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curl(1) |
Curl Manual |
curl(1) |
curl is a tool to transfer data from or to a server, using one of the
supported protocols (DICT, FILE, FTP, FTPS, GOPHER, HTTP, HTTPS, IMAP, IMAPS,
LDAP, LDAPS, POP3, POP3S, RTMP, RTSP, SCP, SFTP, SMTP, SMTPS, TELNET and
TFTP). The command is designed to work without user interaction.
curl offers a busload of useful tricks like proxy support, user
authentication, FTP upload, HTTP post, SSL connections, cookies, file
transfer resume, Metalink, and more. As you will see below, the number of
features will make your head spin!
curl is powered by libcurl for all transfer-related features. See
libcurl(3) for details.
The URL syntax is protocol-dependent. You'll find a detailed description in RFC
3986.
You can specify multiple URLs or parts of URLs by writing part
sets within braces as in:
http://site.{one,two,three}.com
or you can get sequences of alphanumeric series by using [] as
in:
ftp://ftp.numericals.com/file[1-100].txt
ftp://ftp.numericals.com/file[001-100].txt (with leading zeros)
ftp://ftp.letters.com/file[a-z].txt
Nested sequences are not supported, but you can use several ones
next to each other:
http://any.org/archive[1996-1999]/vol[1-4]/part{a,b,c}.html
You can specify any amount of URLs on the command line. They will
be fetched in a sequential manner in the specified order.
You can specify a step counter for the ranges to get every Nth
number or letter:
http://www.numericals.com/file[1-100:10].txt
http://www.letters.com/file[a-z:2].txt
If you specify URL without protocol:// prefix, curl will attempt
to guess what protocol you might want. It will then default to HTTP but try
other protocols based on often-used host name prefixes. For example, for
host names starting with "ftp." curl will assume you want to speak
FTP.
curl will do its best to use what you pass to it as a URL. It is
not trying to validate it as a syntactically correct URL by any means but is
instead very liberal with what it accepts.
curl will attempt to re-use connections for multiple file
transfers, so that getting many files from the same server will not do
multiple connects / handshakes. This improves speed. Of course this is only
done on files specified on a single command line and cannot be used between
separate curl invokes.
curl normally displays a progress meter during operations, indicating the amount
of transferred data, transfer speeds and estimated time left, etc.
curl displays this data to the terminal by default, so if you
invoke curl to do an operation and it is about to write data to the
terminal, it disables the progress meter as otherwise it would mess
up the output mixing progress meter and response data.
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 (>),
-o [file] or similar.
It is not the same case for FTP upload as that operation does not
spit out any response data to the terminal.
If you prefer a progress "bar" instead of the regular
meter, -# is your friend.
In general, all boolean options are enabled with --option and yet again
disabled with --no-option. 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 7.19.0. Previously most options were toggled on/off on repeated use
of the same command line option.)
- -#, --progress-bar
- Make curl display progress as a simple progress bar instead of the
standard, more informational, meter.
- -0, --http1.0
- (HTTP) Forces curl to issue its requests using HTTP 1.0 instead of using
its internally preferred: HTTP 1.1.
- -1, --tlsv1
- (SSL) Forces curl to use TLS version 1.x when negotiating with a remote
TLS server. You can use options --tlsv1.0, --tlsv1.1,
--tlsv1.2, and --tlsv1.3 to control the TLS version more
precisely (if the SSL backend in use supports such a level of
control).
- -2, --sslv2
- (SSL) Forces curl to use SSL version 2 when negotiating with a remote SSL
server.
- -3, --sslv3
- (SSL) Forces curl to use SSL version 3 when negotiating with a remote SSL
server.
- -4, --ipv4
- If curl is capable of resolving an address to multiple IP versions (which
it is if it is IPv6-capable), this option tells curl to resolve names to
IPv4 addresses only.
- -6, --ipv6
- If curl is capable of resolving an address to multiple IP versions (which
it is if it is IPv6-capable), this option tells curl to resolve names to
IPv6 addresses only.
- -a, --append
- (FTP/SFTP) When used in an upload, this will tell curl to append to the
target file instead of overwriting it. If the file doesn't exist, it will
be created. Note that this flag is ignored by some SSH servers (including
OpenSSH).
- -A, --user-agent <agent string>
- (HTTP) Specify the User-Agent string to send to the HTTP server. Some
badly done CGIs fail if this field isn't set to "Mozilla/4.0".
To encode blanks in the string, surround the string with single quote
marks. This can also be set with the -H, --header option of course.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --anyauth
- (HTTP) Tells curl to figure out authentication method by itself, and use
the most 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 --basic,
--digest, --ntlm, and --negotiate.
Note that using --anyauth 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 the need should arise when uploading
from stdin, the upload operation will fail.
- -b, --cookie <name=data>
- (HTTP) Pass the data to the HTTP server as a cookie. 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 line, it is treated as a
filename to use to read previously stored cookie lines from, which
should be used in this session if they match. Using this method also
activates the "cookie parser" which will make curl record
incoming cookies too, which may be handy if you're using this in
combination with the -L, --location option. The file format of
the file to read cookies from should be plain HTTP headers or the
Netscape/Mozilla cookie file format.
NOTE that the file specified with -b, --cookie
is only used as input. No cookies will be stored in the file. To store
cookies, use the -c, --cookie-jar option or you could even save
the HTTP headers to a file using -D, --dump-header!
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- -B, --use-ascii
- (FTP/LDAP) Enable ASCII transfer. For FTP, this can also be enforced by
using an URL that ends with ";type=A". This option causes data
sent to stdout to be in text mode for win32 systems.
- --basic
- (HTTP) Tells curl to use HTTP Basic authentication. This is the default
and this option is usually pointless, unless you use it to override a
previously set option that sets a different authentication method (such as
--ntlm, --digest, or --negotiate).
- -c, --cookie-jar <file name>
- (HTTP) Specify to which file you want curl to write all cookies after a
completed operation. Curl writes all cookies previously read from a
specified file as well as all cookies received from remote server(s). If
no cookies are known, no file 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 -b, --cookie 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 -v 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.
- -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.
- --ciphers <list of ciphers>
- (SSL) 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: http://www.openssl.org/docs/apps/ciphers.html
NSS ciphers are done differently than OpenSSL and GnuTLS. The
full list of NSS ciphers is in the NSSCipherSuite entry at this URL:
http://git.fedorahosted.org/cgit/mod_nss.git/plain/docs/mod_nss.html#Directives
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --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.
- --connect-timeout <seconds>
- Maximum time in seconds that you allow the connection to the server to
take. This only limits the connection phase, once curl has connected this
option is of no more use. See also the -m, --max-time option.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --create-dirs
- When used in conjunction with the -o option, curl will create the
necessary local directory hierarchy as needed. This option creates the
dirs mentioned with the -o option, nothing else. If the -o
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
--ftp-create-dirs.
- --crlf
- (FTP) Convert LF to CRLF in upload. Useful for MVS (OS/390).
- --crlfile <file>
- (HTTPS/FTPS) 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)
- -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 -F, --form.
-d, --data is the same as --data-ascii. To post
data purely binary, you should instead use the --data-binary
option. To URL-encode the value of a form field you may use
--data-urlencode.
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. The contents of the file must already be URL-encoded.
Multiple files can also be specified. Posting data from a file named
'foobar' would thus be done with --data @foobar.
- -D, --dump-header <file>
- Write the 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 -b, --cookie
option! The -c, --cookie-jar option is however 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.
- --data-ascii <data>
- See -d, --data.
- --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 --data-ascii
does, except that newlines 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 -d, --data.
- --data-urlencode <data>
- (HTTP) This posts data, similar to the other --data options with the
exception that this performs URL-encoding. (Added in 7.18.0)
To be CGI-compliant, the <data> part should begin with a
name followed by a separator and a content specification. The
<data> part can be passed to curl using one of the following
syntaxes:
- 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!
- =content
- This will make curl URL-encode the content and pass that on. The preceding
= symbol is not included in the data.
- 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.
- @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.
- 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
name=urlencoded-file-content. Note that the name is expected to be
URL-encoded already.
- --delegation LEVEL
- Set LEVEL to tell the server what it is allowed to delegate when it
comes to user credentials. Used with GSS/kerberos.
- none
- Don't allow any delegation.
- 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.
- always
- Unconditionally allow the server to delegate.
- --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 -u, --user option to
set user name and password. See also --ntlm, --negotiate and
--anyauth for related options.
If this option is used several times, only the first one is
used.
- --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 --disable-eprt.
If the server is an IPv6 host, 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 -P, --ftp-port or
force it with --ftp-pasv.
- --disable-epsv
- (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 --disable-epsv.
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 -P, --ftp-port.
- -e, --referer <URL>
- (HTTP) Sends the "Referer Page" information to the HTTP server.
This can also be set with the -H, --header flag of course. When
used with -L, --location you can append ";auto" to the
--referer 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 --referer.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- -E, --cert <certificate[:password]>
- (SSL) 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 PEM format. 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 private
certificate concatenated! See --cert and --key 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.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --engine <name>
- Select the OpenSSL crypto engine to use for cipher operations. Use
--engine 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.
- --environment
- (RISC OS ONLY) Sets a range of environment variables, using the names the
-w option supports, to allow easier extraction of useful
information after having run curl.
- --egd-file <file>
- (SSL) Specify the path name to the Entropy Gathering Daemon socket. The
socket is used to seed the random engine for SSL connections. See also the
--random-file option.
- --cert-type <type>
- (SSL) Tells curl what certificate type the provided certificate is in.
PEM, DER and ENG are recognized types. If not specified, PEM is assumed.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --cacert <CA certificate>
- (SSL) Tells curl to use the specified certificate file to verify the peer.
The file may contain multiple CA certificates. The certificate(s) must be
in PEM format. Normally curl is built to use a default file for this, so
this option is typically used to alter that default file.
curl recognizes the environment variable named
'CURL_CA_BUNDLE' if it is set, and uses the given path as a path to a CA
cert bundle. This option overrides that variable.
The windows version of curl will automatically look for a CA
certs file named ´curl-ca-bundle.crt´, either in the same
directory as curl.exe, or in the 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 (libnsspem.so) needs to be available for this option to
work properly.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --capath <CA certificate directory>
- (SSL) Tells curl to use the specified certificate directory to verify the
peer. Multiple paths can be provided by separating them with ":"
(e.g. "path1:path2:path3"). The certificates must be in PEM
format, and if curl is built against OpenSSL, the directory must have been
processed using the c_rehash utility supplied with OpenSSL. Using
--capath can allow OpenSSL-powered curl to make SSL-connections
much more efficiently than using --cacert if the --cacert
file contains many CA certificates.
If this option is set, the default capath value will be
ignored, and if it is used several times, the last one will be used.
- -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).
- -F, --form <name=content>
- (HTTP) 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. 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 your password file to the server, where
'password' is the name of the form-field to which /etc/passwd will be
the input:
curl -F password=@/etc/passwd www.mypasswords.com
To read content from stdin instead of a file, use - as the
filename. This goes for both @ and < constructs.
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"
url.com
or
curl -F "name=daniel;type=text/foo"
url.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"
url.com
If filename/path contains ',' or ';', it must be quoted by
double-quotes like:
curl -F
"file=@\"localfile\";filename=\"nameinpost\""
url.com
or
curl -F
'file=@"localfile";filename="nameinpost"'
url.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.
See further examples and details in the MANUAL.
This option can be used multiple times.
- --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. (Added in 7.13.0)
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --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)
- --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.
- --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:
- 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.
- 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.
- 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'.
(Added in 7.15.1)
- --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
-P/-ftp-port option. (Added in 7.11.0)
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 -P, --ftp-port again.
Passive mode means that curl will try the EPSV command first
and then PASV, unless --disable-epsv is used.
- --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. (Added in 7.14.2)
This option has no effect if PORT, EPRT or EPSV is used
instead of PASV.
- --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.x)
- --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 --ftp-ssl-ccc-mode for other modes.
(Added in 7.16.1)
- --ftp-ssl-ccc-mode [active/passive]
- (FTP) Use CCC (Clear Command Channel) 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. (Added in
7.16.2)
- --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) that can
still be used but will be removed in a future version.
- --form-string <name=string>
- (HTTP) Similar to --form 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 --form if there's any possibility that the string
value may accidentally trigger the '@' or '<' features of
--form.
- -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.
- -G, --get
- When used, this option will make all data specified with -d, --data
or --data-binary 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 -I, 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.
- -H, --header <header>
- (HTTP) Extra header to use when getting a web page. 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 not add that
as a part of the header content: do not add newlines or carriage
returns, they will only mess things up for you.
See also the -A, --user-agent and -e, --referer
options.
This option can be used multiple times to add/replace/remove
multiple headers.
- --hostpubmd5 <md5>
- (SCP/SFTP) 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)
- --ignore-content-length
- (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.
- -i, --include
- (HTTP) Include the HTTP-header in the output. The HTTP-header includes
things like server-name, date of the document, HTTP-version and
more...
- -I, --head
- (HTTP/FTP/FILE) Fetch the HTTP-header 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.
- --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 http://www.netscape.com/
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- -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.
- -J, --remote-header-name
- (HTTP) This option tells the -O, --remote-name option to use the
server-specified Content-Disposition filename instead of extracting a
filename from the URL.
- -k, --insecure
- (SSL) This option explicitly allows curl to perform "insecure"
SSL connections and transfers. All SSL connections are attempted to be
made secure by using the CA certificate bundle installed by default. This
makes all connections considered "insecure" fail unless -k,
--insecure is used.
See this online resource for further details:
http://curl.haxx.se/docs/sslcerts.html
- -K, --config <config file>
- Specify which config file to read curl arguments from. The config file is
a text file in which command line arguments can be written which then will
be used as if they were written on the actual command line. Options and
their parameters must be specified on the same config file line, separated
by whitespace, colon, the equals sign or any combination thereof (however,
the preferred separator is the equals sign). 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 -K, --config 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 --url option, and not by simply
writing the URL on its own line. So, it could look similar to this:
url = "http://curl.haxx.se/docs/"
Long option names can optionally be given in the config file
without the initial double dashes.
When curl is invoked, it always (unless -q 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.
# --- Example file ---
# this is a comment
url = "curl.haxx.se"
output = "curlhere.html"
user-agent = "superagent/1.0"
# and fetch another URL too
url = "curl.haxx.se/docs/manpage.html"
-O
referer = "http://nowhereatall.com/"
# --- End of example file ---
This option can be used multiple times to load multiple config
files.
- --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 --no-keepalive is used. (Added in
7.18.0)
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used. If unspecified, the option defaults to 60 seconds.
- --key <key>
- (SSL/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.
- --key-type <type>
- (SSL) Private key file type. Specify which type your --key 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.
- --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.
This option requires a library built with kerberos4 or GSSAPI
(GSS-Negotiate) support. This is not very common. Use -V,
--version to see if your curl supports it.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- -l, --list-only
- (FTP) When listing an FTP directory, this switch forces a name-only view.
Especially useful if you want to machine-parse the contents of an FTP
directory since the normal directory view doesn't use a standard look or
format.
This option causes an FTP NLST command to be sent. Some FTP
servers list only files in their response to NLST; they do not include
subdirectories and symbolic links.
- -L, --location
- (HTTP/HTTPS) 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 -i, --include or -I, --head, 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
--location-trusted on how to change this. You can limit the amount
of redirects to follow by using the --max-redirs 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.
- --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)
- --limit-rate <speed>
- Specify the maximum transfer rate you want curl to use. This feature is
useful if you have a limited pipe and you'd like your transfer not to use
your entire bandwidth.
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.
The given rate is the average speed counted during the entire
transfer. It means that curl might use higher transfer speeds in short
bursts, but over time it uses no more than the given rate.
If you also use the -Y, --speed-limit 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.
- --local-port <num>[-num]
- Set a preferred number or range 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)
- --location-trusted
- (HTTP/HTTPS) Like -L, --location, 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).
- -m, --max-time <seconds>
- 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. See also the --connect-timeout
option.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --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.
(Added in 7.25.0)
- --mail-from <address>
- (SMTP) Specify a single address that the given mail should get sent from.
(Added in 7.20.0)
- --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.
NOTE: 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.
- --mail-rcpt <address>
- (SMTP) Specify a single address that the given mail should get sent to.
This option can be used multiple times to specify many recipients.
(Added in 7.20.0)
- --max-redirs <num>
- Set maximum number of redirection-followings allowed. If -L,
--location is used, this option can be 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 limitless.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --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 --metalink and --include 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.
(Added in 7.27.0, if built against the libmetalink
library.)
- -n, --netrc
- Makes curl scan the .netrc (_netrc 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 netrc(4) or ftp(1) 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
.netrc to allow curl to FTP to the machine host.domain.com with
user name 'myself' and password 'secret' should look similar to:
machine host.domain.com login myself password
secret
- -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.
- --netrc-file
- This option is similar to --netrc, 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 --netrc-file
options are provided, only the last one will be used. (Added in
7.21.5)
This option overrides any use of --netrc as they are
mutually exclusive. It will also abide by --netrc-optional if
specified.
- --netrc-optional
- Very similar to --netrc, but this option makes the .netrc usage
optional and not mandatory as the --netrc option does.
- --negotiate
- (HTTP) Enables GSS-Negotiate authentication. The GSS-Negotiate method was
designed by Microsoft and is used in their web applications. It is
primarily meant as a support for Kerberos5 authentication but may be also
used along with another authentication method. For more information see
IETF draft draft-brezak-spnego-http-04.txt.
If you want to enable Negotiate for your proxy authentication,
then use --proxy-negotiate.
This option requires a library built with GSSAPI support. This
is not very common. Use -V, --version to see if your version
supports GSS-Negotiate.
When using this option, you must also provide a fake -u,
--user option to activate the authentication code properly. Sending
a '-u :' is enough as the user name and password from the -u
option aren't actually used.
If this option is used several times, only the first one is
used.
- --no-keepalive
- Disables the use of keepalive messages on the TCP connection, as by
default curl enables them.
Note that this is the negated option name documented. You can
thus use --keepalive to enforce keepalive.
- --no-sessionid
- (SSL) 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. (Added in 7.16.0)
Note that this is the negated option name documented. You can
thus use --sessionid to enforce session-ID caching.
- --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. (Added in 7.19.4).
- --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 --proxy-ntlm.
This option requires a library built with SSL support. Use
-V, --version to see if your curl supports NTLM.
If this option is used several times, only the first one is
used.
- -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}.site.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.
See also the --create-dirs option to create the local
directories dynamically. Specifying the output as '-' (a single dash)
will force the output to be done to stdout.
- -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 remote file name to use for saving is extracted from the
given URL, nothing else.
Consequentially, the file will be saved in the current working
directory. If you want the file saved in a different directory, make
sure you change current working directory before you invoke curl with
the -O, --remote-name flag!
You may use this option as many times as the number of URLs
you have.
- -p, --proxytunnel
- When an HTTP proxy is used (-x, --proxy), 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.
- -P, --ftp-port <address>
- (FTP) Reverses the default initiator/listener roles when connecting with
FTP. This switch makes curl use active mode. In practice, 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:
- interface
- i.e "eth0" to specify which interface's IP address you want to
use (Unix only)
- IP address
- i.e "192.168.10.1" to specify the exact IP address
- host name
- i.e "my.host.domain" to specify the machine
- -
- make curl pick the same IP address that is already used for the control
connection
If this option is used several times, the last one will be used.
Disable the use of PORT with --ftp-pasv. Disable the attempt to use
the EPRT command instead of PORT by using --disable-eprt. EPRT is
really PORT++.
Starting in 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.
- --pass <phrase>
- (SSL/SSH) Passphrase for the private key
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --post301
- (HTTP) Tells curl to respect RFC 2616/10.3.2 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
-L, --location (Added in 7.17.1)
- --post302
- (HTTP) Tells curl to respect RFC 2616/10.3.2 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
-L, --location (Added in 7.19.1)
- --post303
- (HTTP) Tells curl to respect RFC 2616/10.3.2 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
-L, --location (Added in 7.26.0)
- --proto <protocols>
- Tells curl to use the listed protocols for its initial retrieval.
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:
- +
- Permit this protocol in addition to protocols already permitted (this is
the default if no modifier is used).
- -
- Deny this protocol, removing it from the list of protocols already
permitted.
- =
- Permit only this protocol (ignoring the list already permitted), though
subject to later modification by subsequent entries in the comma separated
list.
- For example:
- --proto -ftps
- uses the default protocols, but disables ftps
- --proto -all,https,+http
- only enables http and https
- --proto =http,https
- also only enables http and https
- 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.
(Added in 7.20.2)
- --proto-redir <protocols>
- Tells curl to use the listed protocols after a redirect. See --proto for
how protocols are represented.
(Added in 7.20.2)
- --proxy-anyauth
- Tells curl to pick a suitable authentication method when communicating
with the given proxy. This might cause an extra request/response
round-trip. (Added in 7.13.2)
- --proxy-basic
- Tells curl to use HTTP Basic authentication when communicating with the
given proxy. Use --basic for enabling HTTP Basic with a remote
host. Basic is the default authentication method curl uses with
proxies.
- --proxy-digest
- Tells curl to use HTTP Digest authentication when communicating with the
given proxy. Use --digest for enabling HTTP Digest with a remote
host.
- --proxy-negotiate
- Tells curl to use HTTP Negotiate authentication when communicating with
the given proxy. Use --negotiate for enabling HTTP Negotiate with a
remote host. (Added in 7.17.1)
- --proxy-ntlm
- Tells curl to use HTTP NTLM authentication when communicating with the
given proxy. Use --ntlm for enabling NTLM with a remote host.
- --proxy1.0 <proxyhost[: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
(-x, --proxy), is that attempts to use CONNECT through the proxy
will specify an HTTP 1.0 protocol instead of the default HTTP 1.1.
- --pubkey <key>
- (SSH) 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.)
- -q
- If used as the first parameter on the command line, the curlrc
config file will not be read and used. See the -K, --config for
details on the default config file search path.
- -Q, --quote <command>
- (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:
- 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.
- chmod mode file
- The chmod command modifies the file mode bits of the specified file. The
mode operand is an octal integer mode number.
- 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.
- 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.
- mkdir directory_name
- The mkdir command creates the directory named by the directory_name
operand.
- pwd
- The pwd command returns the absolute pathname of the current working
directory.
- 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.
- rm file
- The rm command removes the file specified by the file operand.
- rmdir directory
- The rmdir command removes the directory entry specified by the directory
operand, provided it is empty.
- symlink source_file target_file
- See ln.
- -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.
- 0-499
- specifies the first 500 bytes
- 500-999
- specifies the second 500 bytes
- -500
- specifies the last 500 bytes
- 9500-
- specifies the bytes from offset 9500 and forward
- 0-0,-1
- specifies the first and last byte only(*)(H)
- 500-700,600-799
- specifies 300 bytes from offset 500(H)
- 100-199,500-599
- specifies two separate 100-byte ranges(*)(H)
(*) = 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.
- -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.
- --random-file <file>
- (SSL) Specify the path name to file containing what will be considered as
random data. The data is used to seed the random engine for SSL
connections. See also the --egd-file option.
- --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)
- --remote-name-all
- This option changes the default action for all given URLs to be dealt with
as if -O, --remote-name were used for each one. So if you want to
disable that for a specific URL after --remote-name-all has been
used, you must use "-o -" or --no-remote-name. (Added in
7.19.0)
- --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.
This option can be used many times to add many host names to
resolve.
(Added in 7.21.3)
- --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 --retry-delay you disable this
exponential backoff algorithm. See also --retry-max-time to limit
the total time allowed for retries. (Added in 7.12.3)
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --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
--retry is also used. Setting this delay to zero will make curl use
the default backoff time. (Added in 7.12.3)
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --retry-max-time <seconds>
- The retry timer is reset before the first transfer attempt. Retries will
be done as usual (see --retry) 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
-m, --max-time. Set this option to zero to not timeout retries.
(Added in 7.12.3)
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- -s, --silent
- Silent or quiet mode. Don't show progress meter or error messages. Makes
Curl mute.
- -S, --show-error
- When used with -s it makes curl show an error message if it
fails.
- --ssl
- (FTP, POP3, IMAP, 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
--ftp-ssl-control and --ssl-reqd for different levels of
encryption required. (Added in 7.20.0)
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.
- --ssl-reqd
- (FTP, POP3, IMAP, SMTP) Require SSL/TLS for the connection. Terminates the
connection if the server doesn't support SSL/TLS. (Added in 7.20.0)
This option was formerly known as --ftp-ssl-reqd (added
in 7.15.5). That option name can still be used but will be removed in a
future version.
- --ssl-allow-beast
- (SSL) 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 work-arounds 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)
- --socks4 <host[:port]>
- Use the specified SOCKS4 proxy. If the port number is not specified, it is
assumed at port 1080. (Added in 7.15.2)
This option overrides any previous use of -x, --proxy,
as they are mutually exclusive.
Since 7.21.7, this option is superfluous since you can specify
a socks4 proxy with -x, --proxy using a socks4:// protocol
prefix.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --socks4a <host[:port]>
- Use the specified SOCKS4a proxy. If the port number is not specified, it
is assumed at port 1080. (Added in 7.18.0)
This option overrides any previous use of -x, --proxy,
as they are mutually exclusive.
Since 7.21.7, this option is superfluous since you can specify
a socks4a proxy with -x, --proxy using a socks4a:// protocol
prefix.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --socks5-basic
- Tells curl to use username/password authentication when connecting to a
SOCKS5 proxy. The username/password authentication is enabled by default.
Use --socks5-gssapi to force GSS-API authentication to SOCKS5
proxies. (Added in 7.55.0)
- --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 --socks5-basic to force
username/password authentication to SOCKS5 proxies. (Added in 7.55.0)
- --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. (Added in
7.18.0)
This option overrides any previous use of -x, --proxy,
as they are mutually exclusive.
Since 7.21.7, this option is superfluous since you can specify
a socks5 hostname proxy with -x, --proxy using a socks5h://
protocol prefix.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used. (This option was previously wrongly documented and used as --socks
without the number appended.)
- --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 -x, --proxy,
as they are mutually exclusive.
Since 7.21.7, this option is superfluous since you can specify
a socks5 proxy with -x, --proxy using a socks5:// protocol
prefix.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used. (This option was previously wrongly documented and used as --socks
without the number appended.)
This option (as well as --socks4) does not work with
IPV6, FTPS or LDAP.
- --socks5-gssapi-service <servicename>
- The default service name for a socks server is rcmd/server-fqdn. This
option allows you to change it.
Examples: --socks5 proxy-name --socks5-gssapi-service
sockd would use sockd/proxy-name --socks5 proxy-name
--socks5-gssapi-service 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).
- --socks5-gssapi-nec
- As part of the gssapi 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 --socks5-gssapi-nec allows the
unprotected exchange of the protection mode negotiation. (Added in
7.19.4).
- --stderr <file>
- 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.
- -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.
- -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 -T for each URL on the command line. Each
-T + URL pair specifies what to upload and to where. curl also supports
"globbing" of the -T 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 -T "{file1,file2}"
http://www.uploadtothissite.com
or even
curl -T "img[1-1000].png"
ftp://ftp.picturemania.com/upload/
- --tcp-nodelay
- Turn on the TCP_NODELAY option. See the curl_easy_setopt(3) man
page for details about this option. (Added in 7.11.2)
- --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)
- --tlsauthtype <authtype>
- Set TLS authentication type. Currently, the only supported option is
"SRP", for TLS-SRP (RFC 5054). If --tlsuser and
--tlspassword are specified but --tlsauthtype is not, then
this option defaults to "SRP". This option works only if the
underlying libcurl is built with TLS-SRP support, which requires OpenSSL
or GnuTLS with TLS-SRP support. (Added in 7.21.4)
- --tlspassword <password>
- Set password for use with the TLS authentication method specified with
--tlsauthtype. Requires that --tlsuser also be set. (Added
in 7.21.4)
- --tlsuser <user>
- Set username for use with the TLS authentication method specified with
--tlsauthtype. Requires that --tlspassword also be set.
(Added in 7.21.4)
- --tlsv1.0
- (SSL) Forces curl to use TLS version 1.0 when negotiating with a remote
TLS server. (Added in 7.34.0)
- --tlsv1.1
- (SSL) Forces curl to use TLS version 1.1 when negotiating with a remote
TLS server. (Added in 7.34.0)
- --tlsv1.2
- (SSL) Forces curl to use TLS version 1.2 when negotiating with a remote
TLS server. (Added in 7.34.0)
- --tlsv1.3
- (SSL) Forces curl to use TLS version 1.3 when negotiating with a remote
TLS server. (Added in 7.52.0)
- --tls-max <VERSION>
- (SSL) VERSION defines maximum supported TLS version. The minimum
acceptable version is set by tlsv1.0, tlsv1.1, tlsv1.2 or tlsv1.3.
- default
- Use up to recommended TLS version.
- 1.0
- Use up to TLSv1.0.
- 1.1
- Use up to TLSv1.1.
- 1.2
- Use up to TLSv1.2.
- 1.3
- Use up to TLSv1.3.
See also --tlsv1.0 and --tlsv1.1 and
--tlsv1.2 and --tlsv1.3. Added in 7.54.0.
- --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)
- --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.
This option overrides previous uses of -v, --verbose or
--trace-ascii.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --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 --trace, 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.
This option overrides previous uses of -v, --verbose or
--trace.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --trace-time
- Prepends a time stamp to each trace or verbose line that curl displays.
(Added in 7.14.0)
- --unix-socket <path>
- (HTTP) Connect through this UNIX domain socket, instead of using the
network. (Added in 7.40.0)
- -u, --user <user:password>
- Specify the user name and password to use for server authentication.
Overrides -n, --netrc and --netrc-optional.
If you just give the user name (without entering a colon) curl
will prompt for a password.
If you use an SSPI-enabled curl binary and do NTLM
authentication, you can force curl to pick up the user name and password
from your environment by simply specifying a single colon with this
option: "-u :".
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- -U, --proxy-user <user:password>
- Specify the user name and password to use for proxy authentication.
If you use an SSPI-enabled curl binary and do NTLM
authentication, you can force curl to pick up the user name and password
from your environment by simply specifying a single colon with this
option: "-U :".
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --url <URL>
- Specify a URL to fetch. This option is mostly handy when you want to
specify URL(s) in a config file.
This option may be used any number of times. To control where
this URL is written, use the -o, --output or the -O,
--remote-name options.
- -v, --verbose
- Makes the fetching more verbose/talkative. Mostly useful for debugging. 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.
Note that if you only want HTTP headers in the output, -i,
--include might be the option you're looking for.
If you think this option still doesn't give you enough
details, consider using --trace or --trace-ascii
instead.
This option overrides previous uses of --trace-ascii or
--trace.
Use -s, --silent to make curl quiet.
- -w, --write-out <format>
- Defines what to display on stdout after a completed and successful
operation. The format is a string that may contain plain text mixed with
any number of variables. The string can be specified as
"string", to get read from a particular file you specify it
"@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.
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:
- content_type
- The Content-Type of the requested document, if there was any.
- 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 --remote-name or
--output option. It's most useful in combination with the
--remote-header-name option. (Added in 7.25.1)
- ftp_entry_path
- The initial path curl ended up in when logging on to the remote FTP
server. (Added in 7.15.4)
- 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 response_code was added to
show the same info.
- 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)
- 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)
- local_port
- The local port number of the most recently done connection (Added in
7.29.0)
- num_connects
- Number of new connects made in the recent transfer. (Added in 7.12.3)
- num_redirects
- Number of redirects that were followed in the request. (Added in
7.12.3)
- redirect_url
- When an HTTP request was made without -L to follow redirects, this
variable will show the actual URL a redirect would take you to.
(Added in 7.18.2)
- remote_ip
- The remote IP address of the most recently done connection - can be either
IPv4 or IPv6 (Added in 7.29.0)
- remote_port
- The remote port number of the most recently done connection (Added in
7.29.0)
- size_download
- The total amount of bytes that were downloaded.
- size_header
- The total amount of bytes of the downloaded headers.
- size_request
- The total amount of bytes that were sent in the HTTP request.
- size_upload
- The total amount of bytes that were uploaded.
- speed_download
- The average download speed that curl measured for the complete download.
Bytes per second.
- speed_upload
- The average upload speed that curl measured for the complete upload. Bytes
per second.
- 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)
- 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)
- time_connect
- The time, in seconds, it took from the start until the TCP connect to the
remote host (or proxy) was completed.
- time_namelookup
- The time, in seconds, it took from the start until the name resolving was
completed.
- 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.
- time_redirect
- The time, in seconds, it took for all redirection steps include 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)
- 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.
- time_total
- The total time, in seconds, that the full operation lasted. The time will
be displayed with millisecond resolution.
- url_effective
- The URL that was fetched last. This is most meaningful if you've told curl
to follow location: headers.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- -x, --proxy <[protocol://][user:password@]proxyhost[:port]>
- Use the specified HTTP proxy. If the port number is not specified, it is
assumed at port 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 -p, --proxytunnel
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.
From 7.21.7, the proxy string may 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, http:// and all others
will be treated as HTTP proxies.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- -X, --request <command>
- (HTTP) Specifies a custom request method to use when communicating with
the HTTP server. The specified request 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 -I, --head option.
(FTP) Specifies a custom FTP command to use instead of LIST
when doing file lists with FTP.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- --xattr
- When saving output to a file, this option tells curl to store certain file
metadata in extened 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.
- -y, --speed-time <time>
- 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 -Y.
This option controls transfers and thus will not affect slow
connects etc. If this is a concern for you, try the
--connect-timeout option.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- -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 -y and
is 30 if not set.
If this option is used several times, the last one will be
used.
- -z, --time-cond <date expression>|<file>
- (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 curl_getdate(3) 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.
- -h, --help
- Usage help.
- -M, --manual
- Manual. Display the huge help text.
- -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:
- IPv6
- You can use IPv6 with this.
- krb4
- Krb4 for FTP is supported.
- SSL
- HTTPS and FTPS are supported.
- libz
- Automatic decompression of compressed files over HTTP is supported.
- NTLM
- NTLM authentication is supported.
- GSS-Negotiate
- Negotiate authentication and krb5 for FTP is supported.
- Debug
- This curl uses a libcurl built with Debug. This enables more
error-tracking and memory debugging etc. For curl-developers only!
- AsynchDNS
- This curl uses asynchronous name resolves.
- SPNEGO
- SPNEGO Negotiate authentication is supported.
- Largefile
- This curl supports transfers of large files, files larger than 2GB.
- IDN
- This curl supports IDN - international domain names.
- SSPI
- SSPI is supported. If you use NTLM and set a blank user name, curl will
authenticate with your current user and password.
- TLS-SRP
- SRP (Secure Remote Password) authentication is supported for TLS.
- 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).
~/.curlrc
Default config file, see -K, --config for
details.
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 --proxy option.
- http_proxy [protocol://]<host>[:port]
- Sets the proxy server to use for HTTP.
- HTTPS_PROXY [protocol://]<host>[:port]
- Sets the proxy server to use for HTTPS.
- [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.
- ALL_PROXY [protocol://]<host>[:port]
- Sets the proxy server to use if no protocol-specific proxy is set.
- 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 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:
- socks4://
- Makes it the equivalent of --socks4
- socks4a://
- Makes it the equivalent of --socks4a
- socks5://
- Makes it the equivalent of --socks5
- socks5h://
- Makes it the equivalent of --socks5-hostname
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:
- 1
- Unsupported protocol. This build of curl has no support for this
protocol.
- 2
- Failed to initialize.
- 3
- URL malformed. The syntax was not correct.
- 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!
- 5
- Couldn't resolve proxy. The given proxy host could not be resolved.
- 6
- Couldn't resolve host. The given remote host was not resolved.
- 7
- Failed to connect to host.
- 8
- FTP weird server reply. The server sent data curl couldn't parse.
- 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.
- 11
- FTP weird PASS reply. Curl couldn't parse the reply sent to the PASS
request.
- 13
- FTP weird PASV reply, Curl couldn't parse the reply sent to the PASV
request.
- 14
- FTP weird 227 format. Curl couldn't parse the 227-line the server
sent.
- 15
- FTP can't get host. Couldn't resolve the host IP we got in the
227-line.
- 17
- FTP couldn't set binary. Couldn't change transfer method to binary.
- 18
- Partial file. Only a part of the file was transferred.
- 19
- FTP couldn't download/access the given file, the RETR (or similar) command
failed.
- 21
- FTP quote error. A quote command returned error from the server.
- 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 -f, --fail is used.
- 23
- Write error. Curl couldn't write data to a local filesystem or
similar.
- 25
- FTP couldn't STOR file. The server denied the STOR operation, used for FTP
uploading.
- 26
- Read error. Various reading problems.
- 27
- Out of memory. A memory allocation request failed.
- 28
- Operation timeout. The specified time-out period was reached according to
the conditions.
- 30
- FTP PORT failed. The PORT command failed. Not all FTP servers support the
PORT command, try doing a transfer using PASV instead!
- 31
- FTP couldn't use REST. The REST command failed. This command is used for
resumed FTP transfers.
- 33
- HTTP range error. The range "command" didn't work.
- 34
- HTTP post error. Internal post-request generation error.
- 35
- SSL connect error. The SSL handshaking failed.
- 36
- FTP bad download resume. Couldn't continue an earlier aborted
download.
- 37
- FILE couldn't read file. Failed to open the file. Permissions?
- 38
- LDAP cannot bind. LDAP bind operation failed.
- 39
- LDAP search failed.
- 41
- Function not found. A required LDAP function was not found.
- 42
- Aborted by callback. An application told curl to abort the operation.
- 43
- Internal error. A function was called with a bad parameter.
- 45
- Interface error. A specified outgoing interface could not be used.
- 47
- Too many redirects. When following redirects, curl hit the maximum
amount.
- 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!
- 49
- Malformed telnet option.
- 51
- The peer's SSL certificate or SSH MD5 fingerprint was not OK.
- 52
- The server didn't reply anything, which here is considered an error.
- 53
- SSL crypto engine not found.
- 54
- Cannot set SSL crypto engine as default.
- 55
- Failed sending network data.
- 56
- Failure in receiving network data.
- 58
- Problem with the local certificate.
- 59
- Couldn't use specified SSL cipher.
- 60
- Peer certificate cannot be authenticated with known CA certificates.
- 61
- Unrecognized transfer encoding.
- 62
- Invalid LDAP URL.
- 63
- Maximum file size exceeded.
- 64
- Requested FTP SSL level failed.
- 65
- Sending the data requires a rewind that failed.
- 66
- Failed to initialise SSL Engine.
- 67
- The user name, password, or similar was not accepted and curl failed to
log in.
- 68
- File not found on TFTP server.
- 69
- Permission problem on TFTP server.
- 70
- Out of disk space on TFTP server.
- 71
- Illegal TFTP operation.
- 72
- Unknown TFTP transfer ID.
- 73
- File already exists (TFTP).
- 74
- No such user (TFTP).
- 75
- Character conversion failed.
- 76
- Character conversion functions required.
- 77
- Problem with reading the SSL CA cert (path? access rights?).
- 78
- The resource referenced in the URL does not exist.
- 79
- An unspecified error occurred during the SSH session.
- 80
- Failed to shut down the SSL connection.
- 82
- Could not load CRL file, missing or wrong format (added in 7.19.0).
- 83
- Issuer check failed (added in 7.19.0).
- 84
- The FTP PRET command failed
- 85
- RTSP: mismatch of CSeq numbers
- 86
- RTSP: mismatch of Session Identifiers
- 87
- unable to parse FTP file list
- 88
- FTP chunk callback reported error
- XX
- More error codes will appear here in future releases. The existing ones
are meant to never change.
Daniel Stenberg is the main author, but the whole list of contributors is found
in the separate THANKS file.
ftp://ftp.sunet.se/pub/www/utilities/curl/
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