| xf.li | 6c8fc1e | 2023-08-12 00:11:09 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | _   _ ____  _ | 
|  | 2 | ___| | | |  _ \| | | 
|  | 3 | / __| | | | |_) | | | 
|  | 4 | | (__| |_| |  _ <| |___ | 
|  | 5 | \___|\___/|_| \_\_____| | 
|  | 6 |  | 
|  | 7 | FAQ | 
|  | 8 |  | 
|  | 9 | 1. Philosophy | 
|  | 10 | 1.1 What is cURL? | 
|  | 11 | 1.2 What is libcurl? | 
|  | 12 | 1.3 What is curl not? | 
|  | 13 | 1.4 When will you make curl do XXXX ? | 
|  | 14 | 1.5 Who makes curl? | 
|  | 15 | 1.6 What do you get for making curl? | 
|  | 16 | 1.7 What about CURL from curl.com? | 
|  | 17 | 1.8 I have a problem, who do I mail? | 
|  | 18 | 1.9 Where do I buy commercial support for curl? | 
|  | 19 | 1.10 How many are using curl? | 
|  | 20 | 1.11 Why do you not update ca-bundle.crt | 
|  | 21 | 1.12 I have a problem, who can I chat with? | 
|  | 22 | 1.13 curl's ECCN number? | 
|  | 23 | 1.14 How do I submit my patch? | 
|  | 24 | 1.15 How do I port libcurl to my OS? | 
|  | 25 |  | 
|  | 26 | 2. Install Related Problems | 
|  | 27 | 2.1 configure fails when using static libraries | 
|  | 28 | 2.2 Does curl work/build with other SSL libraries? | 
|  | 29 | 2.4 Does curl support SOCKS (RFC 1928) ? | 
|  | 30 |  | 
|  | 31 | 3. Usage Problems | 
|  | 32 | 3.1 curl: (1) SSL is disabled, https: not supported | 
|  | 33 | 3.2 How do I tell curl to resume a transfer? | 
|  | 34 | 3.3 Why does my posting using -F not work? | 
|  | 35 | 3.4 How do I tell curl to run custom FTP commands? | 
|  | 36 | 3.5 How can I disable the Accept: */* header? | 
|  | 37 | 3.6 Does curl support ASP, XML, XHTML or HTML version Y? | 
|  | 38 | 3.7 Can I use curl to delete/rename a file through FTP? | 
|  | 39 | 3.8 How do I tell curl to follow HTTP redirects? | 
|  | 40 | 3.9 How do I use curl in my favorite programming language? | 
|  | 41 | 3.10 What about SOAP, WebDAV, XML-RPC or similar protocols over HTTP? | 
|  | 42 | 3.11 How do I POST with a different Content-Type? | 
|  | 43 | 3.12 Why do FTP-specific features over HTTP proxy fail? | 
|  | 44 | 3.13 Why do my single/double quotes fail? | 
|  | 45 | 3.14 Does curl support JavaScript or PAC (automated proxy config)? | 
|  | 46 | 3.15 Can I do recursive fetches with curl? | 
|  | 47 | 3.16 What certificates do I need when I use SSL? | 
|  | 48 | 3.17 How do I list the root directory of an FTP server? | 
|  | 49 | 3.18 Can I use curl to send a POST/PUT and not wait for a response? | 
|  | 50 | 3.19 How do I get HTTP from a host using a specific IP address? | 
|  | 51 | 3.20 How to SFTP from my user's home directory? | 
|  | 52 | 3.21 Protocol xxx not supported or disabled in libcurl | 
|  | 53 | 3.22 curl -X gives me HTTP problems | 
|  | 54 |  | 
|  | 55 | 4. Running Problems | 
|  | 56 | 4.2 Why do I get problems when I use & or % in the URL? | 
|  | 57 | 4.3 How can I use {, }, [ or ] to specify multiple URLs? | 
|  | 58 | 4.4 Why do I get downloaded data even though the web page does not exist? | 
|  | 59 | 4.5 Why do I get return code XXX from an HTTP server? | 
|  | 60 | 4.5.1 "400 Bad Request" | 
|  | 61 | 4.5.2 "401 Unauthorized" | 
|  | 62 | 4.5.3 "403 Forbidden" | 
|  | 63 | 4.5.4 "404 Not Found" | 
|  | 64 | 4.5.5 "405 Method Not Allowed" | 
|  | 65 | 4.5.6 "301 Moved Permanently" | 
|  | 66 | 4.6 Can you tell me what error code 142 means? | 
|  | 67 | 4.7 How do I keep user names and passwords secret in curl command lines? | 
|  | 68 | 4.8 I found a bug | 
|  | 69 | 4.9 curl cannot authenticate to a server that requires NTLM? | 
|  | 70 | 4.10 My HTTP request using HEAD, PUT or DELETE does not work | 
|  | 71 | 4.11 Why do my HTTP range requests return the full document? | 
|  | 72 | 4.12 Why do I get "certificate verify failed" ? | 
|  | 73 | 4.13 Why is curl -R on Windows one hour off? | 
|  | 74 | 4.14 Redirects work in browser but not with curl | 
|  | 75 | 4.15 FTPS does not work | 
|  | 76 | 4.16 My HTTP POST or PUT requests are slow | 
|  | 77 | 4.17 Non-functional connect timeouts on Windows | 
|  | 78 | 4.18 file:// URLs containing drive letters (Windows, NetWare) | 
|  | 79 | 4.19 Why does not curl return an error when the network cable is unplugged? | 
|  | 80 | 4.20 curl does not return error for HTTP non-200 responses | 
|  | 81 |  | 
|  | 82 | 5. libcurl Issues | 
|  | 83 | 5.1 Is libcurl thread-safe? | 
|  | 84 | 5.2 How can I receive all data into a large memory chunk? | 
|  | 85 | 5.3 How do I fetch multiple files with libcurl? | 
|  | 86 | 5.4 Does libcurl do Winsock initialization on win32 systems? | 
|  | 87 | 5.5 Does CURLOPT_WRITEDATA and CURLOPT_READDATA work on win32 ? | 
|  | 88 | 5.6 What about Keep-Alive or persistent connections? | 
|  | 89 | 5.7 Link errors when building libcurl on Windows | 
|  | 90 | 5.8 libcurl.so.X: open failed: No such file or directory | 
|  | 91 | 5.9 How does libcurl resolve host names? | 
|  | 92 | 5.10 How do I prevent libcurl from writing the response to stdout? | 
|  | 93 | 5.11 How do I make libcurl not receive the whole HTTP response? | 
|  | 94 | 5.12 Can I make libcurl fake or hide my real IP address? | 
|  | 95 | 5.13 How do I stop an ongoing transfer? | 
|  | 96 | 5.14 Using C++ non-static functions for callbacks? | 
|  | 97 | 5.15 How do I get an FTP directory listing? | 
|  | 98 | 5.16 I want a different time-out | 
|  | 99 | 5.17 Can I write a server with libcurl? | 
|  | 100 | 5.18 Does libcurl use threads? | 
|  | 101 |  | 
|  | 102 | 6. License Issues | 
|  | 103 | 6.1 I have a GPL program, can I use the libcurl library? | 
|  | 104 | 6.2 I have a closed-source program, can I use the libcurl library? | 
|  | 105 | 6.3 I have a BSD licensed program, can I use the libcurl library? | 
|  | 106 | 6.4 I have a program that uses LGPL libraries, can I use libcurl? | 
|  | 107 | 6.5 Can I modify curl/libcurl for my program and keep the changes secret? | 
|  | 108 | 6.6 Can you please change the curl/libcurl license to XXXX? | 
|  | 109 | 6.7 What are my obligations when using libcurl in my commercial apps? | 
|  | 110 |  | 
|  | 111 | 7. PHP/CURL Issues | 
|  | 112 | 7.1 What is PHP/CURL? | 
|  | 113 | 7.2 Who wrote PHP/CURL? | 
|  | 114 | 7.3 Can I perform multiple requests using the same handle? | 
|  | 115 | 7.4 Does PHP/CURL have dependencies? | 
|  | 116 |  | 
|  | 117 | 8. Development | 
|  | 118 | 8.1 Why does curl use C89? | 
|  | 119 | 8.2 Will curl be rewritten? | 
|  | 120 |  | 
|  | 121 | ============================================================================== | 
|  | 122 |  | 
|  | 123 | 1. Philosophy | 
|  | 124 |  | 
|  | 125 | 1.1 What is cURL? | 
|  | 126 |  | 
|  | 127 | cURL is the name of the project. The name is a play on 'Client for URLs', | 
|  | 128 | originally with URL spelled in uppercase to make it obvious it deals with | 
|  | 129 | URLs. The fact it can also be read as 'see URL' also helped, it works as | 
|  | 130 | an abbreviation for "Client URL Request Library" or why not the recursive | 
|  | 131 | version: "curl URL Request Library". | 
|  | 132 |  | 
|  | 133 | The cURL project produces two products: | 
|  | 134 |  | 
|  | 135 | libcurl | 
|  | 136 |  | 
|  | 137 | A client-side URL transfer library, supporting DICT, FILE, FTP, FTPS, | 
|  | 138 | GOPHER, GOPHERS, HTTP, HTTPS, IMAP, IMAPS, LDAP, LDAPS, MQTT, POP3, POP3S, | 
|  | 139 | RTMP, RTMPS, RTSP, SCP, SFTP, SMB, SMBS, SMTP, SMTPS, TELNET, TFTP, WS | 
|  | 140 | and WSS. | 
|  | 141 |  | 
|  | 142 | libcurl supports HTTPS certificates, HTTP POST, HTTP PUT, FTP uploading, | 
|  | 143 | Kerberos, SPNEGO, HTTP form based upload, proxies, cookies, user+password | 
|  | 144 | authentication, file transfer resume, http proxy tunneling and more. | 
|  | 145 |  | 
|  | 146 | libcurl is highly portable, it builds and works identically on numerous | 
|  | 147 | platforms, including Solaris, NetBSD, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Darwin, HP-UX, | 
|  | 148 | IRIX, AIX, Tru64, Linux, UnixWare, HURD, Windows, Amiga, OS/2, macOS, | 
|  | 149 | Ultrix, QNX, OpenVMS, RISC OS, Novell NetWare, DOS, Symbian, OSF, Android, | 
|  | 150 | Minix, IBM TPF and more... | 
|  | 151 |  | 
|  | 152 | libcurl is free, thread-safe, IPv6 compatible, feature rich, well | 
|  | 153 | supported and fast. | 
|  | 154 |  | 
|  | 155 | curl | 
|  | 156 |  | 
|  | 157 | A command line tool for getting or sending data using URL syntax. | 
|  | 158 |  | 
|  | 159 | Since curl uses libcurl, curl supports the same wide range of common | 
|  | 160 | Internet protocols that libcurl does. | 
|  | 161 |  | 
|  | 162 | We pronounce curl with an initial k sound. It rhymes with words like girl | 
|  | 163 | and earl. This is a short WAV file to help you: | 
|  | 164 |  | 
|  | 165 | https://media.merriam-webster.com/soundc11/c/curl0001.wav | 
|  | 166 |  | 
|  | 167 | There are numerous sub-projects and related projects that also use the word | 
|  | 168 | curl in the project names in various combinations, but you should take | 
|  | 169 | notice that this FAQ is directed at the command-line tool named curl (and | 
|  | 170 | libcurl the library), and may therefore not be valid for other curl-related | 
|  | 171 | projects. (There is however a small section for the PHP/CURL in this FAQ.) | 
|  | 172 |  | 
|  | 173 | 1.2 What is libcurl? | 
|  | 174 |  | 
|  | 175 | libcurl is a reliable and portable library for doing Internet data transfers | 
|  | 176 | using one or more of its supported Internet protocols. | 
|  | 177 |  | 
|  | 178 | You can use libcurl freely in your application, be it open source, | 
|  | 179 | commercial or closed-source. | 
|  | 180 |  | 
|  | 181 | libcurl is most probably the most portable, most powerful and most often | 
|  | 182 | used C-based multi-platform file transfer library on this planet - be it | 
|  | 183 | open source or commercial. | 
|  | 184 |  | 
|  | 185 | 1.3 What is curl not? | 
|  | 186 |  | 
|  | 187 | curl is not a wget clone. That is a common misconception. Never, during | 
|  | 188 | curl's development, have we intended curl to replace wget or compete on its | 
|  | 189 | market. curl is targeted at single-shot file transfers. | 
|  | 190 |  | 
|  | 191 | curl is not a website mirroring program. If you want to use curl to mirror | 
|  | 192 | something: fine, go ahead and write a script that wraps around curl or use | 
|  | 193 | libcurl to make it reality. | 
|  | 194 |  | 
|  | 195 | curl is not an FTP site mirroring program. Sure, get and send FTP with curl | 
|  | 196 | but if you want systematic and sequential behavior you should write a | 
|  | 197 | script (or write a new program that interfaces libcurl) and do it. | 
|  | 198 |  | 
|  | 199 | curl is not a PHP tool, even though it works perfectly well when used from | 
|  | 200 | or with PHP (when using the PHP/CURL module). | 
|  | 201 |  | 
|  | 202 | curl is not a program for a single operating system. curl exists, compiles, | 
|  | 203 | builds and runs under a wide range of operating systems, including all | 
|  | 204 | modern Unixes (and a bunch of older ones too), Windows, Amiga, OS/2, macOS, | 
|  | 205 | QNX etc. | 
|  | 206 |  | 
|  | 207 | 1.4 When will you make curl do XXXX ? | 
|  | 208 |  | 
|  | 209 | We love suggestions of what to change in order to make curl and libcurl | 
|  | 210 | better. We do however believe in a few rules when it comes to the future of | 
|  | 211 | curl: | 
|  | 212 |  | 
|  | 213 | curl -- the command line tool -- is to remain a non-graphical command line | 
|  | 214 | tool. If you want GUIs or fancy scripting capabilities, you should look for | 
|  | 215 | another tool that uses libcurl. | 
|  | 216 |  | 
|  | 217 | We do not add things to curl that other small and available tools already do | 
|  | 218 | well at the side. curl's output can be piped into another program or | 
|  | 219 | redirected to another file for the next program to interpret. | 
|  | 220 |  | 
|  | 221 | We focus on protocol related issues and improvements. If you want to do more | 
|  | 222 | magic with the supported protocols than curl currently does, chances are | 
|  | 223 | good we will agree. If you want to add more protocols, we may agree. | 
|  | 224 |  | 
|  | 225 | If you want someone else to do all the work while you wait for us to | 
|  | 226 | implement it for you, that is not a friendly attitude. We spend a | 
|  | 227 | considerable time already on maintaining and developing curl. In order to | 
|  | 228 | get more out of us, you should consider trading in some of your time and | 
|  | 229 | effort in return. Simply go to the GitHub repository which resides at | 
|  | 230 | https://github.com/curl/curl, fork the project, and create pull requests | 
|  | 231 | with your proposed changes. | 
|  | 232 |  | 
|  | 233 | If you write the code, chances are better that it will get into curl faster. | 
|  | 234 |  | 
|  | 235 | 1.5 Who makes curl? | 
|  | 236 |  | 
|  | 237 | curl and libcurl are not made by any single individual. Daniel Stenberg is | 
|  | 238 | project leader and main developer, but other persons' submissions are | 
|  | 239 | important and crucial. Anyone can contribute and post their changes and | 
|  | 240 | improvements and have them inserted in the main sources (of course on the | 
|  | 241 | condition that developers agree that the fixes are good). | 
|  | 242 |  | 
|  | 243 | The full list of all contributors is found in the docs/THANKS file. | 
|  | 244 |  | 
|  | 245 | curl is developed by a community, with Daniel at the wheel. | 
|  | 246 |  | 
|  | 247 | 1.6 What do you get for making curl? | 
|  | 248 |  | 
|  | 249 | Project cURL is entirely free and open. We do this voluntarily, mostly in | 
|  | 250 | our spare time. Companies may pay individual developers to work on curl. | 
|  | 251 | This is not controlled by nor supervised in any way by the curl project. | 
|  | 252 |  | 
|  | 253 | We get help from companies. Haxx provides website, bandwidth, mailing lists | 
|  | 254 | etc, GitHub hosts the primary git repository and other services like the bug | 
|  | 255 | tracker at https://github.com/curl/curl. Also again, some companies have | 
|  | 256 | sponsored certain parts of the development in the past and I hope some will | 
|  | 257 | continue to do so in the future. | 
|  | 258 |  | 
|  | 259 | If you want to support our project, consider a donation or a banner-program | 
|  | 260 | or even better: by helping us with coding, documenting or testing etc. | 
|  | 261 |  | 
|  | 262 | See also: https://curl.se/sponsors.html | 
|  | 263 |  | 
|  | 264 | 1.7 What about CURL from curl.com? | 
|  | 265 |  | 
|  | 266 | During the summer of 2001, curl.com was busy advertising their client-side | 
|  | 267 | programming language for the web, named CURL. | 
|  | 268 |  | 
|  | 269 | We are in no way associated with curl.com or their CURL programming | 
|  | 270 | language. | 
|  | 271 |  | 
|  | 272 | Our project name curl has been in effective use since 1998. We were not the | 
|  | 273 | first computer related project to use the name "curl" and do not claim any | 
|  | 274 | rights to the name. | 
|  | 275 |  | 
|  | 276 | We recognize that we will be living in parallel with curl.com and wish them | 
|  | 277 | every success. | 
|  | 278 |  | 
|  | 279 | 1.8 I have a problem, who do I mail? | 
|  | 280 |  | 
|  | 281 | Please do not mail any single individual unless you really need to. Keep | 
|  | 282 | curl-related questions on a suitable mailing list. All available mailing | 
|  | 283 | lists are listed in the MANUAL document and online at | 
|  | 284 | https://curl.se/mail/ | 
|  | 285 |  | 
|  | 286 | Keeping curl-related questions and discussions on mailing lists allows | 
|  | 287 | others to join in and help, to share their ideas, to contribute their | 
|  | 288 | suggestions and to spread their wisdom. Keeping discussions on public mailing | 
|  | 289 | lists also allows for others to learn from this (both current and future | 
|  | 290 | users thanks to the web based archives of the mailing lists), thus saving us | 
|  | 291 | from having to repeat ourselves even more. Thanks for respecting this. | 
|  | 292 |  | 
|  | 293 | If you have found or simply suspect a security problem in curl or libcurl, | 
|  | 294 | submit all the details at https://hackerone.one/curl. On there we keep the | 
|  | 295 | issue private while we investigate, confirm it, work and validate a fix and | 
|  | 296 | agree on a time schedule for publication etc. That way we produce a fix in a | 
|  | 297 | timely manner before the flaw is announced to the world, reducing the impact | 
|  | 298 | the problem risks having on existing users. | 
|  | 299 |  | 
|  | 300 | Security issues can also be taking to the curl security team by emailing | 
|  | 301 | security at curl.se (closed list of receivers, mails are not disclosed). | 
|  | 302 |  | 
|  | 303 | 1.9 Where do I buy commercial support for curl? | 
|  | 304 |  | 
|  | 305 | curl is fully open source. It means you can hire any skilled engineer to fix | 
|  | 306 | your curl-related problems. | 
|  | 307 |  | 
|  | 308 | We list available alternatives on the curl website: | 
|  | 309 | https://curl.se/support.html | 
|  | 310 |  | 
|  | 311 | 1.10 How many are using curl? | 
|  | 312 |  | 
|  | 313 | It is impossible to tell. | 
|  | 314 |  | 
|  | 315 | We do not know how many users that knowingly have installed and use curl. | 
|  | 316 |  | 
|  | 317 | We do not know how many users that use curl without knowing that they are in | 
|  | 318 | fact using it. | 
|  | 319 |  | 
|  | 320 | We do not know how many users that downloaded or installed curl and then | 
|  | 321 | never use it. | 
|  | 322 |  | 
|  | 323 | In 2020, we estimate that curl runs in roughly ten billion installations | 
|  | 324 | world wide. | 
|  | 325 |  | 
|  | 326 | 1.11 Why do you not update ca-bundle.crt | 
|  | 327 |  | 
|  | 328 | In the cURL project we have decided not to attempt to keep this file updated | 
|  | 329 | (or even present) since deciding what to add to a ca cert bundle is an | 
|  | 330 | undertaking we have not been ready to accept, and the one we can get from | 
|  | 331 | Mozilla is perfectly fine so there is no need to duplicate that work. | 
|  | 332 |  | 
|  | 333 | Today, with many services performed over HTTPS, every operating system | 
|  | 334 | should come with a default ca cert bundle that can be deemed somewhat | 
|  | 335 | trustworthy and that collection (if reasonably updated) should be deemed to | 
|  | 336 | be a lot better than a private curl version. | 
|  | 337 |  | 
|  | 338 | If you want the most recent collection of ca certs that Mozilla Firefox | 
|  | 339 | uses, we recommend that you extract the collection yourself from Mozilla | 
|  | 340 | Firefox (by running 'make ca-bundle), or by using our online service setup | 
|  | 341 | for this purpose: https://curl.se/docs/caextract.html | 
|  | 342 |  | 
|  | 343 | 1.12 I have a problem who, can I chat with? | 
|  | 344 |  | 
|  | 345 | There is a bunch of friendly people hanging out in the #curl channel on the | 
|  | 346 | IRC network libera.chat. If you are polite and nice, chances are good that | 
|  | 347 | you can get -- or provide -- help instantly. | 
|  | 348 |  | 
|  | 349 | 1.13 curl's ECCN number? | 
|  | 350 |  | 
|  | 351 | The US government restricts exports of software that contains or uses | 
|  | 352 | cryptography. When doing so, the Export Control Classification Number (ECCN) | 
|  | 353 | is used to identify the level of export control etc. | 
|  | 354 |  | 
|  | 355 | Apache Software Foundation gives a good explanation of ECCNs at | 
|  | 356 | https://www.apache.org/dev/crypto.html | 
|  | 357 |  | 
|  | 358 | We believe curl's number might be ECCN 5D002, another possibility is | 
|  | 359 | 5D992. It seems necessary to write them (the authority that administers ECCN | 
|  | 360 | numbers), asking to confirm. | 
|  | 361 |  | 
|  | 362 | Comprehensible explanations of the meaning of such numbers and how to obtain | 
|  | 363 | them (resp.) are here | 
|  | 364 |  | 
|  | 365 | https://www.bis.doc.gov/licensing/exportingbasics.htm | 
|  | 366 | https://www.bis.doc.gov/licensing/do_i_needaneccn.html | 
|  | 367 |  | 
|  | 368 | An incomprehensible description of the two numbers above is here | 
|  | 369 | https://www.bis.doc.gov/index.php/documents/new-encryption/1653-ccl5-pt2-3 | 
|  | 370 |  | 
|  | 371 | 1.14 How do I submit my patch? | 
|  | 372 |  | 
|  | 373 | We strongly encourage you to submit changes and improvements directly as | 
|  | 374 | "pull requests" on GitHub: https://github.com/curl/curl/pulls | 
|  | 375 |  | 
|  | 376 | If you for any reason cannot or will not deal with GitHub, send your patch to | 
|  | 377 | the curl-library mailing list. We are many subscribers there and there are | 
|  | 378 | lots of people who can review patches, comment on them and "receive" them | 
|  | 379 | properly. | 
|  | 380 |  | 
|  | 381 | Lots of more details are found in the CONTRIBUTE.md and INTERNALS.md | 
|  | 382 | documents. | 
|  | 383 |  | 
|  | 384 | 1.15 How do I port libcurl to my OS? | 
|  | 385 |  | 
|  | 386 | Here's a rough step-by-step: | 
|  | 387 |  | 
|  | 388 | 1. copy a suitable lib/config-*.h file as a start to lib/config-[youros].h | 
|  | 389 |  | 
|  | 390 | 2. edit lib/config-[youros].h to match your OS and setup | 
|  | 391 |  | 
|  | 392 | 3. edit lib/curl_setup.h to include config-[youros].h when your OS is | 
|  | 393 | detected by the preprocessor, in the style others already exist | 
|  | 394 |  | 
|  | 395 | 4. compile lib/*.c and make them into a library | 
|  | 396 |  | 
|  | 397 |  | 
|  | 398 | 2. Install Related Problems | 
|  | 399 |  | 
|  | 400 | 2.1 configure fails when using static libraries | 
|  | 401 |  | 
|  | 402 | You may find that configure fails to properly detect the entire dependency | 
|  | 403 | chain of libraries when you provide static versions of the libraries that | 
|  | 404 | configure checks for. | 
|  | 405 |  | 
|  | 406 | The reason why static libraries is much harder to deal with is that for them | 
|  | 407 | we do not get any help but the script itself must know or check what more | 
|  | 408 | libraries that are needed (with shared libraries, that dependency "chain" is | 
|  | 409 | handled automatically). This is a error-prone process and one that also | 
|  | 410 | tends to vary over time depending on the release versions of the involved | 
|  | 411 | components and may also differ between operating systems. | 
|  | 412 |  | 
|  | 413 | For that reason, configure does few attempts to actually figure this out and | 
|  | 414 | you are instead encouraged to set LIBS and LDFLAGS accordingly when you | 
|  | 415 | invoke configure, and point out the needed libraries and set the necessary | 
|  | 416 | flags yourself. | 
|  | 417 |  | 
|  | 418 | 2.2 Does curl work with other SSL libraries? | 
|  | 419 |  | 
|  | 420 | curl has been written to use a generic SSL function layer internally, and | 
|  | 421 | that SSL functionality can then be provided by one out of many different SSL | 
|  | 422 | backends. | 
|  | 423 |  | 
|  | 424 | curl can be built to use one of the following SSL alternatives: OpenSSL, | 
|  | 425 | libressl, BoringSSL, GnuTLS, wolfSSL, NSS, mbedTLS, Secure | 
|  | 426 | Transport (native iOS/OS X), Schannel (native Windows), GSKit (native IBM | 
|  | 427 | i), BearSSL, or Rustls. They all have their pros and cons, and we try to | 
|  | 428 | maintain a comparison of them here: https://curl.se/docs/ssl-compared.html | 
|  | 429 |  | 
|  | 430 | 2.4 Does curl support SOCKS (RFC 1928) ? | 
|  | 431 |  | 
|  | 432 | Yes, SOCKS 4 and 5 are supported. | 
|  | 433 |  | 
|  | 434 | 3. Usage problems | 
|  | 435 |  | 
|  | 436 | 3.1 curl: (1) SSL is disabled, https: not supported | 
|  | 437 |  | 
|  | 438 | If you get this output when trying to get anything from an https:// server, | 
|  | 439 | it means that the instance of curl/libcurl that you are using was built | 
|  | 440 | without support for this protocol. | 
|  | 441 |  | 
|  | 442 | This could have happened if the configure script that was run at build time | 
|  | 443 | could not find all libs and include files curl requires for SSL to work. If | 
|  | 444 | the configure script fails to find them, curl is simply built without SSL | 
|  | 445 | support. | 
|  | 446 |  | 
|  | 447 | To get the https:// support into a curl that was previously built but that | 
|  | 448 | reports that https:// is not supported, you should dig through the document | 
|  | 449 | and logs and check out why the configure script does not find the SSL libs | 
|  | 450 | and/or include files. | 
|  | 451 |  | 
|  | 452 | Also, check out the other paragraph in this FAQ labeled "configure does not | 
|  | 453 | find OpenSSL even when it is installed". | 
|  | 454 |  | 
|  | 455 | 3.2 How do I tell curl to resume a transfer? | 
|  | 456 |  | 
|  | 457 | curl supports resumed transfers both ways on both FTP and HTTP. | 
|  | 458 | Try the -C option. | 
|  | 459 |  | 
|  | 460 | 3.3 Why does my posting using -F not work? | 
|  | 461 |  | 
|  | 462 | You cannot arbitrarily use -F or -d, the choice between -F or -d depends on | 
|  | 463 | the HTTP operation you need curl to do and what the web server that will | 
|  | 464 | receive your post expects. | 
|  | 465 |  | 
|  | 466 | If the form you are trying to submit uses the type 'multipart/form-data', | 
|  | 467 | then and only then you must use the -F type. In all the most common cases, | 
|  | 468 | you should use -d which then causes a posting with the type | 
|  | 469 | 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'. | 
|  | 470 |  | 
|  | 471 | This is described in some detail in the MANUAL and TheArtOfHttpScripting | 
|  | 472 | documents, and if you do not understand it the first time, read it again | 
|  | 473 | before you post questions about this to the mailing list. Also, try reading | 
|  | 474 | through the mailing list archives for old postings and questions regarding | 
|  | 475 | this. | 
|  | 476 |  | 
|  | 477 | 3.4 How do I tell curl to run custom FTP commands? | 
|  | 478 |  | 
|  | 479 | You can tell curl to perform optional commands both before and/or after a | 
|  | 480 | file transfer. Study the -Q/--quote option. | 
|  | 481 |  | 
|  | 482 | Since curl is used for file transfers, you do not normally use curl to | 
|  | 483 | perform FTP commands without transferring anything. Therefore you must | 
|  | 484 | always specify a URL to transfer to/from even when doing custom FTP | 
|  | 485 | commands, or use -I which implies the "no body" option sent to libcurl. | 
|  | 486 |  | 
|  | 487 | 3.5 How can I disable the Accept: */* header? | 
|  | 488 |  | 
|  | 489 | You can change all internally generated headers by adding a replacement with | 
|  | 490 | the -H/--header option. By adding a header with empty contents you safely | 
|  | 491 | disable that one. Use -H "Accept:" to disable that specific header. | 
|  | 492 |  | 
|  | 493 | 3.6 Does curl support ASP, XML, XHTML or HTML version Y? | 
|  | 494 |  | 
|  | 495 | To curl, all contents are alike. It does not matter how the page was | 
|  | 496 | generated. It may be ASP, PHP, Perl, shell-script, SSI or plain HTML | 
|  | 497 | files. There is no difference to curl and it does not even know what kind of | 
|  | 498 | language that generated the page. | 
|  | 499 |  | 
|  | 500 | See also item 3.14 regarding JavaScript. | 
|  | 501 |  | 
|  | 502 | 3.7 Can I use curl to delete/rename a file through FTP? | 
|  | 503 |  | 
|  | 504 | Yes. You specify custom FTP commands with -Q/--quote. | 
|  | 505 |  | 
|  | 506 | One example would be to delete a file after you have downloaded it: | 
|  | 507 |  | 
|  | 508 | curl -O ftp://download.com/coolfile -Q '-DELE coolfile' | 
|  | 509 |  | 
|  | 510 | or rename a file after upload: | 
|  | 511 |  | 
|  | 512 | curl -T infile ftp://upload.com/dir/ -Q "-RNFR infile" -Q "-RNTO newname" | 
|  | 513 |  | 
|  | 514 | 3.8 How do I tell curl to follow HTTP redirects? | 
|  | 515 |  | 
|  | 516 | curl does not follow so-called redirects by default. The Location: header | 
|  | 517 | that informs the client about this is only interpreted if you are using the | 
|  | 518 | -L/--location option. As in: | 
|  | 519 |  | 
|  | 520 | curl -L http://redirector.com | 
|  | 521 |  | 
|  | 522 | Not all redirects are HTTP ones, see 4.14 | 
|  | 523 |  | 
|  | 524 | 3.9 How do I use curl in my favorite programming language? | 
|  | 525 |  | 
|  | 526 | Many programming languages have interfaces/bindings that allow you to use | 
|  | 527 | curl without having to use the command line tool. If you are fluent in such | 
|  | 528 | a language, you may prefer to use one of these interfaces instead. | 
|  | 529 |  | 
|  | 530 | Find out more about which languages that support curl directly, and how to | 
|  | 531 | install and use them, in the libcurl section of the curl website: | 
|  | 532 | https://curl.se/libcurl/ | 
|  | 533 |  | 
|  | 534 | All the various bindings to libcurl are made by other projects and people, | 
|  | 535 | outside of the cURL project. The cURL project itself only produces libcurl | 
|  | 536 | with its plain C API. If you do not find anywhere else to ask you can ask | 
|  | 537 | about bindings on the curl-library list too, but be prepared that people on | 
|  | 538 | that list may not know anything about bindings. | 
|  | 539 |  | 
|  | 540 | In December 2021, there were interfaces available for the following | 
|  | 541 | languages: Ada95, Basic, C, C++, Ch, Cocoa, D, Delphi, Dylan, Eiffel, | 
|  | 542 | Euphoria, Falcon, Ferite, Gambas, glib/GTK+, Go, Guile, Harbour, Haskell, | 
|  | 543 | Java, Julia, Lisp, Lua, Mono, .NET, node.js, Object-Pascal, OCaml, Pascal, | 
|  | 544 | Perl, PHP, PostgreSQL, Python, R, Rexx, Ring, RPG, Ruby, Rust, Scheme, | 
|  | 545 | Scilab, S-Lang, Smalltalk, SP-Forth, SPL, Tcl, Visual Basic, Visual FoxPro, | 
|  | 546 | Q, wxwidgets, XBLite and Xoho. By the time you read this, additional ones | 
|  | 547 | may have appeared. | 
|  | 548 |  | 
|  | 549 | 3.10 What about SOAP, WebDAV, XML-RPC or similar protocols over HTTP? | 
|  | 550 |  | 
|  | 551 | curl adheres to the HTTP spec, which basically means you can play with *any* | 
|  | 552 | protocol that is built on top of HTTP. Protocols such as SOAP, WEBDAV and | 
|  | 553 | XML-RPC are all such ones. You can use -X to set custom requests and -H to | 
|  | 554 | set custom headers (or replace internally generated ones). | 
|  | 555 |  | 
|  | 556 | Using libcurl is of course just as good and you would just use the proper | 
|  | 557 | library options to do the same. | 
|  | 558 |  | 
|  | 559 | 3.11 How do I POST with a different Content-Type? | 
|  | 560 |  | 
|  | 561 | You can always replace the internally generated headers with -H/--header. | 
|  | 562 | To make a simple HTTP POST with text/xml as content-type, do something like: | 
|  | 563 |  | 
|  | 564 | curl -d "datatopost" -H "Content-Type: text/xml" [URL] | 
|  | 565 |  | 
|  | 566 | 3.12 Why do FTP-specific features over HTTP proxy fail? | 
|  | 567 |  | 
|  | 568 | Because when you use an HTTP proxy, the protocol spoken on the network will | 
|  | 569 | be HTTP, even if you specify an FTP URL. This effectively means that you | 
|  | 570 | normally cannot use FTP-specific features such as FTP upload and FTP quote | 
|  | 571 | etc. | 
|  | 572 |  | 
|  | 573 | There is one exception to this rule, and that is if you can "tunnel through" | 
|  | 574 | the given HTTP proxy. Proxy tunneling is enabled with a special option (-p) | 
|  | 575 | and is generally not available as proxy admins usually disable tunneling to | 
|  | 576 | ports other than 443 (which is used for HTTPS access through proxies). | 
|  | 577 |  | 
|  | 578 | 3.13 Why do my single/double quotes fail? | 
|  | 579 |  | 
|  | 580 | To specify a command line option that includes spaces, you might need to | 
|  | 581 | put the entire option within quotes. Like in: | 
|  | 582 |  | 
|  | 583 | curl -d " with spaces " url.com | 
|  | 584 |  | 
|  | 585 | or perhaps | 
|  | 586 |  | 
|  | 587 | curl -d ' with spaces ' url.com | 
|  | 588 |  | 
|  | 589 | Exactly what kind of quotes and how to do this is entirely up to the shell | 
|  | 590 | or command line interpreter that you are using. For most unix shells, you | 
|  | 591 | can more or less pick either single (') or double (") quotes. For | 
|  | 592 | Windows/DOS command prompts you must use double (") quotes, and if the | 
|  | 593 | option string contains inner double quotes you can escape them with a | 
|  | 594 | backslash. | 
|  | 595 |  | 
|  | 596 | For Windows powershell the arguments are not always passed on as expected | 
|  | 597 | because curl is not a powershell script. You may or may not be able to use | 
|  | 598 | single quotes. To escape inner double quotes seems to require a | 
|  | 599 | backslash-backtick escape sequence and the outer quotes as double quotes. | 
|  | 600 |  | 
|  | 601 | Please study the documentation for your particular environment. Examples in | 
|  | 602 | the curl docs will use a mix of both of these as shown above. You must | 
|  | 603 | adjust them to work in your environment. | 
|  | 604 |  | 
|  | 605 | Remember that curl works and runs on more operating systems than most single | 
|  | 606 | individuals have ever tried. | 
|  | 607 |  | 
|  | 608 | 3.14 Does curl support JavaScript or PAC (automated proxy config)? | 
|  | 609 |  | 
|  | 610 | Many web pages do magic stuff using embedded JavaScript. curl and libcurl | 
|  | 611 | have no built-in support for that, so it will be treated just like any other | 
|  | 612 | contents. | 
|  | 613 |  | 
|  | 614 | .pac files are a Netscape invention and are sometimes used by organizations | 
|  | 615 | to allow them to differentiate which proxies to use. The .pac contents is | 
|  | 616 | just a JavaScript program that gets invoked by the browser and that returns | 
|  | 617 | the name of the proxy to connect to. Since curl does not support JavaScript, | 
|  | 618 | it cannot support .pac proxy configuration either. | 
|  | 619 |  | 
|  | 620 | Some workarounds usually suggested to overcome this JavaScript dependency: | 
|  | 621 |  | 
|  | 622 | Depending on the JavaScript complexity, write up a script that translates it | 
|  | 623 | to another language and execute that. | 
|  | 624 |  | 
|  | 625 | Read the JavaScript code and rewrite the same logic in another language. | 
|  | 626 |  | 
|  | 627 | Implement a JavaScript interpreter, people have successfully used the | 
|  | 628 | Mozilla JavaScript engine in the past. | 
|  | 629 |  | 
|  | 630 | Ask your admins to stop this, for a static proxy setup or similar. | 
|  | 631 |  | 
|  | 632 | 3.15 Can I do recursive fetches with curl? | 
|  | 633 |  | 
|  | 634 | No. curl itself has no code that performs recursive operations, such as | 
|  | 635 | those performed by wget and similar tools. | 
|  | 636 |  | 
|  | 637 | There exists wrapper scripts with that functionality (for example the | 
|  | 638 | curlmirror perl script), and you can write programs based on libcurl to do | 
|  | 639 | it, but the command line tool curl itself cannot. | 
|  | 640 |  | 
|  | 641 | 3.16 What certificates do I need when I use SSL? | 
|  | 642 |  | 
|  | 643 | There are three different kinds of "certificates" to keep track of when we | 
|  | 644 | talk about using SSL-based protocols (HTTPS or FTPS) using curl or libcurl. | 
|  | 645 |  | 
|  | 646 | CLIENT CERTIFICATE | 
|  | 647 |  | 
|  | 648 | The server you communicate with may require that you can provide this in | 
|  | 649 | order to prove that you actually are who you claim to be. If the server | 
|  | 650 | does not require this, you do not need a client certificate. | 
|  | 651 |  | 
|  | 652 | A client certificate is always used together with a private key, and the | 
|  | 653 | private key has a pass phrase that protects it. | 
|  | 654 |  | 
|  | 655 | SERVER CERTIFICATE | 
|  | 656 |  | 
|  | 657 | The server you communicate with has a server certificate. You can and should | 
|  | 658 | verify this certificate to make sure that you are truly talking to the real | 
|  | 659 | server and not a server impersonating it. | 
|  | 660 |  | 
|  | 661 | CERTIFICATE AUTHORITY CERTIFICATE ("CA cert") | 
|  | 662 |  | 
|  | 663 | You often have several CA certs in a CA cert bundle that can be used to | 
|  | 664 | verify a server certificate that was signed by one of the authorities in the | 
|  | 665 | bundle. curl does not come with a CA cert bundle but most curl installs | 
|  | 666 | provide one. You can also override the default. | 
|  | 667 |  | 
|  | 668 | The server certificate verification process is made by using a Certificate | 
|  | 669 | Authority certificate ("CA cert") that was used to sign the server | 
|  | 670 | certificate. Server certificate verification is enabled by default in curl | 
|  | 671 | and libcurl and is often the reason for problems as explained in FAQ entry | 
|  | 672 | 4.12 and the SSLCERTS document | 
|  | 673 | (https://curl.se/docs/sslcerts.html). Server certificates that are | 
|  | 674 | "self-signed" or otherwise signed by a CA that you do not have a CA cert | 
|  | 675 | for, cannot be verified. If the verification during a connect fails, you are | 
|  | 676 | refused access. You then need to explicitly disable the verification to | 
|  | 677 | connect to the server. | 
|  | 678 |  | 
|  | 679 | 3.17 How do I list the root directory of an FTP server? | 
|  | 680 |  | 
|  | 681 | There are two ways. The way defined in the RFC is to use an encoded slash | 
|  | 682 | in the first path part. List the "/tmp" directory like this: | 
|  | 683 |  | 
|  | 684 | curl ftp://ftp.sunet.se/%2ftmp/ | 
|  | 685 |  | 
|  | 686 | or the not-quite-kosher-but-more-readable way, by simply starting the path | 
|  | 687 | section of the URL with a slash: | 
|  | 688 |  | 
|  | 689 | curl ftp://ftp.sunet.se//tmp/ | 
|  | 690 |  | 
|  | 691 | 3.18 Can I use curl to send a POST/PUT and not wait for a response? | 
|  | 692 |  | 
|  | 693 | No. | 
|  | 694 |  | 
|  | 695 | You can easily write your own program using libcurl to do such stunts. | 
|  | 696 |  | 
|  | 697 | 3.19 How do I get HTTP from a host using a specific IP address? | 
|  | 698 |  | 
|  | 699 | For example, you may be trying out a website installation that is not yet in | 
|  | 700 | the DNS. Or you have a site using multiple IP addresses for a given host | 
|  | 701 | name and you want to address a specific one out of the set. | 
|  | 702 |  | 
|  | 703 | Set a custom Host: header that identifies the server name you want to reach | 
|  | 704 | but use the target IP address in the URL: | 
|  | 705 |  | 
|  | 706 | curl --header "Host: www.example.com" http://127.0.0.1/ | 
|  | 707 |  | 
|  | 708 | You can also opt to add faked host name entries to curl with the --resolve | 
|  | 709 | option. That has the added benefit that things like redirects will also work | 
|  | 710 | properly. The above operation would instead be done as: | 
|  | 711 |  | 
|  | 712 | curl --resolve www.example.com:80:127.0.0.1 http://www.example.com/ | 
|  | 713 |  | 
|  | 714 | 3.20 How to SFTP from my user's home directory? | 
|  | 715 |  | 
|  | 716 | Contrary to how FTP works, SFTP and SCP URLs specify the exact directory to | 
|  | 717 | work with. It means that if you do not specify that you want the user's home | 
|  | 718 | directory, you get the actual root directory. | 
|  | 719 |  | 
|  | 720 | To specify a file in your user's home directory, you need to use the correct | 
|  | 721 | URL syntax which for SFTP might look similar to: | 
|  | 722 |  | 
|  | 723 | curl -O -u user:password sftp://example.com/~/file.txt | 
|  | 724 |  | 
|  | 725 | and for SCP it is just a different protocol prefix: | 
|  | 726 |  | 
|  | 727 | curl -O -u user:password scp://example.com/~/file.txt | 
|  | 728 |  | 
|  | 729 | 3.21 Protocol xxx not supported or disabled in libcurl | 
|  | 730 |  | 
|  | 731 | When passing on a URL to curl to use, it may respond that the particular | 
|  | 732 | protocol is not supported or disabled. The particular way this error message | 
|  | 733 | is phrased is because curl does not make a distinction internally of whether | 
|  | 734 | a particular protocol is not supported (i.e. never got any code added that | 
|  | 735 | knows how to speak that protocol) or if it was explicitly disabled. curl can | 
|  | 736 | be built to only support a given set of protocols, and the rest would then | 
|  | 737 | be disabled or not supported. | 
|  | 738 |  | 
|  | 739 | Note that this error will also occur if you pass a wrongly spelled protocol | 
|  | 740 | part as in "htpt://example.com" or as in the less evident case if you prefix | 
|  | 741 | the protocol part with a space as in " http://example.com/". | 
|  | 742 |  | 
|  | 743 | 3.22 curl -X gives me HTTP problems | 
|  | 744 |  | 
|  | 745 | In normal circumstances, -X should hardly ever be used. | 
|  | 746 |  | 
|  | 747 | By default you use curl without explicitly saying which request method to | 
|  | 748 | use when the URL identifies an HTTP transfer. If you just pass in a URL like | 
|  | 749 | "curl http://example.com" it will use GET. If you use -d or -F curl will use | 
|  | 750 | POST, -I will cause a HEAD and -T will make it a PUT. | 
|  | 751 |  | 
|  | 752 | If for whatever reason you are not happy with these default choices that curl | 
|  | 753 | does for you, you can override those request methods by specifying -X | 
|  | 754 | [WHATEVER]. This way you can for example send a DELETE by doing "curl -X | 
|  | 755 | DELETE [URL]". | 
|  | 756 |  | 
|  | 757 | It is thus pointless to do "curl -XGET [URL]" as GET would be used | 
|  | 758 | anyway. In the same vein it is pointless to do "curl -X POST -d data | 
|  | 759 | [URL]"... But you can make a fun and somewhat rare request that sends a | 
|  | 760 | request-body in a GET request with something like "curl -X GET -d data | 
|  | 761 | [URL]" | 
|  | 762 |  | 
|  | 763 | Note that -X does not actually change curl's behavior as it only modifies the | 
|  | 764 | actual string sent in the request, but that may of course trigger a | 
|  | 765 | different set of events. | 
|  | 766 |  | 
|  | 767 | Accordingly, by using -XPOST on a command line that for example would follow | 
|  | 768 | a 303 redirect, you will effectively prevent curl from behaving | 
|  | 769 | correctly. Be aware. | 
|  | 770 |  | 
|  | 771 |  | 
|  | 772 | 4. Running Problems | 
|  | 773 |  | 
|  | 774 | 4.2 Why do I get problems when I use & or % in the URL? | 
|  | 775 |  | 
|  | 776 | In general Unix shells, the & symbol is treated specially and when used, it | 
|  | 777 | runs the specified command in the background. To safely send the & as a part | 
|  | 778 | of a URL, you should quote the entire URL by using single (') or double (") | 
|  | 779 | quotes around it. Similar problems can also occur on some shells with other | 
|  | 780 | characters, including ?*!$~(){}<>\|;`. When in doubt, quote the URL. | 
|  | 781 |  | 
|  | 782 | An example that would invoke a remote CGI that uses &-symbols could be: | 
|  | 783 |  | 
|  | 784 | curl 'http://www.altavista.com/cgi-bin/query?text=yes&q=curl' | 
|  | 785 |  | 
|  | 786 | In Windows, the standard DOS shell treats the percent sign specially and you | 
|  | 787 | need to use TWO percent signs for each single one you want to use in the | 
|  | 788 | URL. | 
|  | 789 |  | 
|  | 790 | If you want a literal percent sign to be part of the data you pass in a POST | 
|  | 791 | using -d/--data you must encode it as '%25' (which then also needs the | 
|  | 792 | percent sign doubled on Windows machines). | 
|  | 793 |  | 
|  | 794 | 4.3 How can I use {, }, [ or ] to specify multiple URLs? | 
|  | 795 |  | 
|  | 796 | Because those letters have a special meaning to the shell, to be used in | 
|  | 797 | a URL specified to curl you must quote them. | 
|  | 798 |  | 
|  | 799 | An example that downloads two URLs (sequentially) would be: | 
|  | 800 |  | 
|  | 801 | curl '{curl,www}.haxx.se' | 
|  | 802 |  | 
|  | 803 | To be able to use those characters as actual parts of the URL (without using | 
|  | 804 | them for the curl URL "globbing" system), use the -g/--globoff option: | 
|  | 805 |  | 
|  | 806 | curl -g 'www.site.com/weirdname[].html' | 
|  | 807 |  | 
|  | 808 | 4.4 Why do I get downloaded data even though the web page does not exist? | 
|  | 809 |  | 
|  | 810 | curl asks remote servers for the page you specify. If the page does not exist | 
|  | 811 | at the server, the HTTP protocol defines how the server should respond and | 
|  | 812 | that means that headers and a "page" will be returned. That is simply how | 
|  | 813 | HTTP works. | 
|  | 814 |  | 
|  | 815 | By using the --fail option you can tell curl explicitly to not get any data | 
|  | 816 | if the HTTP return code does not say success. | 
|  | 817 |  | 
|  | 818 | 4.5 Why do I get return code XXX from an HTTP server? | 
|  | 819 |  | 
|  | 820 | RFC2616 clearly explains the return codes. This is a short transcript. Go | 
|  | 821 | read the RFC for exact details: | 
|  | 822 |  | 
|  | 823 | 4.5.1 "400 Bad Request" | 
|  | 824 |  | 
|  | 825 | The request could not be understood by the server due to malformed | 
|  | 826 | syntax. The client SHOULD NOT repeat the request without modifications. | 
|  | 827 |  | 
|  | 828 | 4.5.2 "401 Unauthorized" | 
|  | 829 |  | 
|  | 830 | The request requires user authentication. | 
|  | 831 |  | 
|  | 832 | 4.5.3 "403 Forbidden" | 
|  | 833 |  | 
|  | 834 | The server understood the request, but is refusing to fulfill it. | 
|  | 835 | Authorization will not help and the request SHOULD NOT be repeated. | 
|  | 836 |  | 
|  | 837 | 4.5.4 "404 Not Found" | 
|  | 838 |  | 
|  | 839 | The server has not found anything matching the Request-URI. No indication | 
|  | 840 | is given as to whether the condition is temporary or permanent. | 
|  | 841 |  | 
|  | 842 | 4.5.5 "405 Method Not Allowed" | 
|  | 843 |  | 
|  | 844 | The method specified in the Request-Line is not allowed for the resource | 
|  | 845 | identified by the Request-URI. The response MUST include an Allow header | 
|  | 846 | containing a list of valid methods for the requested resource. | 
|  | 847 |  | 
|  | 848 | 4.5.6 "301 Moved Permanently" | 
|  | 849 |  | 
|  | 850 | If you get this return code and an HTML output similar to this: | 
|  | 851 |  | 
|  | 852 | <H1>Moved Permanently</H1> The document has moved <A | 
|  | 853 | HREF="http://same_url_now_with_a_trailing_slash/">here</A>. | 
|  | 854 |  | 
|  | 855 | it might be because you requested a directory URL but without the trailing | 
|  | 856 | slash. Try the same operation again _with_ the trailing URL, or use the | 
|  | 857 | -L/--location option to follow the redirection. | 
|  | 858 |  | 
|  | 859 | 4.6 Can you tell me what error code 142 means? | 
|  | 860 |  | 
|  | 861 | All curl error codes are described at the end of the man page, in the | 
|  | 862 | section called "EXIT CODES". | 
|  | 863 |  | 
|  | 864 | Error codes that are larger than the highest documented error code means | 
|  | 865 | that curl has exited due to a crash. This is a serious error, and we | 
|  | 866 | appreciate a detailed bug report from you that describes how we could go | 
|  | 867 | ahead and repeat this. | 
|  | 868 |  | 
|  | 869 | 4.7 How do I keep user names and passwords secret in curl command lines? | 
|  | 870 |  | 
|  | 871 | This problem has two sides: | 
|  | 872 |  | 
|  | 873 | The first part is to avoid having clear-text passwords in the command line | 
|  | 874 | so that they do not appear in 'ps' outputs and similar. That is easily | 
|  | 875 | avoided by using the "-K" option to tell curl to read parameters from a file | 
|  | 876 | or stdin to which you can pass the secret info. curl itself will also | 
|  | 877 | attempt to "hide" the given password by blanking out the option - this | 
|  | 878 | does not work on all platforms. | 
|  | 879 |  | 
|  | 880 | To keep the passwords in your account secret from the rest of the world is | 
|  | 881 | not a task that curl addresses. You could of course encrypt them somehow to | 
|  | 882 | at least hide them from being read by human eyes, but that is not what | 
|  | 883 | anyone would call security. | 
|  | 884 |  | 
|  | 885 | Also note that regular HTTP (using Basic authentication) and FTP passwords | 
|  | 886 | are sent as cleartext across the network. All it takes for anyone to fetch | 
|  | 887 | them is to listen on the network. Eavesdropping is easy. Use more secure | 
|  | 888 | authentication methods (like Digest, Negotiate or even NTLM) or consider the | 
|  | 889 | SSL-based alternatives HTTPS and FTPS. | 
|  | 890 |  | 
|  | 891 | 4.8 I found a bug | 
|  | 892 |  | 
|  | 893 | It is not a bug if the behavior is documented. Read the docs first. | 
|  | 894 | Especially check out the KNOWN_BUGS file, it may be a documented bug. | 
|  | 895 |  | 
|  | 896 | If it is a problem with a binary you have downloaded or a package for your | 
|  | 897 | particular platform, try contacting the person who built the package/archive | 
|  | 898 | you have. | 
|  | 899 |  | 
|  | 900 | If there is a bug, read the BUGS document first. Then report it as described | 
|  | 901 | in there. | 
|  | 902 |  | 
|  | 903 | 4.9 curl cannot authenticate to a server that requires NTLM? | 
|  | 904 |  | 
|  | 905 | NTLM support requires OpenSSL, GnuTLS, mbedTLS, NSS, Secure Transport, or | 
|  | 906 | Microsoft Windows libraries at build-time to provide this functionality. | 
|  | 907 |  | 
|  | 908 | 4.10 My HTTP request using HEAD, PUT or DELETE does not work | 
|  | 909 |  | 
|  | 910 | Many web servers allow or demand that the administrator configures the | 
|  | 911 | server properly for these requests to work on the web server. | 
|  | 912 |  | 
|  | 913 | Some servers seem to support HEAD only on certain kinds of URLs. | 
|  | 914 |  | 
|  | 915 | To fully grasp this, try the documentation for the particular server | 
|  | 916 | software you are trying to interact with. This is not anything curl can do | 
|  | 917 | anything about. | 
|  | 918 |  | 
|  | 919 | 4.11 Why do my HTTP range requests return the full document? | 
|  | 920 |  | 
|  | 921 | Because the range may not be supported by the server, or the server may | 
|  | 922 | choose to ignore it and return the full document anyway. | 
|  | 923 |  | 
|  | 924 | 4.12 Why do I get "certificate verify failed" ? | 
|  | 925 |  | 
|  | 926 | When you invoke curl and get an error 60 error back it means that curl | 
|  | 927 | could not verify that the server's certificate was good. curl verifies the | 
|  | 928 | certificate using the CA cert bundle and verifying for which names the | 
|  | 929 | certificate has been granted. | 
|  | 930 |  | 
|  | 931 | To completely disable the certificate verification, use -k. This does | 
|  | 932 | however enable man-in-the-middle attacks and makes the transfer INSECURE. | 
|  | 933 | We strongly advise against doing this for more than experiments. | 
|  | 934 |  | 
|  | 935 | If you get this failure with a CA cert bundle installed and used, the | 
|  | 936 | server's certificate might not be signed by one of the CA's in your CA | 
|  | 937 | store. It might for example be self-signed. You then correct this problem by | 
|  | 938 | obtaining a valid CA cert for the server. Or again, decrease the security by | 
|  | 939 | disabling this check. | 
|  | 940 |  | 
|  | 941 | At times, you find that the verification works in your favorite browser but | 
|  | 942 | fails in curl. When this happens, the reason is usually that the server | 
|  | 943 | sends an incomplete cert chain. The server is mandated to send all | 
|  | 944 | "intermediate certificates" but does not. This typically works with browsers | 
|  | 945 | anyway since they A) cache such certs and B) supports AIA which downloads | 
|  | 946 | such missing certificates on demand. This is a server misconfiguration. A | 
|  | 947 | good way to figure out if this is the case it to use the SSL Labs server | 
|  | 948 | test and check the certificate chain: https://www.ssllabs.com/ssltest/ | 
|  | 949 |  | 
|  | 950 | Details are also in the SSLCERTS.md document, found online here: | 
|  | 951 | https://curl.se/docs/sslcerts.html | 
|  | 952 |  | 
|  | 953 | 4.13 Why is curl -R on Windows one hour off? | 
|  | 954 |  | 
|  | 955 | Since curl 7.53.0 this issue should be fixed as long as curl was built with | 
|  | 956 | any modern compiler that allows for a 64-bit curl_off_t type. For older | 
|  | 957 | compilers or prior curl versions it may set a time that appears one hour off. | 
|  | 958 | This happens due to a flaw in how Windows stores and uses file modification | 
|  | 959 | times and it is not easily worked around. For more details read this: | 
|  | 960 | https://www.codeproject.com/Articles/1144/Beating-the-Daylight-Savings-Time-bug-and-getting | 
|  | 961 |  | 
|  | 962 | 4.14 Redirects work in browser but not with curl | 
|  | 963 |  | 
|  | 964 | curl supports HTTP redirects well (see item 3.8). Browsers generally support | 
|  | 965 | at least two other ways to perform redirects that curl does not: | 
|  | 966 |  | 
|  | 967 | Meta tags. You can write an HTML tag that will cause the browser to redirect | 
|  | 968 | to another given URL after a certain time. | 
|  | 969 |  | 
|  | 970 | JavaScript. You can write a JavaScript program embedded in an HTML page that | 
|  | 971 | redirects the browser to another given URL. | 
|  | 972 |  | 
|  | 973 | There is no way to make curl follow these redirects. You must either | 
|  | 974 | manually figure out what the page is set to do, or write a script that parses | 
|  | 975 | the results and fetches the new URL. | 
|  | 976 |  | 
|  | 977 | 4.15 FTPS does not work | 
|  | 978 |  | 
|  | 979 | curl supports FTPS (sometimes known as FTP-SSL) both implicit and explicit | 
|  | 980 | mode. | 
|  | 981 |  | 
|  | 982 | When a URL is used that starts with FTPS://, curl assumes implicit SSL on | 
|  | 983 | the control connection and will therefore immediately connect and try to | 
|  | 984 | speak SSL. FTPS:// connections default to port 990. | 
|  | 985 |  | 
|  | 986 | To use explicit FTPS, you use an FTP:// URL and the --ftp-ssl option (or one | 
|  | 987 | of its related flavors). This is the most common method, and the one | 
|  | 988 | mandated by RFC4217. This kind of connection will then of course use the | 
|  | 989 | standard FTP port 21 by default. | 
|  | 990 |  | 
|  | 991 | 4.16 My HTTP POST or PUT requests are slow | 
|  | 992 |  | 
|  | 993 | libcurl makes all POST and PUT requests (except for POST requests with a | 
|  | 994 | tiny request body) use the "Expect: 100-continue" header. This header | 
|  | 995 | allows the server to deny the operation early so that libcurl can bail out | 
|  | 996 | before having to send any data. This is useful in authentication | 
|  | 997 | cases and others. | 
|  | 998 |  | 
|  | 999 | However, many servers do not implement the Expect: stuff properly and if the | 
|  | 1000 | server does not respond (positively) within 1 second libcurl will continue | 
|  | 1001 | and send off the data anyway. | 
|  | 1002 |  | 
|  | 1003 | You can disable libcurl's use of the Expect: header the same way you disable | 
|  | 1004 | any header, using -H / CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, or by forcing it to use HTTP 1.0. | 
|  | 1005 |  | 
|  | 1006 | 4.17 Non-functional connect timeouts | 
|  | 1007 |  | 
|  | 1008 | In most Windows setups having a timeout longer than 21 seconds make no | 
|  | 1009 | difference, as it will only send 3 TCP SYN packets and no more. The second | 
|  | 1010 | packet sent three seconds after the first and the third six seconds after | 
|  | 1011 | the second. No more than three packets are sent, no matter how long the | 
|  | 1012 | timeout is set. | 
|  | 1013 |  | 
|  | 1014 | See option TcpMaxConnectRetransmissions on this page: | 
|  | 1015 | https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/175523/en-us | 
|  | 1016 |  | 
|  | 1017 | Also, even on non-Windows systems there may run a firewall or anti-virus | 
|  | 1018 | software or similar that accepts the connection but does not actually do | 
|  | 1019 | anything else. This will make (lib)curl to consider the connection connected | 
|  | 1020 | and thus the connect timeout will not trigger. | 
|  | 1021 |  | 
|  | 1022 | 4.18 file:// URLs containing drive letters (Windows, NetWare) | 
|  | 1023 |  | 
|  | 1024 | When using curl to try to download a local file, one might use a URL | 
|  | 1025 | in this format: | 
|  | 1026 |  | 
|  | 1027 | file://D:/blah.txt | 
|  | 1028 |  | 
|  | 1029 | you will find that even if D:\blah.txt does exist, curl returns a 'file | 
|  | 1030 | not found' error. | 
|  | 1031 |  | 
|  | 1032 | According to RFC 1738 (https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1738.txt), | 
|  | 1033 | file:// URLs must contain a host component, but it is ignored by | 
|  | 1034 | most implementations. In the above example, 'D:' is treated as the | 
|  | 1035 | host component, and is taken away. Thus, curl tries to open '/blah.txt'. | 
|  | 1036 | If your system is installed to drive C:, that will resolve to 'C:\blah.txt', | 
|  | 1037 | and if that does not exist you will get the not found error. | 
|  | 1038 |  | 
|  | 1039 | To fix this problem, use file:// URLs with *three* leading slashes: | 
|  | 1040 |  | 
|  | 1041 | file:///D:/blah.txt | 
|  | 1042 |  | 
|  | 1043 | Alternatively, if it makes more sense, specify 'localhost' as the host | 
|  | 1044 | component: | 
|  | 1045 |  | 
|  | 1046 | file://localhost/D:/blah.txt | 
|  | 1047 |  | 
|  | 1048 | In either case, curl should now be looking for the correct file. | 
|  | 1049 |  | 
|  | 1050 | 4.19 Why does not curl return an error when the network cable is unplugged? | 
|  | 1051 |  | 
|  | 1052 | Unplugging a cable is not an error situation. The TCP/IP protocol stack | 
|  | 1053 | was designed to be fault tolerant, so even though there may be a physical | 
|  | 1054 | break somewhere the connection should not be affected, just possibly | 
|  | 1055 | delayed. Eventually, the physical break will be fixed or the data will be | 
|  | 1056 | re-routed around the physical problem through another path. | 
|  | 1057 |  | 
|  | 1058 | In such cases, the TCP/IP stack is responsible for detecting when the | 
|  | 1059 | network connection is irrevocably lost. Since with some protocols it is | 
|  | 1060 | perfectly legal for the client to wait indefinitely for data, the stack may | 
|  | 1061 | never report a problem, and even when it does, it can take up to 20 minutes | 
|  | 1062 | for it to detect an issue. The curl option --keepalive-time enables | 
|  | 1063 | keep-alive support in the TCP/IP stack which makes it periodically probe the | 
|  | 1064 | connection to make sure it is still available to send data. That should | 
|  | 1065 | reliably detect any TCP/IP network failure. | 
|  | 1066 |  | 
|  | 1067 | TCP keep alive will not detect the network going down before the TCP/IP | 
|  | 1068 | connection is established (e.g. during a DNS lookup) or using protocols that | 
|  | 1069 | do not use TCP. To handle those situations, curl offers a number of timeouts | 
|  | 1070 | on its own. --speed-limit/--speed-time will abort if the data transfer rate | 
|  | 1071 | falls too low, and --connect-timeout and --max-time can be used to put an | 
|  | 1072 | overall timeout on the connection phase or the entire transfer. | 
|  | 1073 |  | 
|  | 1074 | A libcurl-using application running in a known physical environment (e.g. | 
|  | 1075 | an embedded device with only a single network connection) may want to act | 
|  | 1076 | immediately if its lone network connection goes down. That can be achieved | 
|  | 1077 | by having the application monitor the network connection on its own using an | 
|  | 1078 | OS-specific mechanism, then signaling libcurl to abort (see also item 5.13). | 
|  | 1079 |  | 
|  | 1080 | 4.20 curl does not return error for HTTP non-200 responses | 
|  | 1081 |  | 
|  | 1082 | Correct. Unless you use -f (--fail). | 
|  | 1083 |  | 
|  | 1084 | When doing HTTP transfers, curl will perform exactly what you are asking it | 
|  | 1085 | to do and if successful it will not return an error. You can use curl to | 
|  | 1086 | test your web server's "file not found" page (that gets 404 back), you can | 
|  | 1087 | use it to check your authentication protected web pages (that gets a 401 | 
|  | 1088 | back) and so on. | 
|  | 1089 |  | 
|  | 1090 | The specific HTTP response code does not constitute a problem or error for | 
|  | 1091 | curl. It simply sends and delivers HTTP as you asked and if that worked, | 
|  | 1092 | everything is fine and dandy. The response code is generally providing more | 
|  | 1093 | higher level error information that curl does not care about. The error was | 
|  | 1094 | not in the HTTP transfer. | 
|  | 1095 |  | 
|  | 1096 | If you want your command line to treat error codes in the 400 and up range | 
|  | 1097 | as errors and thus return a non-zero value and possibly show an error | 
|  | 1098 | message, curl has a dedicated option for that: -f (CURLOPT_FAILONERROR in | 
|  | 1099 | libcurl speak). | 
|  | 1100 |  | 
|  | 1101 | You can also use the -w option and the variable %{response_code} to extract | 
|  | 1102 | the exact response code that was returned in the response. | 
|  | 1103 |  | 
|  | 1104 | 5. libcurl Issues | 
|  | 1105 |  | 
|  | 1106 | 5.1 Is libcurl thread-safe? | 
|  | 1107 |  | 
|  | 1108 | Yes. | 
|  | 1109 |  | 
|  | 1110 | We have written the libcurl code specifically adjusted for multi-threaded | 
|  | 1111 | programs. libcurl will use thread-safe functions instead of non-safe ones if | 
|  | 1112 | your system has such. Note that you must never share the same handle in | 
|  | 1113 | multiple threads. | 
|  | 1114 |  | 
|  | 1115 | There may be some exceptions to thread safety depending on how libcurl was | 
|  | 1116 | built. Please review the guidelines for thread safety to learn more: | 
|  | 1117 | https://curl.se/libcurl/c/threadsafe.html | 
|  | 1118 |  | 
|  | 1119 | 5.2 How can I receive all data into a large memory chunk? | 
|  | 1120 |  | 
|  | 1121 | [ See also the examples/getinmemory.c source ] | 
|  | 1122 |  | 
|  | 1123 | You are in full control of the callback function that gets called every time | 
|  | 1124 | there is data received from the remote server. You can make that callback do | 
|  | 1125 | whatever you want. You do not have to write the received data to a file. | 
|  | 1126 |  | 
|  | 1127 | One solution to this problem could be to have a pointer to a struct that you | 
|  | 1128 | pass to the callback function. You set the pointer using the | 
|  | 1129 | CURLOPT_WRITEDATA option. Then that pointer will be passed to the callback | 
|  | 1130 | instead of a FILE * to a file: | 
|  | 1131 |  | 
|  | 1132 | /* imaginary struct */ | 
|  | 1133 | struct MemoryStruct { | 
|  | 1134 | char *memory; | 
|  | 1135 | size_t size; | 
|  | 1136 | }; | 
|  | 1137 |  | 
|  | 1138 | /* imaginary callback function */ | 
|  | 1139 | size_t | 
|  | 1140 | WriteMemoryCallback(void *ptr, size_t size, size_t nmemb, void *data) | 
|  | 1141 | { | 
|  | 1142 | size_t realsize = size * nmemb; | 
|  | 1143 | struct MemoryStruct *mem = (struct MemoryStruct *)data; | 
|  | 1144 |  | 
|  | 1145 | mem->memory = (char *)realloc(mem->memory, mem->size + realsize + 1); | 
|  | 1146 | if (mem->memory) { | 
|  | 1147 | memcpy(&(mem->memory[mem->size]), ptr, realsize); | 
|  | 1148 | mem->size += realsize; | 
|  | 1149 | mem->memory[mem->size] = 0; | 
|  | 1150 | } | 
|  | 1151 | return realsize; | 
|  | 1152 | } | 
|  | 1153 |  | 
|  | 1154 | 5.3 How do I fetch multiple files with libcurl? | 
|  | 1155 |  | 
|  | 1156 | libcurl has excellent support for transferring multiple files. You should | 
|  | 1157 | just repeatedly set new URLs with curl_easy_setopt() and then transfer it | 
|  | 1158 | with curl_easy_perform(). The handle you get from curl_easy_init() is not | 
|  | 1159 | only reusable, but you are even encouraged to reuse it if you can, as that | 
|  | 1160 | will enable libcurl to use persistent connections. | 
|  | 1161 |  | 
|  | 1162 | 5.4 Does libcurl do Winsock initialization on win32 systems? | 
|  | 1163 |  | 
|  | 1164 | Yes, if told to in the curl_global_init() call. | 
|  | 1165 |  | 
|  | 1166 | 5.5 Does CURLOPT_WRITEDATA and CURLOPT_READDATA work on win32 ? | 
|  | 1167 |  | 
|  | 1168 | Yes, but you cannot open a FILE * and pass the pointer to a DLL and have | 
|  | 1169 | that DLL use the FILE * (as the DLL and the client application cannot access | 
|  | 1170 | each others' variable memory areas). If you set CURLOPT_WRITEDATA you must | 
|  | 1171 | also use CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION as well to set a function that writes the | 
|  | 1172 | file, even if that simply writes the data to the specified FILE *. | 
|  | 1173 | Similarly, if you use CURLOPT_READDATA you must also specify | 
|  | 1174 | CURLOPT_READFUNCTION. | 
|  | 1175 |  | 
|  | 1176 | 5.6 What about Keep-Alive or persistent connections? | 
|  | 1177 |  | 
|  | 1178 | curl and libcurl have excellent support for persistent connections when | 
|  | 1179 | transferring several files from the same server.  curl will attempt to reuse | 
|  | 1180 | connections for all URLs specified on the same command line/config file, and | 
|  | 1181 | libcurl will reuse connections for all transfers that are made using the | 
|  | 1182 | same libcurl handle. | 
|  | 1183 |  | 
|  | 1184 | When you use the easy interface the connection cache is kept within the easy | 
|  | 1185 | handle. If you instead use the multi interface, the connection cache will be | 
|  | 1186 | kept within the multi handle and will be shared among all the easy handles | 
|  | 1187 | that are used within the same multi handle. | 
|  | 1188 |  | 
|  | 1189 | 5.7 Link errors when building libcurl on Windows | 
|  | 1190 |  | 
|  | 1191 | You need to make sure that your project, and all the libraries (both static | 
|  | 1192 | and dynamic) that it links against, are compiled/linked against the same run | 
|  | 1193 | time library. | 
|  | 1194 |  | 
|  | 1195 | This is determined by the /MD, /ML, /MT (and their corresponding /M?d) | 
|  | 1196 | options to the command line compiler. /MD (linking against MSVCRT dll) seems | 
|  | 1197 | to be the most commonly used option. | 
|  | 1198 |  | 
|  | 1199 | When building an application that uses the static libcurl library, you must | 
|  | 1200 | add -DCURL_STATICLIB to your CFLAGS. Otherwise the linker will look for | 
|  | 1201 | dynamic import symbols. If you are using Visual Studio, you need to instead | 
|  | 1202 | add CURL_STATICLIB in the "Preprocessor Definitions" section. | 
|  | 1203 |  | 
|  | 1204 | If you get a linker error like "unknown symbol __imp__curl_easy_init ..." you | 
|  | 1205 | have linked against the wrong (static) library. If you want to use the | 
|  | 1206 | libcurl.dll and import lib, you do not need any extra CFLAGS, but use one of | 
|  | 1207 | the import libraries below. These are the libraries produced by the various | 
|  | 1208 | lib/Makefile.* files: | 
|  | 1209 |  | 
|  | 1210 | Target:          static lib.   import lib for libcurl*.dll. | 
|  | 1211 | ----------------------------------------------------------- | 
|  | 1212 | MinGW:           libcurl.a     libcurldll.a | 
|  | 1213 | MSVC (release):  libcurl.lib   libcurl_imp.lib | 
|  | 1214 | MSVC (debug):    libcurld.lib  libcurld_imp.lib | 
|  | 1215 | Borland:         libcurl.lib   libcurl_imp.lib | 
|  | 1216 |  | 
|  | 1217 | 5.8 libcurl.so.X: open failed: No such file or directory | 
|  | 1218 |  | 
|  | 1219 | This is an error message you might get when you try to run a program linked | 
|  | 1220 | with a shared version of libcurl and your runtime linker (ld.so) could not | 
|  | 1221 | find the shared library named libcurl.so.X. (Where X is the number of the | 
|  | 1222 | current libcurl ABI, typically 3 or 4). | 
|  | 1223 |  | 
|  | 1224 | You need to make sure that ld.so finds libcurl.so.X. You can do that | 
|  | 1225 | multiple ways, and it differs somewhat between different operating systems. | 
|  | 1226 | They are usually: | 
|  | 1227 |  | 
|  | 1228 | * Add an option to the linker command line that specify the hard-coded path | 
|  | 1229 | the runtime linker should check for the lib (usually -R) | 
|  | 1230 |  | 
|  | 1231 | * Set an environment variable (LD_LIBRARY_PATH for example) where ld.so | 
|  | 1232 | should check for libs | 
|  | 1233 |  | 
|  | 1234 | * Adjust the system's config to check for libs in the directory where you have | 
|  | 1235 | put the library (like Linux's /etc/ld.so.conf) | 
|  | 1236 |  | 
|  | 1237 | 'man ld.so' and 'man ld' will tell you more details | 
|  | 1238 |  | 
|  | 1239 | 5.9 How does libcurl resolve host names? | 
|  | 1240 |  | 
|  | 1241 | libcurl supports a large number of name resolve functions. One of them is | 
|  | 1242 | picked at build-time and will be used unconditionally. Thus, if you want to | 
|  | 1243 | change name resolver function you must rebuild libcurl and tell it to use a | 
|  | 1244 | different function. | 
|  | 1245 |  | 
|  | 1246 | - The non-IPv6 resolver that can use one of four different host name resolve | 
|  | 1247 | calls (depending on what your system supports): | 
|  | 1248 |  | 
|  | 1249 | A - gethostbyname() | 
|  | 1250 | B - gethostbyname_r() with 3 arguments | 
|  | 1251 | C - gethostbyname_r() with 5 arguments | 
|  | 1252 | D - gethostbyname_r() with 6 arguments | 
|  | 1253 |  | 
|  | 1254 | - The IPv6-resolver that uses getaddrinfo() | 
|  | 1255 |  | 
|  | 1256 | - The c-ares based name resolver that uses the c-ares library for resolves. | 
|  | 1257 | Using this offers asynchronous name resolves. | 
|  | 1258 |  | 
|  | 1259 | - The threaded resolver (default option on Windows). It uses: | 
|  | 1260 |  | 
|  | 1261 | A - gethostbyname() on plain IPv4 hosts | 
|  | 1262 | B - getaddrinfo() on IPv6 enabled hosts | 
|  | 1263 |  | 
|  | 1264 | Also note that libcurl never resolves or reverse-lookups addresses given as | 
|  | 1265 | pure numbers, such as 127.0.0.1 or ::1. | 
|  | 1266 |  | 
|  | 1267 | 5.10 How do I prevent libcurl from writing the response to stdout? | 
|  | 1268 |  | 
|  | 1269 | libcurl provides a default built-in write function that writes received data | 
|  | 1270 | to stdout. Set the CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION to receive the data, or possibly | 
|  | 1271 | set CURLOPT_WRITEDATA to a different FILE * handle. | 
|  | 1272 |  | 
|  | 1273 | 5.11 How do I make libcurl not receive the whole HTTP response? | 
|  | 1274 |  | 
|  | 1275 | You make the write callback (or progress callback) return an error and | 
|  | 1276 | libcurl will then abort the transfer. | 
|  | 1277 |  | 
|  | 1278 | 5.12 Can I make libcurl fake or hide my real IP address? | 
|  | 1279 |  | 
|  | 1280 | No. libcurl operates on a higher level. Besides, faking IP address would | 
|  | 1281 | imply sending IP packets with a made-up source address, and then you normally | 
|  | 1282 | get a problem with receiving the packet sent back as they would then not be | 
|  | 1283 | routed to you. | 
|  | 1284 |  | 
|  | 1285 | If you use a proxy to access remote sites, the sites will not see your local | 
|  | 1286 | IP address but instead the address of the proxy. | 
|  | 1287 |  | 
|  | 1288 | Also note that on many networks NATs or other IP-munging techniques are used | 
|  | 1289 | that makes you see and use a different IP address locally than what the | 
|  | 1290 | remote server will see you coming from. You may also consider using | 
|  | 1291 | https://www.torproject.org/ . | 
|  | 1292 |  | 
|  | 1293 | 5.13 How do I stop an ongoing transfer? | 
|  | 1294 |  | 
|  | 1295 | With the easy interface you make sure to return the correct error code from | 
|  | 1296 | one of the callbacks, but none of them are instant. There is no function you | 
|  | 1297 | can call from another thread or similar that will stop it immediately. | 
|  | 1298 | Instead, you need to make sure that one of the callbacks you use returns an | 
|  | 1299 | appropriate value that will stop the transfer. Suitable callbacks that you | 
|  | 1300 | can do this with include the progress callback, the read callback and the | 
|  | 1301 | write callback. | 
|  | 1302 |  | 
|  | 1303 | If you are using the multi interface, you can also stop a transfer by | 
|  | 1304 | removing the particular easy handle from the multi stack at any moment you | 
|  | 1305 | think the transfer is done or when you wish to abort the transfer. | 
|  | 1306 |  | 
|  | 1307 | 5.14 Using C++ non-static functions for callbacks? | 
|  | 1308 |  | 
|  | 1309 | libcurl is a C library, it does not know anything about C++ member functions. | 
|  | 1310 |  | 
|  | 1311 | You can overcome this "limitation" with relative ease using a static | 
|  | 1312 | member function that is passed a pointer to the class: | 
|  | 1313 |  | 
|  | 1314 | // f is the pointer to your object. | 
|  | 1315 | static size_t YourClass::func(void *buffer, size_t sz, size_t n, void *f) | 
|  | 1316 | { | 
|  | 1317 | // Call non-static member function. | 
|  | 1318 | static_cast<YourClass*>(f)->nonStaticFunction(); | 
|  | 1319 | } | 
|  | 1320 |  | 
|  | 1321 | // This is how you pass pointer to the static function: | 
|  | 1322 | curl_easy_setopt(hcurl, CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION, YourClass::func); | 
|  | 1323 | curl_easy_setopt(hcurl, CURLOPT_WRITEDATA, this); | 
|  | 1324 |  | 
|  | 1325 | 5.15 How do I get an FTP directory listing? | 
|  | 1326 |  | 
|  | 1327 | If you end the FTP URL you request with a slash, libcurl will provide you | 
|  | 1328 | with a directory listing of that given directory. You can also set | 
|  | 1329 | CURLOPT_CUSTOMREQUEST to alter what exact listing command libcurl would use | 
|  | 1330 | to list the files. | 
|  | 1331 |  | 
|  | 1332 | The follow-up question tends to be how is a program supposed to parse the | 
|  | 1333 | directory listing. How does it know what's a file and what's a directory and | 
|  | 1334 | what's a symlink etc. If the FTP server supports the MLSD command then it | 
|  | 1335 | will return data in a machine-readable format that can be parsed for type. | 
|  | 1336 | The types are specified by RFC3659 section 7.5.1. If MLSD is not supported | 
|  | 1337 | then you have to work with what you are given. The LIST output format is | 
|  | 1338 | entirely at the server's own liking and the NLST output does not reveal any | 
|  | 1339 | types and in many cases does not even include all the directory entries. | 
|  | 1340 | Also, both LIST and NLST tend to hide unix-style hidden files (those that | 
|  | 1341 | start with a dot) by default so you need to do "LIST -a" or similar to see | 
|  | 1342 | them. | 
|  | 1343 |  | 
|  | 1344 | Example - List only directories. | 
|  | 1345 | ftp.funet.fi supports MLSD and ftp.kernel.org does not: | 
|  | 1346 |  | 
|  | 1347 | curl -s ftp.funet.fi/pub/ -X MLSD | \ | 
|  | 1348 | perl -lne 'print if s/(?:^|;)type=dir;[^ ]+ (.+)$/$1/' | 
|  | 1349 |  | 
|  | 1350 | curl -s ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/ | \ | 
|  | 1351 | perl -lne 'print if s/^d[-rwx]{9}(?: +[^ ]+){7} (.+)$/$1/' | 
|  | 1352 |  | 
|  | 1353 | If you need to parse LIST output in libcurl one such existing | 
|  | 1354 | list parser is available at https://cr.yp.to/ftpparse.html  Versions of | 
|  | 1355 | libcurl since 7.21.0 also provide the ability to specify a wildcard to | 
|  | 1356 | download multiple files from one FTP directory. | 
|  | 1357 |  | 
|  | 1358 | 5.16 I want a different time-out | 
|  | 1359 |  | 
|  | 1360 | Sometimes users realize that CURLOPT_TIMEOUT and CURLOPT_CONNECTIMEOUT are | 
|  | 1361 | not sufficiently advanced or flexible to cover all the various use cases and | 
|  | 1362 | scenarios applications end up with. | 
|  | 1363 |  | 
|  | 1364 | libcurl offers many more ways to time-out operations. A common alternative | 
|  | 1365 | is to use the CURLOPT_LOW_SPEED_LIMIT and CURLOPT_LOW_SPEED_TIME options to | 
|  | 1366 | specify the lowest possible speed to accept before to consider the transfer | 
|  | 1367 | timed out. | 
|  | 1368 |  | 
|  | 1369 | The most flexible way is by writing your own time-out logic and using | 
|  | 1370 | CURLOPT_XFERINFOFUNCTION (perhaps in combination with other callbacks) and | 
|  | 1371 | use that to figure out exactly when the right condition is met when the | 
|  | 1372 | transfer should get stopped. | 
|  | 1373 |  | 
|  | 1374 | 5.17 Can I write a server with libcurl? | 
|  | 1375 |  | 
|  | 1376 | No. libcurl offers no functions or building blocks to build any kind of | 
|  | 1377 | Internet protocol server. libcurl is only a client-side library. For server | 
|  | 1378 | libraries, you need to continue your search elsewhere but there exist many | 
|  | 1379 | good open source ones out there for most protocols you could want a server | 
|  | 1380 | for. There are also really good stand-alone servers that have been tested | 
|  | 1381 | and proven for many years. There is no need for you to reinvent them. | 
|  | 1382 |  | 
|  | 1383 | 5.18 Does libcurl use threads? | 
|  | 1384 |  | 
|  | 1385 | Put simply: no, libcurl will execute in the same thread you call it in. All | 
|  | 1386 | callbacks will be called in the same thread as the one you call libcurl in. | 
|  | 1387 |  | 
|  | 1388 | If you want to avoid your thread to be blocked by the libcurl call, you make | 
|  | 1389 | sure you use the non-blocking multi API which will do transfers | 
|  | 1390 | asynchronously - still in the same single thread. | 
|  | 1391 |  | 
|  | 1392 | libcurl will potentially internally use threads for name resolving, if it | 
|  | 1393 | was built to work like that, but in those cases it will create the child | 
|  | 1394 | threads by itself and they will only be used and then killed internally by | 
|  | 1395 | libcurl and never exposed to the outside. | 
|  | 1396 |  | 
|  | 1397 | 6. License Issues | 
|  | 1398 |  | 
|  | 1399 | curl and libcurl are released under a MIT/X derivative license. The license | 
|  | 1400 | is liberal and should not impose a problem for your project. This section is | 
|  | 1401 | just a brief summary for the cases we get the most questions. (Parts of this | 
|  | 1402 | section was much enhanced by Bjorn Reese.) | 
|  | 1403 |  | 
|  | 1404 | We are not lawyers and this is not legal advice. You should probably consult | 
|  | 1405 | one if you want true and accurate legal insights without our prejudice. Note | 
|  | 1406 | especially that this section concerns the libcurl license only; compiling in | 
|  | 1407 | features of libcurl that depend on other libraries (e.g. OpenSSL) may affect | 
|  | 1408 | the licensing obligations of your application. | 
|  | 1409 |  | 
|  | 1410 | 6.1 I have a GPL program, can I use the libcurl library? | 
|  | 1411 |  | 
|  | 1412 | Yes | 
|  | 1413 |  | 
|  | 1414 | Since libcurl may be distributed under the MIT/X derivative license, it can | 
|  | 1415 | be used together with GPL in any software. | 
|  | 1416 |  | 
|  | 1417 | 6.2 I have a closed-source program, can I use the libcurl library? | 
|  | 1418 |  | 
|  | 1419 | Yes | 
|  | 1420 |  | 
|  | 1421 | libcurl does not put any restrictions on the program that uses the library. | 
|  | 1422 |  | 
|  | 1423 | 6.3 I have a BSD licensed program, can I use the libcurl library? | 
|  | 1424 |  | 
|  | 1425 | Yes | 
|  | 1426 |  | 
|  | 1427 | libcurl does not put any restrictions on the program that uses the library. | 
|  | 1428 |  | 
|  | 1429 | 6.4 I have a program that uses LGPL libraries, can I use libcurl? | 
|  | 1430 |  | 
|  | 1431 | Yes | 
|  | 1432 |  | 
|  | 1433 | The LGPL license does not clash with other licenses. | 
|  | 1434 |  | 
|  | 1435 | 6.5 Can I modify curl/libcurl for my program and keep the changes secret? | 
|  | 1436 |  | 
|  | 1437 | Yes | 
|  | 1438 |  | 
|  | 1439 | The MIT/X derivative license practically allows you to do almost anything | 
|  | 1440 | with the sources, on the condition that the copyright texts in the sources | 
|  | 1441 | are left intact. | 
|  | 1442 |  | 
|  | 1443 | 6.6 Can you please change the curl/libcurl license to XXXX? | 
|  | 1444 |  | 
|  | 1445 | No. | 
|  | 1446 |  | 
|  | 1447 | We have carefully picked this license after years of development and | 
|  | 1448 | discussions and a large amount of people have contributed with source code | 
|  | 1449 | knowing that this is the license we use. This license puts the restrictions | 
|  | 1450 | we want on curl/libcurl and it does not spread to other programs or | 
|  | 1451 | libraries that use it. It should be possible for everyone to use libcurl or | 
|  | 1452 | curl in their projects, no matter what license they already have in use. | 
|  | 1453 |  | 
|  | 1454 | 6.7 What are my obligations when using libcurl in my commercial apps? | 
|  | 1455 |  | 
|  | 1456 | Next to none. All you need to adhere to is the MIT-style license (stated in | 
|  | 1457 | the COPYING file) which basically says you have to include the copyright | 
|  | 1458 | notice in "all copies" and that you may not use the copyright holder's name | 
|  | 1459 | when promoting your software. | 
|  | 1460 |  | 
|  | 1461 | You do not have to release any of your source code. | 
|  | 1462 |  | 
|  | 1463 | You do not have to reveal or make public any changes to the libcurl source | 
|  | 1464 | code. | 
|  | 1465 |  | 
|  | 1466 | You do not have to broadcast to the world that you are using libcurl within | 
|  | 1467 | your app. | 
|  | 1468 |  | 
|  | 1469 | All we ask is that you disclose "the copyright notice and this permission | 
|  | 1470 | notice" somewhere. Most probably like in the documentation or in the section | 
|  | 1471 | where other third party dependencies already are mentioned and acknowledged. | 
|  | 1472 |  | 
|  | 1473 | As can be seen here: https://curl.se/docs/companies.html and elsewhere, | 
|  | 1474 | more and more companies are discovering the power of libcurl and take | 
|  | 1475 | advantage of it even in commercial environments. | 
|  | 1476 |  | 
|  | 1477 |  | 
|  | 1478 | 7. PHP/CURL Issues | 
|  | 1479 |  | 
|  | 1480 | 7.1 What is PHP/CURL? | 
|  | 1481 |  | 
|  | 1482 | The module for PHP that makes it possible for PHP programs to access curl- | 
|  | 1483 | functions from within PHP. | 
|  | 1484 |  | 
|  | 1485 | In the cURL project we call this module PHP/CURL to differentiate it from | 
|  | 1486 | curl the command line tool and libcurl the library. The PHP team however | 
|  | 1487 | does not refer to it like this (for unknown reasons). They call it plain | 
|  | 1488 | CURL (often using all caps) or sometimes ext/curl, but both cause much | 
|  | 1489 | confusion to users which in turn gives us a higher question load. | 
|  | 1490 |  | 
|  | 1491 | 7.2 Who wrote PHP/CURL? | 
|  | 1492 |  | 
|  | 1493 | PHP/CURL was initially written by Sterling Hughes. | 
|  | 1494 |  | 
|  | 1495 | 7.3 Can I perform multiple requests using the same handle? | 
|  | 1496 |  | 
|  | 1497 | Yes - at least in PHP version 4.3.8 and later (this has been known to not | 
|  | 1498 | work in earlier versions, but the exact version when it started to work is | 
|  | 1499 | unknown to me). | 
|  | 1500 |  | 
|  | 1501 | After a transfer, you just set new options in the handle and make another | 
|  | 1502 | transfer. This will make libcurl re-use the same connection if it can. | 
|  | 1503 |  | 
|  | 1504 | 7.4 Does PHP/CURL have dependencies? | 
|  | 1505 |  | 
|  | 1506 | PHP/CURL is a module that comes with the regular PHP package. It depends on | 
|  | 1507 | and uses libcurl, so you need to have libcurl installed properly before | 
|  | 1508 | PHP/CURL can be used. | 
|  | 1509 |  | 
|  | 1510 | 8. Development | 
|  | 1511 |  | 
|  | 1512 | 8.1 Why does curl use C89? | 
|  | 1513 |  | 
|  | 1514 | As with everything in curl, there is a history and we keep using what we have | 
|  | 1515 | used before until someone brings up the subject and argues for and works on | 
|  | 1516 | changing it. | 
|  | 1517 |  | 
|  | 1518 | We started out using C89 in the 1990s because that was the only way to write | 
|  | 1519 | a truly portable C program and have it run as widely as possible. C89 was for | 
|  | 1520 | a long time even necessary to make things work on otherwise considered modern | 
|  | 1521 | platforms such as Windows. Today, we do not really know how many users that | 
|  | 1522 | still require the use of a C89 compiler. | 
|  | 1523 |  | 
|  | 1524 | We will continue to use C89 for as long as nobody brings up a strong enough | 
|  | 1525 | reason for us to change our minds. The core developers of the project do not | 
|  | 1526 | feel restricted by this and we are not convinced that going C99 will offer us | 
|  | 1527 | enough of a benefit to warrant the risk of cutting off a share of users. | 
|  | 1528 |  | 
|  | 1529 | 8.2 Will curl be rewritten? | 
|  | 1530 |  | 
|  | 1531 | In one go: no. Little by little over time? Maybe. | 
|  | 1532 |  | 
|  | 1533 | Over the years, new languages and clever operating environments come and go. | 
|  | 1534 | Every now and then the urge apparently arises to request that we rewrite curl | 
|  | 1535 | in another language. | 
|  | 1536 |  | 
|  | 1537 | Some the most important properties in curl are maintaining the API and ABI | 
|  | 1538 | for libcurl and keeping the behavior for the command line tool. As long as we | 
|  | 1539 | can do that, everything else is up for discussion. To maintain the ABI, we | 
|  | 1540 | probably have to maintain a certain amount of code in C, and to remain rock | 
|  | 1541 | stable, we will never risk anything by rewriting a lot of things in one go. | 
|  | 1542 | That said, we can certainly offer more and more optional backends written in | 
|  | 1543 | other languages, as long as those backends can be plugged in at build-time. | 
|  | 1544 | Backends can be written in any language, but should probably provide APIs | 
|  | 1545 | usable from C to ease integration and transition. |