HTTP version.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option overrides \fI--http1.1\fP and \fI--http2\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--http1.1"
 | |
| (HTTP) Tells curl to use HTTP version 1.1.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option overrides \fI-0, --http1.0\fP and \fI--http2\fP. Added in 7.33.0.
 | |
| .IP "--http2-prior-knowledge"
 | |
| (HTTP) Tells curl to issue its non-TLS HTTP requests using HTTP/2 without HTTP/1.1
 | |
| Upgrade. It requires prior knowledge that the server supports HTTP/2 straight
 | |
| away. HTTPS requests will still do HTTP/2 the standard way with negotiated
 | |
| protocol version in the TLS handshake.
 | |
| 
 | |
| \fI--http2-prior-knowledge\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support HTTP/2. This option overrides \fI--http1.1\fP and \fI-0, --http1.0\fP and \fI--http2\fP. Added in 7.49.0.
 | |
| .IP "--http2"
 | |
| (HTTP) Tells curl to use HTTP version 2.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--no-alpn\fP. \fI--http2\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support HTTP/2. This option overrides \fI--http1.1\fP and \fI-0, --http1.0\fP and \fI--http2-prior-knowledge\fP. Added in 7.33.0.
 | |
| .IP "--ignore-content-length"
 | |
| (FTP HTTP) For HTTP, Ignore the Content-Length header. This is particularly useful for
 | |
| servers running Apache 1.x, which will report incorrect Content-Length for
 | |
| files larger than 2 gigabytes.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For FTP (since 7.46.0), skip the RETR command to figure out the size before
 | |
| downloading a file.
 | |
| .IP "-i, --include"
 | |
| Include the HTTP response headers in the output. The HTTP response headers can
 | |
| include things like server name, cookies, date of the document, HTTP version
 | |
| and more...
 | |
| 
 | |
| To view the request headers, consider the \fI-v, --verbose\fP option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-v, --verbose\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-k, --insecure"
 | |
| (TLS) 
 | |
| By default, every SSL connection curl makes is verified to be secure. This
 | |
| option allows curl to proceed and operate even for server connections
 | |
| otherwise considered insecure.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The server connection is verified by making sure the server's certificate
 | |
| contains the right name and verifies successfully using the cert store.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See this online resource for further details:
 | |
|  https://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--proxy-insecure\fP and \fI--cacert\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--interface <name>"
 | |
| 
 | |
| Perform an operation using a specified interface. You can enter interface
 | |
| name, IP address or host name. An example could look like:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl --interface eth0:1 https://www.example.com/
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--dns-interface\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-4, --ipv4"
 | |
| This option tells curl to resolve names to IPv4 addresses only, and not for
 | |
| example try IPv6.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--http1.1\fP and \fI--http2\fP. This option overrides \fI-6, --ipv6\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-6, --ipv6"
 | |
| This option tells curl to resolve names to IPv6 addresses only, and not for
 | |
| example try IPv4.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--http1.1\fP and \fI--http2\fP. This option overrides \fI-6, --ipv6\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-j, --junk-session-cookies"
 | |
| (HTTP) When curl is told to read cookies from a given file, this option will make it
 | |
| discard all "session cookies". This will basically have the same effect as if
 | |
| a new session is started. Typical browsers always discard session cookies when
 | |
| they're closed down.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-b, --cookie\fP and \fI-c, --cookie-jar\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--keepalive-time <seconds>"
 | |
| This option sets the time a connection needs to remain idle before sending
 | |
| keepalive probes and the time between individual keepalive probes. It is
 | |
| currently effective on operating systems offering the TCP_KEEPIDLE and
 | |
| TCP_KEEPINTVL socket options (meaning Linux, recent AIX, HP-UX and more). This
 | |
| option has no effect if \fI--no-keepalive\fP is used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used. If
 | |
| unspecified, the option defaults to 60 seconds.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.18.0.
 | |
| .IP "--key-type <type>"
 | |
| (TLS) Private key file type. Specify which type your \fI--key\fP provided private key
 | |
| is. DER, PEM, and ENG are supported. If not specified, PEM is assumed.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "--key <key>"
 | |
| (TLS SSH) Private key file name. Allows you to provide your private key in this separate
 | |
| file. For SSH, if not specified, curl tries the following candidates in order:
 | |
| '~/.ssh/id_rsa', '~/.ssh/id_dsa', './id_rsa', './id_dsa'.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "--krb <level>"
 | |
| (FTP) Enable Kerberos authentication and use. The level must be entered and should
 | |
| be one of 'clear', 'safe', 'confidential', or 'private'. Should you use a
 | |
| level that is not one of these, 'private' will instead be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| \fI--krb\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support Kerberos.
 | |
| .IP "--libcurl <file>"
 | |
| Append this option to any ordinary curl command line, and you will get a
 | |
| libcurl-using C source code written to the file that does the equivalent
 | |
| of what your command-line operation does!
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last given file name will be
 | |
| used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.16.1.
 | |
| .IP "--limit-rate <speed>"
 | |
| Specify the maximum transfer rate you want curl to use - for both downloads
 | |
| and uploads. This feature is useful if you have a limited pipe and you'd like
 | |
| your transfer not to use your entire bandwidth. To make it slower than it
 | |
| otherwise would be.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The given speed is measured in bytes/second, unless a suffix is appended.
 | |
| Appending 'k' or 'K' will count the number as kilobytes, 'm' or M' makes it
 | |
| megabytes, while 'g' or 'G' makes it gigabytes. Examples: 200K, 3m and 1G.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you also use the \fI-Y, --speed-limit\fP option, that option will take precedence and
 | |
| might cripple the rate-limiting slightly, to help keeping the speed-limit
 | |
| logic working.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "-l, --list-only"
 | |
| (FTP POP3) (FTP)
 | |
| When listing an FTP directory, this switch forces a name-only view. This is
 | |
| especially useful if the user wants to machine-parse the contents of an FTP
 | |
| directory since the normal directory view doesn't use a standard look or
 | |
| format. When used like this, the option causes a NLST command to be sent to
 | |
| the server instead of LIST.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note: Some FTP servers list only files in their response to NLST; they do not
 | |
| include sub-directories and symbolic links.
 | |
| 
 | |
| (POP3)
 | |
| When retrieving a specific email from POP3, this switch forces a LIST command
 | |
| to be performed instead of RETR. This is particularly useful if the user wants
 | |
| to see if a specific message id exists on the server and what size it is.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note: When combined with \fI-X, --request\fP, this option can be used to send an UIDL
 | |
| command instead, so the user may use the email's unique identifier rather than
 | |
| it's message id to make the request.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.21.5.
 | |
| .IP "--local-port <num/range>"
 | |
| Set a preferred single number or range (FROM-TO) of local port numbers to use
 | |
| for the connection(s).  Note that port numbers by nature are a scarce resource
 | |
| that will be busy at times so setting this range to something too narrow might
 | |
| cause unnecessary connection setup failures.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.15.2.
 | |
| .IP "--location-trusted"
 | |
| (HTTP) Like \fI-L, --location\fP, but will allow sending the name + password to all hosts that
 | |
| the site may redirect to. This may or may not introduce a security breach if
 | |
| the site redirects you to a site to which you'll send your authentication info
 | |
| (which is plaintext in the case of HTTP Basic authentication).
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-u, --user\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-L, --location"
 | |
| (HTTP) If the server reports that the requested page has moved to a different
 | |
| location (indicated with a Location: header and a 3XX response code), this
 | |
| option will make curl redo the request on the new place. If used together with
 | |
| \fI-i, --include\fP or \fI-I, --head\fP, headers from all requested pages will be shown. When
 | |
| authentication is used, curl only sends its credentials to the initial
 | |
| host. If a redirect takes curl to a different host, it won't be able to
 | |
| intercept the user+password. See also \fI--location-trusted\fP on how to change
 | |
| this. You can limit the amount of redirects to follow by using the
 | |
| \fI--max-redirs\fP option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When curl follows a redirect and the request is not a plain GET (for example
 | |
| POST or PUT), it will do the following request with a GET if the HTTP response
 | |
| was 301, 302, or 303. If the response code was any other 3xx code, curl will
 | |
| re-send the following request using the same unmodified method.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You can tell curl to not change the non-GET request method to GET after a 30x
 | |
| response by using the dedicated options for that: \fI--post301\fP, \fI--post302\fP and
 | |
| \fI--post303\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--login-options <options>"
 | |
| (IMAP POP3 SMTP) Specify the login options to use during server authentication.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You can use the login options to specify protocol specific options that may
 | |
| be used during authentication. At present only IMAP, POP3 and SMTP support
 | |
| login options. For more information about the login options please see
 | |
| RFC 2384, RFC 5092 and IETF draft draft-earhart-url-smtp-00.txt
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.34.0.
 | |
| .IP "--mail-auth <address>"
 | |
| (SMTP) Specify a single address. This will be used to specify the authentication
 | |
| address (identity) of a submitted message that is being relayed to another
 | |
| server.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--mail-rcpt\fP and \fI--mail-from\fP. Added in 7.25.0.
 | |
| .IP "--mail-from <address>"
 | |
| (SMTP) Specify a single address that the given mail should get sent from.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--mail-rcpt\fP and \fI--mail-auth\fP. Added in 7.20.0.
 | |
| .IP "--mail-rcpt <address>"
 | |
| (SMTP) Specify a single address, user name or mailing list name. Repeat this
 | |
| option several times to send to multiple recipients.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When performing a mail transfer, the recipient should specify a valid email
 | |
| address to send the mail to.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When performing an address verification (VRFY command), the recipient should be
 | |
| specified as the user name or user name and domain (as per Section 3.5 of
 | |
| RFC5321). (Added in 7.34.0)
 | |
| 
 | |
| When performing a mailing list expand (EXPN command), the recipient should be
 | |
| specified using the mailing list name, such as "Friends" or "London-Office".
 | |
| (Added in 7.34.0)
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.20.0.
 | |
| .IP "-M, --manual"
 | |
| Manual. Display the huge help text.
 | |
| .IP "--max-filesize <bytes>"
 | |
| Specify the maximum size (in bytes) of a file to download. If the file
 | |
| requested is larger than this value, the transfer will not start and curl will
 | |
| return with exit code 63.
 | |
| 
 | |
| \fBNOTE:\fP The file size is not always known prior to download, and for such
 | |
| files this option has no effect even if the file transfer ends up being larger
 | |
| than this given limit. This concerns both FTP and HTTP transfers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--limit-rate\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--max-redirs <num>"
 | |
| (HTTP) Set maximum number of redirection-followings allowed. When \fI-L, --location\fP is used,
 | |
| is used to prevent curl from following redirections \&"in absurdum". By
 | |
| default, the limit is set to 50 redirections. Set this option to -1 to make it
 | |
| unlimited.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "-m, --max-time <time>"
 | |
| Maximum time in seconds that you allow the whole operation to take.  This is
 | |
| useful for preventing your batch jobs from hanging for hours due to slow
 | |
| networks or links going down.  Since 7.32.0, this option accepts decimal
 | |
| values, but the actual timeout will decrease in accuracy as the specified
 | |
| timeout increases in decimal precision.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--connect-timeout\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--metalink"
 | |
| This option can tell curl to parse and process a given URI as Metalink file
 | |
| (both version 3 and 4 (RFC 5854) are supported) and make use of the mirrors
 | |
| listed within for failover if there are errors (such as the file or server not
 | |
| being available). It will also verify the hash of the file after the download
 | |
| completes. The Metalink file itself is downloaded and processed in memory and
 | |
| not stored in the local file system.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Example to use a remote Metalink file:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl --metalink http://www.example.com/example.metalink
 | |
| 
 | |
| To use a Metalink file in the local file system, use FILE protocol (file://):
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl --metalink file://example.metalink
 | |
| 
 | |
| Please note that if FILE protocol is disabled, there is no way to use a local
 | |
| Metalink file at the time of this writing. Also note that if \fI--metalink\fP and
 | |
| \fI-i, --include\fP are used together, --include will be ignored. This is because
 | |
| including headers in the response will break Metalink parser and if the
 | |
| headers are included in the file described in Metalink file, hash check will
 | |
| fail.
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| \fI--metalink\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support metalink. Added in 7.27.0.
 | |
| .IP "--negotiate"
 | |
| (HTTP) Enables Negotiate (SPNEGO) authentication.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option requires a library built with GSS-API or SSPI support. Use
 | |
| \fI-V, --version\fP to see if your curl supports GSS-API/SSPI or SPNEGO.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When using this option, you must also provide a fake \fI-u, --user\fP option to activate
 | |
| the authentication code properly. Sending a '-u :' is enough as the user name
 | |
| and password from the \fI-u, --user\fP option aren't actually used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, only the first one is used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--basic\fP and \fI--ntlm\fP and \fI--anyauth\fP and \fI--proxy-negotiate\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--netrc-file <filename>"
 | |
| This option is similar to \fI-n, --netrc\fP, except that you provide the path (absolute
 | |
| or relative) to the netrc file that Curl should use.  You can only specify one
 | |
| netrc file per invocation. If several \fI--netrc-file\fP options are provided,
 | |
| the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| It will abide by \fI--netrc-optional\fP if specified.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option overrides \fI-n, --netrc\fP. Added in 7.21.5.
 | |
| .IP "--netrc-optional"
 | |
| Very similar to \fI-n, --netrc\fP, but this option makes the .netrc usage \fBoptional\fP
 | |
| and not mandatory as the \fI-n, --netrc\fP option does.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--netrc-file\fP. This option overrides \fI-n, --netrc\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-n, --netrc"
 | |
| Makes curl scan the \fI.netrc\fP (\fI_netrc\fP on Windows) file in the user's
 | |
| home directory for login name and password. This is typically used for FTP on
 | |
| Unix. If used with HTTP, curl will enable user authentication. See
 | |
| \fInetrc(5)\fP \fIftp(1)\fP for details on the file format. Curl will not
 | |
| complain if that file doesn't have the right permissions (it should not be
 | |
| either world- or group-readable). The environment variable "HOME" is used to
 | |
| find the home directory.
 | |
| 
 | |
| A quick and very simple example of how to setup a \fI.netrc\fP to allow curl
 | |
| to FTP to the machine host.domain.com with user name \&'myself' and password
 | |
| \&'secret' should look similar to:
 | |
| 
 | |
| .B "machine host.domain.com login myself password secret"
 | |
| .IP "-:, --next"
 | |
| Tells curl to use a separate operation for the following URL and associated
 | |
| options. This allows you to send several URL requests, each with their own
 | |
| specific options, for example, such as different user names or custom requests
 | |
| for each.
 | |
| 
 | |
| \fI-:, --next\fP will reset all local options and only global ones will have their
 | |
| values survive over to the operation following the \fI-:, --next\fP instruction. Global
 | |
| options include \fI-v, --verbose\fP, \fI--trace\fP, \fI--trace-ascii\fP and \fI--fail-early\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| For example, you can do both a GET and a POST in a single command line:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl www1.example.com --next -d postthis www2.example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.36.0.
 | |
| .IP "--no-alpn"
 | |
| (HTTPS) Disable the ALPN TLS extension. ALPN is enabled by default if libcurl was built
 | |
| with an SSL library that supports ALPN. ALPN is used by a libcurl that supports
 | |
| HTTP/2 to negotiate HTTP/2 support with the server during https sessions.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--no-npn\fP and \fI--http2\fP. \fI--no-alpn\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support TLS. Added in 7.36.0.
 | |
| .IP "-N, --no-buffer"
 | |
| Disables the buffering of the output stream. In normal work situations, curl
 | |
| will use a standard buffered output stream that will have the effect that it
 | |
| will output the data in chunks, not necessarily exactly when the data arrives.
 | |
| Using this option will disable that buffering.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that this is the negated option name documented. You can thus use
 | |
| --buffer to enforce the buffering.
 | |
| .IP "--no-keepalive"
 | |
| Disables the use of keepalive messages on the TCP connection. curl otherwise
 | |
| enables them by default.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that this is the negated option name documented. You can thus use
 | |
| --keepalive to enforce keepalive.
 | |
| .IP "--no-npn"
 | |
| (HTTPS) Disable the NPN TLS extension. NPN is enabled by default if libcurl was built
 | |
| with an SSL library that supports NPN. NPN is used by a libcurl that supports
 | |
| HTTP/2 to negotiate HTTP/2 support with the server during https sessions.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--no-alpn\fP and \fI--http2\fP. \fI--no-npn\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support TLS. Added in 7.36.0.
 | |
| .IP "--no-sessionid"
 | |
| (TLS) Disable curl's use of SSL session-ID caching.  By default all transfers are
 | |
| done using the cache. Note that while nothing should ever get hurt by
 | |
| attempting to reuse SSL session-IDs, there seem to be broken SSL
 | |
| implementations in the wild that may require you to disable this in order for
 | |
| you to succeed.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that this is the negated option name documented. You can thus use
 | |
| --sessionid to enforce session-ID caching.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.16.0.
 | |
| .IP "--noproxy <no-proxy-list>"
 | |
| Comma-separated list of hosts which do not use a proxy, if one is specified.
 | |
| The only wildcard is a single * character, which matches all hosts, and
 | |
| effectively disables the proxy. Each name in this list is matched as either
 | |
| a domain which contains the hostname, or the hostname itself. For example,
 | |
| local.com would match local.com, local.com:80, and www.local.com, but not
 | |
| www.notlocal.com.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.53.0, This option overrides the environment variables that disable the
 | |
| proxy. If there's an environment variable disabling a proxy, you can set
 | |
| noproxy list to \&"" to override it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.19.4.
 | |
| .IP "--ntlm-wb"
 | |
| (HTTP) Enables NTLM much in the style \fI--ntlm\fP does, but hand over the authentication
 | |
| to the separate binary ntlmauth application that is executed when needed.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--ntlm\fP and \fI--proxy-ntlm\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--ntlm"
 | |
| (HTTP) Enables NTLM authentication. The NTLM authentication method was designed by
 | |
| Microsoft and is used by IIS web servers. It is a proprietary protocol,
 | |
| reverse-engineered by clever people and implemented in curl based on their
 | |
| efforts. This kind of behavior should not be endorsed, you should encourage
 | |
| everyone who uses NTLM to switch to a public and documented authentication
 | |
| method instead, such as Digest.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you want to enable NTLM for your proxy authentication, then use
 | |
| \fI--proxy-ntlm\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, only the first one is used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--proxy-ntlm\fP. \fI--ntlm\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support TLS. This option overrides \fI--basic\fP and \fI--negotiated\fP and \fI--digest\fP and \fI--anyauth\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--oauth2-bearer <token>"
 | |
| (IMAP POP3 SMTP) Specify the Bearer Token for OAUTH 2.0 server authentication. The Bearer Token
 | |
| is used in conjunction with the user name which can be specified as part of
 | |
| the \fI--url\fP or \fI-u, --user\fP options.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The Bearer Token and user name are formatted according to RFC 6750.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "-o, --output <file>"
 | |
| Write output to <file> instead of stdout. If you are using {} or [] to fetch
 | |
| multiple documents, you can use '#' followed by a number in the <file>
 | |
| specifier. That variable will be replaced with the current string for the URL
 | |
| being fetched. Like in:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl http://{one,two}.example.com -o "file_#1.txt"
 | |
| 
 | |
| or use several variables like:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl http://{site,host}.host[1-5].com -o "#1_#2"
 | |
| 
 | |
| You may use this option as many times as the number of URLs you have. For
 | |
| example, if you specify two URLs on the same command line, you can use it like
 | |
| this:
 | |
| 
 | |
|   curl -o aa example.com -o bb example.net
 | |
| 
 | |
| and the order of the -o options and the URLs doesn't matter, just that the
 | |
| first -o is for the first URL and so on, so the above command line can also be
 | |
| written as
 | |
| 
 | |
|   curl example.com example.net -o aa -o bb
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also the \fI--create-dirs\fP option to create the local directories
 | |
| dynamically. Specifying the output as '-' (a single dash) will force the
 | |
| output to be done to stdout.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-O, --remote-name\fP and \fI--remote-name-all\fP and \fI-J, --remote-header-name\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--pass <phrase>"
 | |
| (SSH TLS) Passphrase for the private key
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "--path-as-is"
 | |
| Tell curl to not handle sequences of /../ or /./ in the given URL
 | |
| path. Normally curl will squash or merge them according to standards but with
 | |
| this option set you tell it not to do that.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.42.0.
 | |
| .IP "--pinnedpubkey <hashes>"
 | |
| (TLS) Tells curl to use the specified public key file (or hashes) to verify the
 | |
| peer. This can be a path to a file which contains a single public key in PEM
 | |
| or DER format, or any number of base64 encoded sha256 hashes preceded by
 | |
| \'sha256//\' and separated by \';\'
 | |
| 
 | |
| When negotiating a TLS or SSL connection, the server sends a certificate
 | |
| indicating its identity. A public key is extracted from this certificate and
 | |
| if it does not exactly match the public key provided to this option, curl will
 | |
| abort the connection before sending or receiving any data.
 | |
| 
 | |
| PEM/DER support:
 | |
|   7.39.0: OpenSSL, GnuTLS and GSKit
 | |
|   7.43.0: NSS and wolfSSL/CyaSSL
 | |
|   7.47.0: mbedtls
 | |
|   7.49.0: PolarSSL
 | |
| sha256 support:
 | |
|   7.44.0: OpenSSL, GnuTLS, NSS and wolfSSL/CyaSSL.
 | |
|   7.47.0: mbedtls
 | |
|   7.49.0: PolarSSL
 | |
| Other SSL backends not supported.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "--post301"
 | |
| (HTTP) Tells curl to respect RFC 7231/6.4.2 and not convert POST requests into GET
 | |
| requests when following a 301 redirection. The non-RFC behaviour is ubiquitous
 | |
| in web browsers, so curl does the conversion by default to maintain
 | |
| consistency. However, a server may require a POST to remain a POST after such
 | |
| a redirection. This option is meaningful only when using \fI-L, --location\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--post302\fP and \fI--post303\fP and \fI-L, --location\fP. Added in 7.17.1.
 | |
| .IP "--post302"
 | |
| (HTTP) Tells curl to respect RFC 7231/6.4.3 and not convert POST requests into GET
 | |
| requests when following a 302 redirection. The non-RFC behaviour is ubiquitous
 | |
| in web browsers, so curl does the conversion by default to maintain
 | |
| consistency. However, a server may require a POST to remain a POST after such
 | |
| a redirection. This option is meaningful only when using \fI-L, --location\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--post301\fP and \fI--post303\fP and \fI-L, --location\fP. Added in 7.19.1.
 | |
| .IP "--post303"
 | |
| (HTTP) Tells curl to respect RFC 7231/6.4.4 and not convert POST requests into GET
 | |
| requests when following a 303 redirection. The non-RFC behaviour is ubiquitous
 | |
| in web browsers, so curl does the conversion by default to maintain
 | |
| consistency. However, a server may require a POST to remain a POST after such
 | |
| a redirection. This option is meaningful only when using \fI-L, --location\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--post302\fP and \fI--post301\fP and \fI-L, --location\fP. Added in 7.26.0.
 | |
| .IP "--preproxy [protocol://]host[:port]"
 | |
| Use the specified SOCKS proxy before connecting to an HTTP or HTTPS \fI-x, --proxy\fP. In
 | |
| such a case curl first connects to the SOCKS proxy and then connects (through
 | |
| SOCKS) to the HTTP or HTTPS proxy. Hence pre proxy.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The pre proxy string should be specified with a protocol:// prefix to specify
 | |
| alternative proxy protocols. Use socks4://, socks4a://, socks5:// or
 | |
| socks5h:// to request the specific SOCKS version to be used. No protocol
 | |
| specified will make curl default to SOCKS4.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the port number is not specified in the proxy string, it is assumed to be
 | |
| 1080.
 | |
| 
 | |
| User and password that might be provided in the proxy string are URL decoded
 | |
| by curl. This allows you to pass in special characters such as @ by using %40
 | |
| or pass in a colon with %3a.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "-#, --progress-bar"
 | |
| Make curl display transfer progress as a simple progress bar instead of the
 | |
| standard, more informational, meter.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This progress bar draws a single line of '#' characters across the screen and
 | |
| shows a percentage if the transfer size is known. For transfers without a
 | |
| known size, it will instead output one '#' character for every 1024 bytes
 | |
| transferred.
 | |
| .IP "--proto-default <protocol>"
 | |
| Tells curl to use \fIprotocol\fP for any URL missing a scheme name.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Example:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl --proto-default https ftp.mozilla.org
 | |
| 
 | |
| An unknown or unsupported protocol causes error
 | |
| \fICURLE_UNSUPPORTED_PROTOCOL\fP (1).
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option does not change the default proxy protocol (http).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Without this option curl would make a guess based on the host, see \fI--url\fP for
 | |
| details.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.45.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proto-redir <protocols>"
 | |
| Tells curl to limit what protocols it may use on redirect. Protocols denied by
 | |
| \fI--proto\fP are not overridden by this option. See --proto for how protocols are
 | |
| represented.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Example, allow only HTTP and HTTPS on redirect:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl --proto-redir -all,http,https http://example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| By default curl will allow all protocols on redirect except several disabled
 | |
| for security reasons: Since 7.19.4 FILE and SCP are disabled, and since 7.40.0
 | |
| SMB and SMBS are also disabled. Specifying \fIall\fP or \fI+all\fP enables all
 | |
| protocols on redirect, including those disabled for security.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.20.2.
 | |
| .IP "--proto <protocols>"
 | |
| Tells curl to limit what protocols it may use in the transfer. Protocols are
 | |
| evaluated left to right, are comma separated, and are each a protocol name or
 | |
| 'all', optionally prefixed by zero or more modifiers. Available modifiers are:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .TP 3
 | |
| .B +
 | |
| Permit this protocol in addition to protocols already permitted (this is
 | |
| the default if no modifier is used).
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B -
 | |
| Deny this protocol, removing it from the list of protocols already permitted.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B =
 | |
| Permit only this protocol (ignoring the list already permitted), though
 | |
| subject to later modification by subsequent entries in the comma separated
 | |
| list.
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| For example:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .TP 15
 | |
| .B \fI--proto\fP -ftps
 | |
| uses the default protocols, but disables ftps
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B  \fI--proto\fP -all,https,+http
 | |
| only enables http and https
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B \fI--proto\fP =http,https
 | |
| also only enables http and https
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| 
 | |
| Unknown protocols produce a warning. This allows scripts to safely rely on
 | |
| being able to disable potentially dangerous protocols, without relying upon
 | |
| support for that protocol being built into curl to avoid an error.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option can be used multiple times, in which case the effect is the same
 | |
| as concatenating the protocols into one instance of the option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--proto-redir\fP and \fI--proto-default\fP. Added in 7.20.2.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-anyauth"
 | |
| Tells curl to pick a suitable authentication method when communicating with
 | |
| the given HTTP proxy. This might cause an extra request/response round-trip.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-x, --proxy\fP and \fI--proxy-basic\fP and \fI--proxy-digest\fP. Added in 7.13.2.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-basic"
 | |
| Tells curl to use HTTP Basic authentication when communicating with the given
 | |
| proxy. Use \fI--basic\fP for enabling HTTP Basic with a remote host. Basic is the
 | |
| default authentication method curl uses with proxies.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-x, --proxy\fP and \fI--proxy-anyauth\fP and \fI--proxy-digest\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-cacert <file>"
 | |
| Same as \fI--cacert\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--proxy-capath\fP and \fI--cacert\fP and \fI--capath\fP and \fI-x, --proxy\fP. Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-capath <dir>"
 | |
| Same as \fI--capath\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--proxy-cacert\fP and \fI-x, --proxy\fP and \fI--capath\fP. Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-cert-type <type>"
 | |
| Same as \fI--cert-type\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-cert <cert[:passwd]>"
 | |
| Same as \fI-E, --cert\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-ciphers <list>"
 | |
| Same as \fI--ciphers\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-crlfile <file>"
 | |
| Same as \fI--crlfile\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-digest"
 | |
| Tells curl to use HTTP Digest authentication when communicating with the given
 | |
| proxy. Use \fI--digest\fP for enabling HTTP Digest with a remote host.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-x, --proxy\fP and \fI--proxy-anyauth\fP and \fI--proxy-basic\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-header <header/@file>"
 | |
| (HTTP) Extra header to include in the request when sending HTTP to a proxy. You may
 | |
| specify any number of extra headers. This is the equivalent option to \fI-H, --header\fP
 | |
| but is for proxy communication only like in CONNECT requests when you want a
 | |
| separate header sent to the proxy to what is sent to the actual remote host.
 | |
| 
 | |
| curl will make sure that each header you add/replace is sent with the proper
 | |
| end-of-line marker, you should thus \fBnot\fP add that as a part of the header
 | |
| content: do not add newlines or carriage returns, they will only mess things
 | |
| up for you.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Headers specified with this option will not be included in requests that curl
 | |
| knows will not be sent to a proxy.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Starting in 7.55.0, this option can take an argument in @filename style, which
 | |
| then adds a header for each line in the input file. Using @- will make curl
 | |
| read the header file from stdin.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option can be used multiple times to add/replace/remove multiple headers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.37.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-insecure"
 | |
| Same as \fI-k, --insecure\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-key-type <type>"
 | |
| Same as \fI--key-type\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-key <key>"
 | |
| Same as \fI--key\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-negotiate"
 | |
| Tells curl to use HTTP Negotiate (SPNEGO) authentication when communicating
 | |
| with the given proxy. Use \fI--negotiate\fP for enabling HTTP Negotiate (SPNEGO)
 | |
| with a remote host.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--proxy-anyauth\fP and \fI--proxy-basic\fP. Added in 7.17.1.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-ntlm"
 | |
| Tells curl to use HTTP NTLM authentication when communicating with the given
 | |
| proxy. Use \fI--ntlm\fP for enabling NTLM with a remote host.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--proxy-negotiate\fP and \fI--proxy-anyauth\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-pass <phrase>"
 | |
| Same as \fI--pass\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-service-name <name>"
 | |
| This option allows you to change the service name for proxy negotiation.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.43.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-ssl-allow-beast"
 | |
| Same as \fI--ssl-allow-beast\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-tlsauthtype <type>"
 | |
| Same as \fI--tlsauthtype\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-tlspassword <string>"
 | |
| Same as \fI--tlspassword\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-tlsuser <name>"
 | |
| Same as \fI--tlsuser\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy-tlsv1"
 | |
| Same as \fI-1, --tlsv1\fP but used in HTTPS proxy context.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "-U, --proxy-user <user:password>"
 | |
| Specify the user name and password to use for proxy authentication.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you use a Windows SSPI-enabled curl binary and do either Negotiate or NTLM
 | |
| authentication then you can tell curl to select the user name and password
 | |
| from your environment by specifying a single colon with this option: "-U :".
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "-x, --proxy [protocol://]host[:port]"
 | |
| Use the specified proxy.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The proxy string can be specified with a protocol:// prefix. No protocol
 | |
| specified or http:// will be treated as HTTP proxy. Use socks4://, socks4a://,
 | |
| socks5:// or socks5h:// to request a specific SOCKS version to be used.
 | |
| (The protocol support was added in curl 7.21.7)
 | |
| 
 | |
| HTTPS proxy support via https:// protocol prefix was added in 7.52.0 for
 | |
| OpenSSL, GnuTLS and NSS.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Unrecognized and unsupported proxy protocols cause an error since 7.52.0.
 | |
| Prior versions may ignore the protocol and use http:// instead.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the port number is not specified in the proxy string, it is assumed to be
 | |
| 1080.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option overrides existing environment variables that set the proxy to
 | |
| use. If there's an environment variable setting a proxy, you can set proxy to
 | |
| \&"" to override it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| All operations that are performed over an HTTP proxy will transparently be
 | |
| converted to HTTP. It means that certain protocol specific operations might
 | |
| not be available. This is not the case if you can tunnel through the proxy, as
 | |
| one with the \fI-p, --proxytunnel\fP option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| User and password that might be provided in the proxy string are URL decoded
 | |
| by curl. This allows you to pass in special characters such as @ by using %40
 | |
| or pass in a colon with %3a.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The proxy host can be specified the exact same way as the proxy environment
 | |
| variables, including the protocol prefix (http://) and the embedded user +
 | |
| password.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "--proxy1.0 <host[:port]>"
 | |
| Use the specified HTTP 1.0 proxy. If the port number is not specified, it is
 | |
| assumed at port 1080.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The only difference between this and the HTTP proxy option \fI-x, --proxy\fP, is that
 | |
| attempts to use CONNECT through the proxy will specify an HTTP 1.0 protocol
 | |
| instead of the default HTTP 1.1.
 | |
| .IP "-p, --proxytunnel"
 | |
| When an HTTP proxy is used \fI-x, --proxy\fP, this option will cause non-HTTP protocols
 | |
| to attempt to tunnel through the proxy instead of merely using it to do
 | |
| HTTP-like operations. The tunnel approach is made with the HTTP proxy CONNECT
 | |
| request and requires that the proxy allows direct connect to the remote port
 | |
| number curl wants to tunnel through to.
 | |
| 
 | |
| To suppress proxy CONNECT response headers when curl is set to output headers
 | |
| use \fI--suppress-connect-headers\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-x, --proxy\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--pubkey <key>"
 | |
| (SFTP SCP) Public key file name. Allows you to provide your public key in this separate
 | |
| file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| (As of 7.39.0, curl attempts to automatically extract the public key from the
 | |
| private key file, so passing this option is generally not required. Note that
 | |
| this public key extraction requires libcurl to be linked against a copy of
 | |
| libssh2 1.2.8 or higher that is itself linked against OpenSSL.)
 | |
| .IP "-Q, --quote"
 | |
| (FTP SFTP) 
 | |
| Send an arbitrary command to the remote FTP or SFTP server. Quote commands are
 | |
| sent BEFORE the transfer takes place (just after the initial PWD command in an
 | |
| FTP transfer, to be exact). To make commands take place after a successful
 | |
| transfer, prefix them with a dash '-'.  To make commands be sent after curl
 | |
| has changed the working directory, just before the transfer command(s), prefix
 | |
| the command with a '+' (this is only supported for FTP). You may specify any
 | |
| number of commands.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the server returns failure for one of the commands, the entire operation
 | |
| will be aborted. You must send syntactically correct FTP commands as RFC 959
 | |
| defines to FTP servers, or one of the commands listed below to SFTP servers.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option can be used multiple times. When speaking to an FTP server, prefix
 | |
| the command with an asterisk (*) to make curl continue even if the command
 | |
| fails as by default curl will stop at first failure.
 | |
| 
 | |
| SFTP is a binary protocol. Unlike for FTP, curl interprets SFTP quote commands
 | |
| itself before sending them to the server.  File names may be quoted
 | |
| shell-style to embed spaces or special characters.  Following is the list of
 | |
| all supported SFTP quote commands:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .IP "chgrp group file"
 | |
| The chgrp command sets the group ID of the file named by the file operand to
 | |
| the group ID specified by the group operand. The group operand is a decimal
 | |
| integer group ID.
 | |
| .IP "chmod mode file"
 | |
| The chmod command modifies the file mode bits of the specified file. The
 | |
| mode operand is an octal integer mode number.
 | |
| .IP "chown user file"
 | |
| The chown command sets the owner of the file named by the file operand to the
 | |
| user ID specified by the user operand. The user operand is a decimal
 | |
| integer user ID.
 | |
| .IP "ln source_file target_file"
 | |
| The ln and symlink commands create a symbolic link at the target_file location
 | |
| pointing to the source_file location.
 | |
| .IP "mkdir directory_name"
 | |
| The mkdir command creates the directory named by the directory_name operand.
 | |
| .IP "pwd"
 | |
| The pwd command returns the absolute pathname of the current working directory.
 | |
| .IP "rename source target"
 | |
| The rename command renames the file or directory named by the source
 | |
| operand to the destination path named by the target operand.
 | |
| .IP "rm file"
 | |
| The rm command removes the file specified by the file operand.
 | |
| .IP "rmdir directory"
 | |
| The rmdir command removes the directory entry specified by the directory
 | |
| operand, provided it is empty.
 | |
| .IP "symlink source_file target_file"
 | |
| See ln.
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .IP "--random-file <file>"
 | |
| Specify the path name to file containing what will be considered as random
 | |
| data. The data may be used to seed the random engine for SSL connections.  See
 | |
| also the \fI--egd-file\fP option.
 | |
| .IP "-r, --range <range>"
 | |
| (HTTP FTP SFTP FILE) Retrieve a byte range (i.e a partial document) from a HTTP/1.1, FTP or SFTP
 | |
| server or a local FILE. Ranges can be specified in a number of ways.
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .TP 10
 | |
| .B 0-499
 | |
| specifies the first 500 bytes
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B 500-999
 | |
| specifies the second 500 bytes
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B -500
 | |
| specifies the last 500 bytes
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B 9500-
 | |
| specifies the bytes from offset 9500 and forward
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B 0-0,-1
 | |
| specifies the first and last byte only(*)(HTTP)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B 100-199,500-599
 | |
| specifies two separate 100-byte ranges(*) (HTTP)
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| (*) = NOTE that this will cause the server to reply with a multipart
 | |
| response!
 | |
| 
 | |
| Only digit characters (0-9) are valid in the 'start' and 'stop' fields of the
 | |
| \&'start-stop' range syntax. If a non-digit character is given in the range,
 | |
| the server's response will be unspecified, depending on the server's
 | |
| configuration.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You should also be aware that many HTTP/1.1 servers do not have this feature
 | |
| enabled, so that when you attempt to get a range, you'll instead get the whole
 | |
| document.
 | |
| 
 | |
| FTP and SFTP range downloads only support the simple 'start-stop' syntax
 | |
| (optionally with one of the numbers omitted). FTP use depends on the extended
 | |
| FTP command SIZE.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "--raw"
 | |
| (HTTP) When used, it disables all internal HTTP decoding of content or transfer
 | |
| encodings and instead makes them passed on unaltered, raw.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.16.2.
 | |
| .IP "-e, --referer <URL>"
 | |
| (HTTP) Sends the "Referrer Page" information to the HTTP server. This can also be set
 | |
| with the \fI-H, --header\fP flag of course.  When used with \fI-L, --location\fP you can append
 | |
| ";auto" to the \fI-e, --referer\fP URL to make curl automatically set the previous URL
 | |
| when it follows a Location: header. The \&";auto" string can be used alone,
 | |
| even if you don't set an initial \fI-e, --referer\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-A, --user-agent\fP and \fI-H, --header\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-J, --remote-header-name"
 | |
| (HTTP) This option tells the \fI-O, --remote-name\fP option to use the server-specified
 | |
| Content-Disposition filename instead of extracting a filename from the URL.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the server specifies a file name and a file with that name already exists
 | |
| in the current working directory it will not be overwritten and an error will
 | |
| occur. If the server doesn't specify a file name then this option has no
 | |
| effect.
 | |
| 
 | |
| There's no attempt to decode %-sequences (yet) in the provided file name, so
 | |
| this option may provide you with rather unexpected file names.
 | |
| 
 | |
| \fBWARNING\fP: Exercise judicious use of this option, especially on Windows. A
 | |
| rogue server could send you the name of a DLL or other file that could possibly
 | |
| be loaded automatically by Windows or some third party software.
 | |
| .IP "--remote-name-all"
 | |
| This option changes the default action for all given URLs to be dealt with as
 | |
| if \fI-O, --remote-name\fP were used for each one. So if you want to disable that for a
 | |
| specific URL after \fI--remote-name-all\fP has been used, you must use "-o -" or
 | |
| --no-remote-name.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.19.0.
 | |
| .IP "-O, --remote-name"
 | |
| Write output to a local file named like the remote file we get. (Only the file
 | |
| part of the remote file is used, the path is cut off.)
 | |
| 
 | |
| The file will be saved in the current working directory. If you want the file
 | |
| saved in a different directory, make sure you change the current working
 | |
| directory before invoking curl with this option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The remote file name to use for saving is extracted from the given URL,
 | |
| nothing else, and if it already exists it will be overwritten. If you want the
 | |
| server to be able to choose the file name refer to \fI-J, --remote-header-name\fP which
 | |
| can be used in addition to this option. If the server chooses a file name and
 | |
| that name already exists it will not be overwritten.
 | |
| 
 | |
| There is no URL decoding done on the file name. If it has %20 or other URL
 | |
| encoded parts of the name, they will end up as-is as file name.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You may use this option as many times as the number of URLs you have.
 | |
| .IP "-R, --remote-time"
 | |
| When used, this will make curl attempt to figure out the timestamp of the
 | |
| remote file, and if that is available make the local file get that same
 | |
| timestamp.
 | |
| .IP "--request-target"
 | |
| (HTTP) Tells curl to use an alternative "target" (path) instead of using the path as
 | |
| provided in the URL. Particularly useful when wanting to issue HTTP requests
 | |
| without leading slash or other data that doesn't follow the regular URL
 | |
| pattern, like "OPTIONS *".
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.55.0.
 | |
| .IP "-X, --request <command>"
 | |
| (HTTP) Specifies a custom request method to use when communicating with the
 | |
| HTTP server.  The specified request method will be used instead of the method
 | |
| otherwise used (which defaults to GET). Read the HTTP 1.1 specification for
 | |
| details and explanations. Common additional HTTP requests include PUT and
 | |
| DELETE, but related technologies like WebDAV offers PROPFIND, COPY, MOVE and
 | |
| more.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Normally you don't need this option. All sorts of GET, HEAD, POST and PUT
 | |
| requests are rather invoked by using dedicated command line options.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option only changes the actual word used in the HTTP request, it does not
 | |
| alter the way curl behaves. So for example if you want to make a proper HEAD
 | |
| request, using -X HEAD will not suffice. You need to use the \fI-I, --head\fP option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The method string you set with \fI-X, --request\fP will be used for all requests, which
 | |
| if you for example use \fI-L, --location\fP may cause unintended side-effects when curl
 | |
| doesn't change request method according to the HTTP 30x response codes - and
 | |
| similar.
 | |
| 
 | |
| (FTP)
 | |
| Specifies a custom FTP command to use instead of LIST when doing file lists
 | |
| with FTP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| (POP3)
 | |
| Specifies a custom POP3 command to use instead of LIST or RETR. (Added in
 | |
| 7.26.0)
 | |
| 
 | |
| (IMAP)
 | |
| Specifies a custom IMAP command to use instead of LIST. (Added in 7.30.0)
 | |
| 
 | |
| (SMTP)
 | |
| Specifies a custom SMTP command to use instead of HELP or VRFY. (Added in 7.34.0)
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "--resolve <host:port:address>"
 | |
| Provide a custom address for a specific host and port pair. Using this, you
 | |
| can make the curl requests(s) use a specified address and prevent the
 | |
| otherwise normally resolved address to be used. Consider it a sort of
 | |
| /etc/hosts alternative provided on the command line. The port number should be
 | |
| the number used for the specific protocol the host will be used for. It means
 | |
| you need several entries if you want to provide address for the same host but
 | |
| different ports.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The provided address set by this option will be used even if \fI-4, --ipv4\fP or \fI-6, --ipv6\fP
 | |
| is set to make curl use another IP version.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option can be used many times to add many host names to resolve.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.21.3.
 | |
| .IP "--retry-connrefused"
 | |
| In addition to the other conditions, consider ECONNREFUSED as a transient
 | |
| error too for \fI--retry\fP. This option is used together with --retry.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "--retry-delay <seconds>"
 | |
| Make curl sleep this amount of time before each retry when a transfer has
 | |
| failed with a transient error (it changes the default backoff time algorithm
 | |
| between retries). This option is only interesting if \fI--retry\fP is also
 | |
| used. Setting this delay to zero will make curl use the default backoff time.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.12.3.
 | |
| .IP "--retry-max-time <seconds>"
 | |
| The retry timer is reset before the first transfer attempt. Retries will be
 | |
| done as usual (see \fI--retry\fP) as long as the timer hasn't reached this given
 | |
| limit. Notice that if the timer hasn't reached the limit, the request will be
 | |
| made and while performing, it may take longer than this given time period. To
 | |
| limit a single request\'s maximum time, use \fI-m, --max-time\fP.  Set this option to
 | |
| zero to not timeout retries.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.12.3.
 | |
| .IP "--retry <num>"
 | |
| If a transient error is returned when curl tries to perform a transfer, it
 | |
| will retry this number of times before giving up. Setting the number to 0
 | |
| makes curl do no retries (which is the default). Transient error means either:
 | |
| a timeout, an FTP 4xx response code or an HTTP 5xx response code.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When curl is about to retry a transfer, it will first wait one second and then
 | |
| for all forthcoming retries it will double the waiting time until it reaches
 | |
| 10 minutes which then will be the delay between the rest of the retries.  By
 | |
| using \fI--retry-delay\fP you disable this exponential backoff algorithm. See also
 | |
| \fI--retry-max-time\fP to limit the total time allowed for retries.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.12.3.
 | |
| .IP "--sasl-ir"
 | |
| Enable initial response in SASL authentication.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.31.0.
 | |
| .IP "--service-name <name>"
 | |
| This option allows you to change the service name for SPNEGO.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Examples: \fI--negotiate\fP \fI--service-name\fP sockd would use sockd/server-name.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.43.0.
 | |
| .IP "-S, --show-error"
 | |
| When used with \fI-s, --silent\fP, it makes curl show an error message if it fails.
 | |
| .IP "-s, --silent"
 | |
| Silent or quiet mode. Don't show progress meter or error messages.  Makes Curl
 | |
| mute. It will still output the data you ask for, potentially even to the
 | |
| terminal/stdout unless you redirect it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Use \fI-S, --show-error\fP in addition to this option to disable progress meter but
 | |
| still show error messages.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-v, --verbose\fP and \fI--stderr\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--socks4 <host[:port]>"
 | |
| Use the specified SOCKS4 proxy. If the port number is not specified, it is
 | |
| assumed at port 1080.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option overrides any previous use of \fI-x, --proxy\fP, as they are mutually
 | |
| exclusive.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.21.7, this option is superfluous since you can specify a socks4 proxy
 | |
| with \fI-x, --proxy\fP using a socks4:// protocol prefix.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.52.0, \fI--preproxy\fP can be used to specify a SOCKS proxy at the same time
 | |
| \fI-x, --proxy\fP is used with an HTTP/HTTPS proxy. In such a case curl first connects to
 | |
| the SOCKS proxy and then connects (through SOCKS) to the HTTP or HTTPS proxy.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.15.2.
 | |
| .IP "--socks4a <host[:port]>"
 | |
| Use the specified SOCKS4a proxy. If the port number is not specified, it is
 | |
| assumed at port 1080.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option overrides any previous use of \fI-x, --proxy\fP, as they are mutually
 | |
| exclusive.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.21.7, this option is superfluous since you can specify a socks4a proxy
 | |
| with \fI-x, --proxy\fP using a socks4a:// protocol prefix.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.52.0, \fI--preproxy\fP can be used to specify a SOCKS proxy at the same time
 | |
| \fI-x, --proxy\fP is used with an HTTP/HTTPS proxy. In such a case curl first connects to
 | |
| the SOCKS proxy and then connects (through SOCKS) to the HTTP or HTTPS proxy.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.18.0.
 | |
| .IP "--socks5-basic"
 | |
| Tells curl to use username/password authentication when connecting to a SOCKS5
 | |
| proxy.  The username/password authentication is enabled by default.  Use
 | |
| \fI--socks5-gssapi\fP to force GSS-API authentication to SOCKS5 proxies.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.55.0.
 | |
| .IP "--socks5-gssapi-nec"
 | |
| As part of the GSS-API negotiation a protection mode is negotiated. RFC 1961
 | |
| says in section 4.3/4.4 it should be protected, but the NEC reference
 | |
| implementation does not.  The option \fI--socks5-gssapi-nec\fP allows the
 | |
| unprotected exchange of the protection mode negotiation.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.19.4.
 | |
| .IP "--socks5-gssapi-service <name>"
 | |
| The default service name for a socks server is rcmd/server-fqdn. This option
 | |
| allows you to change it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Examples: \fI--socks5\fP proxy-name \fI--socks5-gssapi-service\fP sockd would use
 | |
| sockd/proxy-name \fI--socks5\fP proxy-name \fI--socks5-gssapi-service\fP sockd/real-name
 | |
| would use sockd/real-name for cases where the proxy-name does not match the
 | |
| principal name.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.19.4.
 | |
| .IP "--socks5-gssapi"
 | |
| Tells curl to use GSS-API authentication when connecting to a SOCKS5 proxy.
 | |
| The GSS-API authentication is enabled by default (if curl is compiled with
 | |
| GSS-API support).  Use \fI--socks5-basic\fP to force username/password authentication
 | |
| to SOCKS5 proxies.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.55.0.
 | |
| .IP "--socks5-hostname <host[:port]>"
 | |
| Use the specified SOCKS5 proxy (and let the proxy resolve the host name). If
 | |
| the port number is not specified, it is assumed at port 1080.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option overrides any previous use of \fI-x, --proxy\fP, as they are mutually
 | |
| exclusive.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.21.7, this option is superfluous since you can specify a socks5
 | |
| hostname proxy with \fI-x, --proxy\fP using a socks5h:// protocol prefix.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.52.0, \fI--preproxy\fP can be used to specify a SOCKS proxy at the same time
 | |
| \fI-x, --proxy\fP is used with an HTTP/HTTPS proxy. In such a case curl first connects to
 | |
| the SOCKS proxy and then connects (through SOCKS) to the HTTP or HTTPS proxy.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.18.0.
 | |
| .IP "--socks5 <host[:port]>"
 | |
| Use the specified SOCKS5 proxy - but resolve the host name locally. If the
 | |
| port number is not specified, it is assumed at port 1080.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option overrides any previous use of \fI-x, --proxy\fP, as they are mutually
 | |
| exclusive.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.21.7, this option is superfluous since you can specify a socks5 proxy
 | |
| with \fI-x, --proxy\fP using a socks5:// protocol prefix.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.52.0, \fI--preproxy\fP can be used to specify a SOCKS proxy at the same time
 | |
| \fI-x, --proxy\fP is used with an HTTP/HTTPS proxy. In such a case curl first connects to
 | |
| the SOCKS proxy and then connects (through SOCKS) to the HTTP or HTTPS proxy.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option (as well as \fI--socks4\fP) does not work with IPV6, FTPS or LDAP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.18.0.
 | |
| .IP "-Y, --speed-limit <speed>"
 | |
| If a download is slower than this given speed (in bytes per second) for
 | |
| speed-time seconds it gets aborted. speed-time is set with \fI-y, --speed-time\fP and is
 | |
| 30 if not set.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "-y, --speed-time <seconds>"
 | |
| If a download is slower than speed-limit bytes per second during a speed-time
 | |
| period, the download gets aborted. If speed-time is used, the default
 | |
| speed-limit will be 1 unless set with \fI-Y, --speed-limit\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option controls transfers and thus will not affect slow connects etc. If
 | |
| this is a concern for you, try the \fI--connect-timeout\fP option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "--ssl-allow-beast"
 | |
| This option tells curl to not work around a security flaw in the SSL3 and
 | |
| TLS1.0 protocols known as BEAST.  If this option isn't used, the SSL layer may
 | |
| use workarounds known to cause interoperability problems with some older SSL
 | |
| implementations. WARNING: this option loosens the SSL security, and by using
 | |
| this flag you ask for exactly that.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.25.0.
 | |
| .IP "--ssl-no-revoke"
 | |
| (WinSSL) This option tells curl to disable certificate revocation checks.
 | |
| WARNING: this option loosens the SSL security, and by using this flag you ask
 | |
| for exactly that.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.44.0.
 | |
| .IP "--ssl-reqd"
 | |
| (FTP IMAP POP3 SMTP) Require SSL/TLS for the connection.  Terminates the connection if the server
 | |
| doesn't support SSL/TLS.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option was formerly known as --ftp-ssl-reqd.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.20.0.
 | |
| .IP "--ssl"
 | |
| (FTP IMAP POP3 SMTP) 
 | |
| Try to use SSL/TLS for the connection.  Reverts to a non-secure connection if
 | |
| the server doesn't support SSL/TLS.  See also \fI--ftp-ssl-control\fP and \fI--ssl-reqd\fP
 | |
| for different levels of encryption required.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option was formerly known as --ftp-ssl (Added in 7.11.0). That option
 | |
| name can still be used but will be removed in a future version.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.20.0.
 | |
| .IP "-2, --sslv2"
 | |
| (SSL) Forces curl to use SSL version 2 when negotiating with a remote SSL
 | |
| server. Sometimes curl is built without SSLv2 support. SSLv2 is widely
 | |
| considered insecure (see RFC 6176).
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--http1.1\fP and \fI--http2\fP. \fI-2, --sslv2\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support TLS. This option overrides \fI-3, --sslv3\fP and \fI-1, --tlsv1\fP and \fI--tlsv1.1\fP and \fI--tlsv1.2\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-3, --sslv3"
 | |
| (SSL) Forces curl to use SSL version 3 when negotiating with a remote SSL
 | |
| server. Sometimes curl is built without SSLv3 support. SSLv3 is widely
 | |
| considered insecure (see RFC 7568).
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--http1.1\fP and \fI--http2\fP. \fI-3, --sslv3\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support TLS. This option overrides \fI-2, --sslv2\fP and \fI-1, --tlsv1\fP and \fI--tlsv1.1\fP and \fI--tlsv1.2\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--stderr"
 | |
| Redirect all writes to stderr to the specified file instead. If the file name
 | |
| is a plain '-', it is instead written to stdout.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-v, --verbose\fP and \fI-s, --silent\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--suppress-connect-headers"
 | |
| When \fI-p, --proxytunnel\fP is used and a CONNECT request is made don't output proxy
 | |
| CONNECT response headers. This option is meant to be used with \fI-D, --dump-header\fP or
 | |
| \fI-i, --include\fP which are used to show protocol headers in the output. It has no
 | |
| effect on debug options such as \fI-v, --verbose\fP or \fI--trace\fP, or any statistics.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-D, --dump-header\fP and \fI-i, --include\fP and \fI-p, --proxytunnel\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--tcp-fastopen"
 | |
| Enable use of TCP Fast Open (RFC7413).
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.49.0.
 | |
| .IP "--tcp-nodelay"
 | |
| Turn on the TCP_NODELAY option. See the \fIcurl_easy_setopt(3)\fP man page for
 | |
| details about this option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.50.2, curl sets this option by default and you need to explicitly
 | |
| switch it off if you don't want it on.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.11.2.
 | |
| .IP "-t, --telnet-option <opt=val>"
 | |
| Pass options to the telnet protocol. Supported options are:
 | |
| 
 | |
| TTYPE=<term> Sets the terminal type.
 | |
| 
 | |
| XDISPLOC=<X display> Sets the X display location.
 | |
| 
 | |
| NEW_ENV=<var,val> Sets an environment variable.
 | |
| .IP "--tftp-blksize <value>"
 | |
| (TFTP) Set TFTP BLKSIZE option (must be >512). This is the block size that curl will
 | |
| try to use when transferring data to or from a TFTP server. By default 512
 | |
| bytes will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.20.0.
 | |
| .IP "--tftp-no-options"
 | |
| (TFTP) Tells curl not to send TFTP options requests.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option improves interop with some legacy servers that do not acknowledge
 | |
| or properly implement TFTP options. When this option is used \fI--tftp-blksize\fP is
 | |
| ignored.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.48.0.
 | |
| .IP "-z, --time-cond <time>"
 | |
| (HTTP FTP) Request a file that has been modified later than the given time and date, or
 | |
| one that has been modified before that time. The <date expression> can be all
 | |
| sorts of date strings or if it doesn't match any internal ones, it is taken as
 | |
| a filename and tries to get the modification date (mtime) from <file>
 | |
| instead. See the \fIcurl_getdate(3)\fP man pages for date expression details.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Start the date expression with a dash (-) to make it request for a document
 | |
| that is older than the given date/time, default is a document that is newer
 | |
| than the specified date/time.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "--tls-max <VERSION>"
 | |
| (SSL) VERSION defines maximum supported TLS version. A minimum is defined
 | |
| by arguments tlsv1.0 or tlsv1.1 or tlsv1.2.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .IP "default"
 | |
| Use up to recommended TLS version.
 | |
| .IP "1.0"
 | |
| Use up to TLSv1.0.
 | |
| .IP "1.1"
 | |
| Use up to TLSv1.1.
 | |
| .IP "1.2"
 | |
| Use up to TLSv1.2.
 | |
| .IP "1.3"
 | |
| Use up to TLSv1.3.
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--tlsv1.0\fP and \fI--tlsv1.1\fP and \fI--tlsv1.2\fP. \fI--tls-max\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support TLS. Added in 7.54.0.
 | |
| .IP "--tlsauthtype <type>"
 | |
| Set TLS authentication type. Currently, the only supported option is "SRP",
 | |
| for TLS-SRP (RFC 5054). If \fI--tlsuser\fP and \fI--tlspassword\fP are specified but
 | |
| \fI--tlsauthtype\fP is not, then this option defaults to "SRP".
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.21.4.
 | |
| .IP "--tlspassword"
 | |
| Set password for use with the TLS authentication method specified with
 | |
| \fI--tlsauthtype\fP. Requires that \fI--tlsuser\fP also be set.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.21.4.
 | |
| .IP "--tlsuser <name>"
 | |
| Set username for use with the TLS authentication method specified with
 | |
| \fI--tlsauthtype\fP. Requires that \fI--tlspassword\fP also is set.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.21.4.
 | |
| .IP "--tlsv1.0"
 | |
| (TLS) Forces curl to use TLS version 1.0 when connecting to a remote TLS server.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.34.0.
 | |
| .IP "--tlsv1.1"
 | |
| (TLS) Forces curl to use TLS version 1.1 when connecting to a remote TLS server.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.34.0.
 | |
| .IP "--tlsv1.2"
 | |
| (TLS) Forces curl to use TLS version 1.2 when connecting to a remote TLS server.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.34.0.
 | |
| .IP "--tlsv1.3"
 | |
| (TLS) Forces curl to use TLS version 1.3 when connecting to a remote TLS server.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Note that TLS 1.3 is only supported by a subset of TLS backends. At the time
 | |
| of writing this, those are BoringSSL and NSS only.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.52.0.
 | |
| .IP "-1, --tlsv1"
 | |
| (SSL) Tells curl to use TLS version 1.x when negotiating with a remote TLS
 | |
| server. That means TLS version 1.0, 1.1 or 1.2.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI--http1.1\fP and \fI--http2\fP. \fI-1, --tlsv1\fP requires that the underlying libcurl was built to support TLS. This option overrides \fI--tlsv1.1\fP and \fI--tlsv1.2\fP and \fI--tlsv1.3\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--tr-encoding"
 | |
| (HTTP) Request a compressed Transfer-Encoding response using one of the algorithms
 | |
| curl supports, and uncompress the data while receiving it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.21.6.
 | |
| .IP "--trace-ascii <file>"
 | |
| Enables a full trace dump of all incoming and outgoing data, including
 | |
| descriptive information, to the given output file. Use "-" as filename to have
 | |
| the output sent to stdout.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This is very similar to \fI--trace\fP, but leaves out the hex part and only shows
 | |
| the ASCII part of the dump. It makes smaller output that might be easier to
 | |
| read for untrained humans.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option overrides \fI--trace\fP and \fI-v, --verbose\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--trace-time"
 | |
| Prepends a time stamp to each trace or verbose line that curl displays.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.14.0.
 | |
| .IP "--trace <file>"
 | |
| Enables a full trace dump of all incoming and outgoing data, including
 | |
| descriptive information, to the given output file. Use "-" as filename to have
 | |
| the output sent to stdout. Use "%" as filename to have the output sent to
 | |
| stderr.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option overrides \fI-v, --verbose\fP and \fI--trace-ascii\fP.
 | |
| .IP "--unix-socket <path>"
 | |
| (HTTP) Connect through this Unix domain socket, instead of using the network.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Added in 7.40.0.
 | |
| .IP "-T, --upload-file <file>"
 | |
| This transfers the specified local file to the remote URL. If there is no file
 | |
| part in the specified URL, curl will append the local file name. NOTE that you
 | |
| must use a trailing / on the last directory to really prove to Curl that there
 | |
| is no file name or curl will think that your last directory name is the remote
 | |
| file name to use. That will most likely cause the upload operation to fail. If
 | |
| this is used on an HTTP(S) server, the PUT command will be used.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Use the file name "-" (a single dash) to use stdin instead of a given file.
 | |
| Alternately, the file name "." (a single period) may be specified instead
 | |
| of "-" to use stdin in non-blocking mode to allow reading server output
 | |
| while stdin is being uploaded.
 | |
| 
 | |
| You can specify one \fI-T, --upload-file\fP for each URL on the command line. Each
 | |
| \fI-T, --upload-file\fP + URL pair specifies what to upload and to where. curl also
 | |
| supports "globbing" of the \fI-T, --upload-file\fP argument, meaning that you can upload
 | |
| multiple files to a single URL by using the same URL globbing style supported
 | |
| in the URL, like this:
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl --upload-file "{file1,file2}" http://www.example.com
 | |
| 
 | |
| or even
 | |
| 
 | |
|  curl -T "img[1-1000].png" ftp://ftp.example.com/upload/
 | |
| 
 | |
| When uploading to an SMTP server: the uploaded data is assumed to be RFC 5322
 | |
| formatted. It has to feature the necessary set of headers and mail body
 | |
| formatted correctly by the user as curl will not transcode nor encode it
 | |
| further in any way.
 | |
| .IP "--url <url>"
 | |
| Specify a URL to fetch. This option is mostly handy when you want to specify
 | |
| URL(s) in a config file.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If the given URL is missing a scheme name (such as "http://" or "ftp://" etc)
 | |
| then curl will make a guess based on the host. If the outermost sub-domain
 | |
| name matches DICT, FTP, IMAP, LDAP, POP3 or SMTP then that protocol will be
 | |
| used, otherwise HTTP will be used. Since 7.45.0 guessing can be disabled by
 | |
| setting a default protocol, see \fI--proto-default\fP for details.
 | |
| 
 | |
| This option may be used any number of times. To control where this URL is
 | |
| written, use the \fI-o, --output\fP or the \fI-O, --remote-name\fP options.
 | |
| .IP "-B, --use-ascii"
 | |
| (FTP LDAP) Enable ASCII transfer. For FTP, this can also be enforced by using a URL that
 | |
| ends with ";type=A". This option causes data sent to stdout to be in text mode
 | |
| for win32 systems.
 | |
| .IP "-A, --user-agent <name>"
 | |
| (HTTP) 
 | |
| Specify the User-Agent string to send to the HTTP server. To encode blanks in
 | |
| the string, surround the string with single quote marks. This can also be set
 | |
| with the \fI-H, --header\fP option of course.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "-u, --user <user:password>"
 | |
| Specify the user name and password to use for server authentication. Overrides
 | |
| \fI-n, --netrc\fP and \fI--netrc-optional\fP.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you simply specify the user name, curl will prompt for a password.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The user name and passwords are split up on the first colon, which makes it
 | |
| impossible to use a colon in the user name with this option. The password can,
 | |
| still.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When using Kerberos V5 with a Windows based server you should include the
 | |
| Windows domain name in the user name, in order for the server to successfully
 | |
| obtain a Kerberos Ticket. If you don't then the initial authentication
 | |
| handshake may fail.
 | |
| 
 | |
| When using NTLM, the user name can be specified simply as the user name,
 | |
| without the domain, if there is a single domain and forest in your setup
 | |
| for example.
 | |
| 
 | |
| To specify the domain name use either Down-Level Logon Name or UPN (User
 | |
| Principal Name) formats. For example, EXAMPLE\\user and user@example.com
 | |
| respectively.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you use a Windows SSPI-enabled curl binary and perform Kerberos V5,
 | |
| Negotiate, NTLM or Digest authentication then you can tell curl to select
 | |
| the user name and password from your environment by specifying a single colon
 | |
| with this option: "-u :".
 | |
| 
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "-v, --verbose"
 | |
| Makes curl verbose during the operation. Useful for debugging and seeing
 | |
| what's going on "under the hood". A line starting with '>' means "header data"
 | |
| sent by curl, '<' means "header data" received by curl that is hidden in
 | |
| normal cases, and a line starting with '*' means additional info provided by
 | |
| curl.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you only want HTTP headers in the output, \fI-i, --include\fP might be the option
 | |
| you're looking for.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If you think this option still doesn't give you enough details, consider using
 | |
| \fI--trace\fP or \fI--trace-ascii\fP instead.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Use \fI-s, --silent\fP to make curl really quiet.
 | |
| 
 | |
| See also \fI-i, --include\fP. This option overrides \fI--trace\fP and \fI--trace-ascii\fP.
 | |
| .IP "-V, --version"
 | |
| Displays information about curl and the libcurl version it uses.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The first line includes the full version of curl, libcurl and other 3rd party
 | |
| libraries linked with the executable.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The second line (starts with "Protocols:") shows all protocols that libcurl
 | |
| reports to support.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The third line (starts with "Features:") shows specific features libcurl
 | |
| reports to offer. Available features include:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .IP "IPv6"
 | |
| You can use IPv6 with this.
 | |
| .IP "krb4"
 | |
| Krb4 for FTP is supported.
 | |
| .IP "SSL"
 | |
| SSL versions of various protocols are supported, such as HTTPS, FTPS, POP3S
 | |
| and so on.
 | |
| .IP "libz"
 | |
| Automatic decompression of compressed files over HTTP is supported.
 | |
| .IP "NTLM"
 | |
| NTLM authentication is supported.
 | |
| .IP "Debug"
 | |
| This curl uses a libcurl built with Debug. This enables more error-tracking
 | |
| and memory debugging etc. For curl-developers only!
 | |
| .IP "AsynchDNS"
 | |
| This curl uses asynchronous name resolves. Asynchronous name resolves can be
 | |
| done using either the c-ares or the threaded resolver backends.
 | |
| .IP "SPNEGO"
 | |
| SPNEGO authentication is supported.
 | |
| .IP "Largefile"
 | |
| This curl supports transfers of large files, files larger than 2GB.
 | |
| .IP "IDN"
 | |
| This curl supports IDN - international domain names.
 | |
| .IP "GSS-API"
 | |
| GSS-API is supported.
 | |
| .IP "SSPI"
 | |
| SSPI is supported.
 | |
| .IP "TLS-SRP"
 | |
| SRP (Secure Remote Password) authentication is supported for TLS.
 | |
| .IP "HTTP2"
 | |
| HTTP/2 support has been built-in.
 | |
| .IP "UnixSockets"
 | |
| Unix sockets support is provided.
 | |
| .IP "HTTPS-proxy"
 | |
| This curl is built to support HTTPS proxy.
 | |
| .IP "Metalink"
 | |
| This curl supports Metalink (both version 3 and 4 (RFC 5854)), which
 | |
| describes mirrors and hashes.  curl will use mirrors for failover if
 | |
| there are errors (such as the file or server not being available).
 | |
| .IP "PSL"
 | |
| PSL is short for Public Suffix List and means that this curl has been built
 | |
| with knowledge about "public suffixes".
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .IP "-w, --write-out <format>"
 | |
| Make curl display information on stdout after a completed transfer. The format
 | |
| is a string that may contain plain text mixed with any number of
 | |
| variables. The format can be specified as a literal "string", or you can have
 | |
| curl read the format from a file with "@filename" and to tell curl to read the
 | |
| format from stdin you write "@-".
 | |
| 
 | |
| The variables present in the output format will be substituted by the value or
 | |
| text that curl thinks fit, as described below. All variables are specified as
 | |
| %{variable_name} and to output a normal % you just write them as %%. You can
 | |
| output a newline by using \\n, a carriage return with \\r and a tab space with
 | |
| \\t.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .B NOTE:
 | |
| The %-symbol is a special symbol in the win32-environment, where all
 | |
| occurrences of % must be doubled when using this option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The variables available are:
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| .TP 15
 | |
| .B content_type
 | |
| The Content-Type of the requested document, if there was any.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B filename_effective
 | |
| The ultimate filename that curl writes out to. This is only meaningful if curl
 | |
| is told to write to a file with the \fI-O, --remote-name\fP or \fI-o, --output\fP
 | |
| option. It's most useful in combination with the \fI-J, --remote-header-name\fP
 | |
| option. (Added in 7.26.0)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B ftp_entry_path
 | |
| The initial path curl ended up in when logging on to the remote FTP
 | |
| server. (Added in 7.15.4)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B http_code
 | |
| The numerical response code that was found in the last retrieved HTTP(S) or
 | |
| FTP(s) transfer. In 7.18.2 the alias \fBresponse_code\fP was added to show the
 | |
| same info.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B http_connect
 | |
| The numerical code that was found in the last response (from a proxy) to a
 | |
| curl CONNECT request. (Added in 7.12.4)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B http_version
 | |
| The http version that was effectively used. (Added in 7.50.0)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B local_ip
 | |
| The IP address of the local end of the most recently done connection - can be
 | |
| either IPv4 or IPv6 (Added in 7.29.0)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B local_port
 | |
| The local port number of the most recently done connection (Added in 7.29.0)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B num_connects
 | |
| Number of new connects made in the recent transfer. (Added in 7.12.3)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B num_redirects
 | |
| Number of redirects that were followed in the request. (Added in 7.12.3)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B proxy_ssl_verify_result
 | |
| The result of the HTTPS proxy's SSL peer certificate verification that was
 | |
| requested. 0 means the verification was successful. (Added in 7.52.0)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B redirect_url
 | |
| When an HTTP request was made without \fI-L, --location\fP to follow redirects (or when
 | |
| --max-redir is met), this variable will show the actual URL a redirect
 | |
| \fIwould\fP have gone to. (Added in 7.18.2)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B remote_ip
 | |
| The remote IP address of the most recently done connection - can be either
 | |
| IPv4 or IPv6 (Added in 7.29.0)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B remote_port
 | |
| The remote port number of the most recently done connection (Added in 7.29.0)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B scheme
 | |
| The URL scheme (sometimes called protocol) that was effectively used (Added in 7.52.0)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B size_download
 | |
| The total amount of bytes that were downloaded.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B size_header
 | |
| The total amount of bytes of the downloaded headers.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B size_request
 | |
| The total amount of bytes that were sent in the HTTP request.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B size_upload
 | |
| The total amount of bytes that were uploaded.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B speed_download
 | |
| The average download speed that curl measured for the complete download. Bytes
 | |
| per second.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B speed_upload
 | |
| The average upload speed that curl measured for the complete upload. Bytes per
 | |
| second.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B ssl_verify_result
 | |
| The result of the SSL peer certificate verification that was requested. 0
 | |
| means the verification was successful. (Added in 7.19.0)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B time_appconnect
 | |
| The time, in seconds, it took from the start until the SSL/SSH/etc
 | |
| connect/handshake to the remote host was completed. (Added in 7.19.0)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B time_connect
 | |
| The time, in seconds, it took from the start until the TCP connect to the
 | |
| remote host (or proxy) was completed.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B time_namelookup
 | |
| The time, in seconds, it took from the start until the name resolving was
 | |
| completed.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B time_pretransfer
 | |
| The time, in seconds, it took from the start until the file transfer was just
 | |
| about to begin. This includes all pre-transfer commands and negotiations that
 | |
| are specific to the particular protocol(s) involved.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B time_redirect
 | |
| The time, in seconds, it took for all redirection steps including name lookup,
 | |
| connect, pretransfer and transfer before the final transaction was
 | |
| started. time_redirect shows the complete execution time for multiple
 | |
| redirections. (Added in 7.12.3)
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B time_starttransfer
 | |
| The time, in seconds, it took from the start until the first byte was just
 | |
| about to be transferred. This includes time_pretransfer and also the time the
 | |
| server needed to calculate the result.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B time_total
 | |
| The total time, in seconds, that the full operation lasted.
 | |
| .TP
 | |
| .B url_effective
 | |
| The URL that was fetched last. This is most meaningful if you've told curl
 | |
| to follow location: headers.
 | |
| .RE
 | |
| .IP
 | |
| If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
 | |
| .IP "--xattr"
 | |
| When saving output to a file, this option tells curl to store certain file
 | |
| metadata in extended file attributes. Currently, the URL is stored in the
 | |
| xdg.origin.url attribute and, for HTTP, the content type is stored in
 | |
| the mime_type attribute. If the file system does not support extended
 | |
| attributes, a warning is issued.
 | |
| .SH FILES
 | |
| .I ~/.curlrc
 | |
| .RS
 | |
| Default config file, see \fI-K, --config\fP for details.
 | |
| .SH ENVIRONMENT
 | |
| The environment variables can be specified in lower case or upper case. The
 | |
| lower case version has precedence. http_proxy is an exception as it is only
 | |
| available in lower case.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Using an environment variable to set the proxy has the same effect as using
 | |
| the \fI-x, --proxy\fP option.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .IP "http_proxy [protocol://]<host>[:port]"
 | |
| Sets the proxy server to use for HTTP.
 | |
| .IP "HTTPS_PROXY [protocol://]<host>[:port]"
 | |
| Sets the proxy server to use for HTTPS.
 | |
| .IP "[url-protocol]_PROXY [protocol://]<host>[:port]"
 | |
| Sets the proxy server to use for [url-protocol], where the protocol is a
 | |
| protocol that curl supports and as specified in a URL. FTP, FTPS, POP3, IMAP,
 | |
| SMTP, LDAP etc.
 | |
| .IP "ALL_PROXY [protocol://]<host>[:port]"
 | |
| Sets the proxy server to use if no protocol-specific proxy is set.
 | |
| .IP "NO_PROXY <comma-separated list of hosts>"
 | |
| list of host names that shouldn't go through any proxy. If set to a asterisk
 | |
| \&'*' only, it matches all hosts.
 | |
| 
 | |
| Since 7.53.0, this environment variable disable the proxy even if specify
 | |
| \fI-x, --proxy\fP option. That is
 | |
| .B NO_PROXY=direct.example.com curl -x http://proxy.example.com
 | |
| .B http://direct.example.com
 | |
| accesses the target URL directly, and
 | |
| .B NO_PROXY=direct.example.com curl -x http://proxy.example.com
 | |
| .B http://somewhere.example.com
 | |
| accesses the target URL through proxy.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .SH "PROXY PROTOCOL PREFIXES"
 | |
| Since curl version 7.21.7, the proxy string may be specified with a
 | |
| protocol:// prefix to specify alternative proxy protocols.
 | |
| 
 | |
| If no protocol is specified in the proxy string or if the string doesn't match
 | |
| a supported one, the proxy will be treated as an HTTP proxy.
 | |
| 
 | |
| The supported proxy protocol prefixes are as follows:
 | |
| .IP "socks4://"
 | |
| Makes it the equivalent of \fI--socks4\fP
 | |
| .IP "socks4a://"
 | |
| Makes it the equivalent of \fI--socks4a\fP
 | |
| .IP "socks5://"
 | |
| Makes it the equivalent of \fI--socks5\fP
 | |
| .IP "socks5h://"
 | |
| Makes it the equivalent of \fI--socks5-hostname\fP
 | |
| .SH EXIT CODES
 | |
| There are a bunch of different error codes and their corresponding error
 | |
| messages that may appear during bad conditions. At the time of this writing,
 | |
| the exit codes are:
 | |
| .IP 1
 | |
| Unsupported protocol. This build of curl has no support for this protocol.
 | |
| .IP 2
 | |
| Failed to initialize.
 | |
| .IP 3
 | |
| URL malformed. The syntax was not correct.
 | |
| .IP 4
 | |
| A feature or option that was needed to perform the desired request was not
 | |
| enabled or was explicitly disabled at build-time. To make curl able to do
 | |
| this, you probably need another build of libcurl!
 | |
| .IP 5
 | |
| Couldn't resolve proxy. The given proxy host could not be resolved.
 | |
| .IP 6
 | |
| Couldn't resolve host. The given remote host was not resolved.
 | |
| .IP 7
 | |
| Failed to connect to host.
 | |
| .IP 8
 | |
| Weird server reply. The server sent data curl couldn't parse.
 | |
| .IP 9
 | |
| FTP access denied. The server denied login or denied access to the particular
 | |
| resource or directory you wanted to reach. Most often you tried to change to a
 | |
| directory that doesn't exist on the server.
 | |
| .IP 10
 | |
| FTP accept failed. While waiting for the server to connect back when an active
 | |
| FTP session is used, an error code was sent over the control connection or
 | |
| similar.
 | |
| .IP 11
 | |
| FTP weird PASS reply. Curl couldn't parse the reply sent to the PASS request.
 | |
| .IP 12
 | |
| During an active FTP session while waiting for the server to connect back to
 | |
| curl, the timeout expired.
 | |
| .IP 13
 | |
| FTP weird PASV reply, Curl couldn't parse the reply sent to the PASV request.
 | |
| .IP 14
 | |
| FTP weird 227 format. Curl couldn't parse the 227-line the server sent.
 | |
| .IP 15
 | |
| FTP can't get host. Couldn't resolve the host IP we got in the 227-line.
 | |
| .IP 16
 | |
| HTTP/2 error. A problem was detected in the HTTP2 framing layer. This is
 | |
| somewhat generic and can be one out of several problems, see the error message
 | |
| for details.
 | |
| .IP 17
 | |
| FTP couldn't set binary. Couldn't change transfer method to binary.
 | |
| .IP 18
 | |
| Partial file. Only a part of the file was transferred.
 | |
| .IP 19
 | |
| FTP couldn't download/access the given file, the RETR (or similar) command
 | |
| failed.
 | |
| .IP 21
 | |
| FTP quote error. A quote command returned error from the server.
 | |
| .IP 22
 | |
| HTTP page not retrieved. The requested url was not found or returned another
 | |
| error with the HTTP error code being 400 or above. This return code only
 | |
| appears if \fI-f, --fail\fP is used.
 | |
| .IP 23
 | |
| Write error. Curl couldn't write data to a local filesystem or similar.
 | |
| .IP 25
 | |
| FTP couldn't STOR file. The server denied the STOR operation, used for FTP
 | |
| uploading.
 | |
| .IP 26
 | |
| Read error. Various reading problems.
 | |
| .IP 27
 | |
| Out of memory. A memory allocation request failed.
 | |
| .IP 28
 | |
| Operation timeout. The specified time-out period was reached according to the
 | |
| conditions.
 | |
| .IP 30
 | |
| FTP PORT failed. The PORT command failed. Not all FTP servers support the PORT
 | |
| command, try doing a transfer using PASV instead!
 | |
| .IP 31
 | |
| FTP couldn't use REST. The REST command failed. This command is used for
 | |
| resumed FTP transfers.
 | |
| .IP 33
 | |
| HTTP range error. The range "command" didn't work.
 | |
| .IP 34
 | |
| HTTP post error. Internal post-request generation error.
 | |
| .IP 35
 | |
| SSL connect error. The SSL handshaking failed.
 | |
| .IP 36
 | |
| Bad download resume. Couldn't continue an earlier aborted download.
 | |
| .IP 37
 | |
| FILE couldn't read file. Failed to open the file. Permissions?
 | |
| .IP 38
 | |
| LDAP cannot bind. LDAP bind operation failed.
 | |
| .IP 39
 | |
| LDAP search failed.
 | |
| .IP 41
 | |
| Function not found. A required LDAP function was not found.
 | |
| .IP 42
 | |
| Aborted by callback. An application told curl to abort the operation.
 | |
| .IP 43
 | |
| Internal error. A function was called with a bad parameter.
 | |
| .IP 45
 | |
| Interface error. A specified outgoing interface could not be used.
 | |
| .IP 47
 | |
| Too many redirects. When following redirects, curl hit the maximum amount.
 | |
| .IP 48
 | |
| Unknown option specified to libcurl. This indicates that you passed a weird
 | |
| option to curl that was passed on to libcurl and rejected. Read up in the
 | |
| manual!
 | |
| .IP 49
 | |
| Malformed telnet option.
 | |
| .IP 51
 | |
| The peer's SSL certificate or SSH MD5 fingerprint was not OK.
 | |
| .IP 52
 | |
| The server didn't reply anything, which here is considered an error.
 | |
| .IP 53
 | |
| SSL crypto engine not found.
 | |
| .IP 54
 | |
| Cannot set SSL crypto engine as default.
 | |
| .IP 55
 | |
| Failed sending network data.
 | |
| .IP 56
 | |
| Failure in receiving network data.
 | |
| .IP 58
 | |
| Problem with the local certificate.
 | |
| .IP 59
 | |
| Couldn't use specified SSL cipher.
 | |
| .IP 60
 | |
| Peer certificate cannot be authenticated with known CA certificates.
 | |
| .IP 61
 | |
| Unrecognized transfer encoding.
 | |
| .IP 62
 | |
| Invalid LDAP URL.
 | |
| .IP 63
 | |
| Maximum file size exceeded.
 | |
| .IP 64
 | |
| Requested FTP SSL level failed.
 | |
| .IP 65
 | |
| Sending the data requires a rewind that failed.
 | |
| .IP 66
 | |
| Failed to initialise SSL Engine.
 | |
| .IP 67
 | |
| The user name, password, or similar was not accepted and curl failed to log in.
 | |
| .IP 68
 | |
| File not found on TFTP server.
 | |
| .IP 69
 | |
| Permission problem on TFTP server.
 | |
| .IP 70
 | |
| Out of disk space on TFTP server.
 | |
| .IP 71
 | |
| Illegal TFTP operation.
 | |
| .IP 72
 | |
| Unknown TFTP transfer ID.
 | |
| .IP 73
 | |
| File already exists (TFTP).
 | |
| .IP 74
 | |
| No such user (TFTP).
 | |
| .IP 75
 | |
| Character conversion failed.
 | |
| .IP 76
 | |
| Character conversion functions required.
 | |
| .IP 77
 | |
| Problem with reading the SSL CA cert (path? access rights?).
 | |
| .IP 78
 | |
| The resource referenced in the URL does not exist.
 | |
| .IP 79
 | |
| An unspecified error occurred during the SSH session.
 | |
| .IP 80
 | |
| Failed to shut down the SSL connection.
 | |
| .IP 82
 | |
| Could not load CRL file, missing or wrong format (added in 7.19.0).
 | |
| .IP 83
 | |
| Issuer check failed (added in 7.19.0).
 | |
| .IP 84
 | |
| The FTP PRET command failed
 | |
| .IP 85
 | |
| RTSP: mismatch of CSeq numbers
 | |
| .IP 86
 | |
| RTSP: mismatch of Session Identifiers
 | |
| .IP 87
 | |
| unable to parse FTP file list
 | |
| .IP 88
 | |
| FTP chunk callback reported error
 | |
| .IP 89
 | |
| No connection available, the session will be queued
 | |
| .IP 90
 | |
| SSL public key does not matched pinned public key
 | |
| .IP XX
 | |
| More error codes will appear here in future releases. The existing ones
 | |
| are meant to never change.
 | |
| .SH AUTHORS / CONTRIBUTORS
 | |
| Daniel Stenberg is the main author, but the whole list of contributors is
 | |
| found in the separate THANKS file.
 | |
| .SH WWW
 | |
| https://curl.haxx.se
 | |
| .SH "SEE ALSO"
 | |
| .BR ftp (1),
 | |
| .BR wget (1)
 |