FAQ
FAQ
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FAQ
1. Philosophy
1.1 What is cURL?
1.2 What is libcurl?
1.3 What is curl not?
1.4 When will you make curl do XXXX ?
1.5 Who makes curl?
1.6 What do you get for making curl?
1.7 What about CURL from curl.com?
1.8 I have a problem who do I mail?
1.9 Where do I buy commercial support for curl?
1.10 How many are using curl?
1.11 Why don't you update ca-bundle.crt
1.12 I have a problem who can I chat with?
1.13 curl's ECCN number?
1.14 How do I submit my patch?
1.15 How do I port libcurl to my OS?
3. Usage Problems
3.1 curl: (1) SSL is disabled, https: not supported
3.2 How do I tell curl to resume a transfer?
3.3 Why doesn't my posting using -F work?
3.4 How do I tell curl to run custom FTP commands?
3.5 How can I disable the Accept: */* header?
3.6 Does curl support ASP, XML, XHTML or HTML version Y?
3.7 Can I use curl to delete/rename a file through FTP?
3.8 How do I tell curl to follow HTTP redirects?
3.9 How do I use curl in my favorite programming language?
3.10 What about SOAP, WebDAV, XML-RPC or similar protocols over HTTP?
3.11 How do I POST with a different Content-Type?
3.12 Why do FTP-specific features over HTTP proxy fail?
3.13 Why do my single/double quotes fail?
3.14 Does curl support Javascript or PAC (automated proxy config)?
3.15 Can I do recursive fetches with curl?
3.16 What certificates do I need when I use SSL?
3.17 How do I list the root dir of an FTP server?
3.18 Can I use curl to send a POST/PUT and not wait for a response?
3.19 How do I get HTTP from a host using a specific IP address?
3.20 How to SFTP from my user's home directory?
3.21 Protocol xxx not supported or disabled in libcurl
3.22 curl -X gives me HTTP problems
4. Running Problems
4.2 Why do I get problems when I use & or % in the URL?
4.3 How can I use {, }, [ or ] to specify multiple URLs?
4.4 Why do I get downloaded data even though the web page doesn't exist?
4.5 Why do I get return code XXX from a HTTP server?
4.5.1 "400 Bad Request"
4.5.2 "401 Unauthorized"
4.5.3 "403 Forbidden"
4.5.4 "404 Not Found"
4.5.5 "405 Method Not Allowed"
4.5.6 "301 Moved Permanently"
4.6 Can you tell me what error code 142 means?
4.7 How do I keep user names and passwords secret in curl command lines?
4.8 I found a bug!
4.9 curl can't authenticate to the server that requires NTLM?
4.10 My HTTP request using HEAD, PUT or DELETE doesn't work!
4.11 Why do my HTTP range requests return the full document?
4.12 Why do I get "certificate verify failed" ?
4.13 Why is curl -R on Windows one hour off?
4.14 Redirects work in browser but not with curl!
4.15 FTPS doesn't work
4.16 My HTTP POST or PUT requests are slow!
4.17 Non-functional connect timeouts on Windows
4.18 file:// URLs containing drive letters (Windows, NetWare)
4.19 Why doesn't curl return an error when the network cable is unplugged?
4.20 curl doesn't return error for HTTP non-200 responses!
5. libcurl Issues
5.1 Is libcurl thread-safe?
5.2 How can I receive all data into a large memory chunk?
5.3 How do I fetch multiple files with libcurl?
5.4 Does libcurl do Winsock initing on win32 systems?
5.5 Does CURLOPT_WRITEDATA and CURLOPT_READDATA work on win32 ?
5.6 What about Keep-Alive or persistent connections?
5.7 Link errors when building libcurl on Windows!
5.8 libcurl.so.X: open failed: No such file or directory
5.9 How does libcurl resolve host names?
5.10 How do I prevent libcurl from writing the response to stdout?
5.11 How do I make libcurl not receive the whole HTTP response?
5.12 Can I make libcurl fake or hide my real IP address?
5.13 How do I stop an ongoing transfer?
5.14 Using C++ non-static functions for callbacks?
5.15 How do I get an FTP directory listing?
5.16 I want a different time-out!
5.17 Can I write a server with libcurl?
5.18 Does libcurl use threads?
6. License Issues
6.1 I have a GPL program, can I use the libcurl library?
6.2 I have a closed-source program, can I use the libcurl library?
6.3 I have a BSD licensed program, can I use the libcurl library?
6.4 I have a program that uses LGPL libraries, can I use libcurl?
6.5 Can I modify curl/libcurl for my program and keep the changes secret?
6.6 Can you please change the curl/libcurl license to XXXX?
6.7 What are my obligations when using libcurl in my commercial apps?
7. PHP/CURL Issues
7.1 What is PHP/CURL?
7.2 Who wrote PHP/CURL?
7.3 Can I perform multiple requests using the same handle?
7.4 Does PHP/CURL have dependencies?
==============================================================================
1. Philosophy
cURL is the name of the project. The name is a play on 'Client for URLs',
originally with URL spelled in uppercase to make it obvious it deals with
URLs. The fact it can also be pronounced 'see URL' also helped, it works as
an abbreviation for "Client URL Request Library" or why not the recursive
version: "curl URL Request Library".
libcurl
libcurl supports HTTPS certificates, HTTP POST, HTTP PUT, FTP uploading,
Kerberos, SPNEGO, HTTP form based upload, proxies, cookies, user+password
authentication, file transfer resume, http proxy tunneling and more!
curl
A command line tool for getting or sending files using URL syntax.
Since curl uses libcurl, curl supports the same wide range of common
Internet protocols that libcurl does.
We pronounce curl with an initial k sound. It rhymes with words like girl
and earl. This is a short WAV file to help you:
https://media.merriam-webster.com/soundc11/c/curl0001.wav
There are numerous sub-projects and related projects that also use the word
curl in the project names in various combinations, but you should take
notice that this FAQ is directed at the command-line tool named curl (and
libcurl the library), and may therefore not be valid for other curl-related
projects. (There is however a small section for the PHP/CURL in this FAQ.)
libcurl is a reliable and portable library which provides you with an easy
interface to a range of common Internet protocols.
You can use libcurl for free in your application, be it open source,
commercial or closed-source.
libcurl is most probably the most portable, most powerful and most often
used C-based multi-platform file transfer library on this planet - be it
open source or commercial.
curl is not a website mirroring program. If you want to use curl to mirror
something: fine, go ahead and write a script that wraps around curl or use
libcurl to make it reality.
curl is not an FTP site mirroring program. Sure, get and send FTP with curl
but if you want systematic and sequential behavior you should write a
script (or write a new program that interfaces libcurl) and do it.
curl is not a PHP tool, even though it works perfectly well when used from
or with PHP (when using the PHP/CURL module).
curl is not a program for a single operating system. curl exists, compiles,
builds and runs under a wide range of operating systems, including all
modern Unixes (and a bunch of older ones too), Windows, Amiga, BeOS, OS/2,
OS X, QNX etc.
We do not add things to curl that other small and available tools already do
very well at the side. curl's output can be piped into another program or
redirected to another file for the next program to interpret.
If you want someone else to do all the work while you wait for us to
implement it for you, that is not a very friendly attitude. We spend a
considerable time already on maintaining and developing curl. In order to
get more out of us, you should consider trading in some of your time and
effort in return. Simply go to the GitHub repo which resides at
https://github.com/curl/curl, fork the project, and create pull requests
with your proposed changes.
If you write the code, chances are better that it will get into curl faster.
curl and libcurl are not made by any single individual. Daniel Stenberg is
project leader and main developer, but other persons' submissions are
important and crucial. Anyone can contribute and post their changes and
improvements and have them inserted in the main sources (of course on the
condition that developers agree that the fixes are good).
We get help from companies. Haxx provides website, bandwidth, mailing lists
etc, GitHub hosts the primary git repository and other services like the bug
tracker at https://github.com/curl/curl. Also again, some companies have
sponsored certain parts of the development in the past and I hope some will
continue to do so in the future.
During the summer of 2001, curl.com was busy advertising their client-side
programming language for the web, named CURL.
Our project name curl has been in effective use since 1998. We were not the
first computer related project to use the name "curl" and do not claim any
rights to the name.
We recognize that we will be living in parallel with curl.com and wish them
every success.
Please do not mail any single individual unless you really need to. Keep
curl-related questions on a suitable mailing list. All available mailing
lists are listed in the MANUAL document and online at
https://curl.se/mail/
curl is fully open source. It means you can hire any skilled engineer to fix
your curl-related problems.
It is impossible to tell.
We don't know how many users that knowingly have installed and use curl.
We don't know how many users that use curl without knowing that they are in
fact using it.
We don't know how many users that downloaded or installed curl and then
never use it.
In the cURL project we've decided not to attempt to keep this file updated
(or even present) since deciding what to add to a ca cert bundle is an
undertaking we've not been ready to accept, and the one we can get from
Mozilla is perfectly fine so there's no need to duplicate that work.
Today, with many services performed over HTTPS, every operating system
should come with a default ca cert bundle that can be deemed somewhat
trustworthy and that collection (if reasonably updated) should be deemed to
be a lot better than a private curl version.
If you want the most recent collection of ca certs that Mozilla Firefox
uses, we recommend that you extract the collection yourself from Mozilla
Firefox (by running 'make ca-bundle), or by using our online service setup
for this purpose: https://curl.se/docs/caextract.html
There's a bunch of friendly people hanging out in the #curl channel on the
IRC network irc.freenode.net. If you're polite and nice, chances are good
that you can get -- or provide -- help instantly.
https://www.bis.doc.gov/licensing/exportingbasics.htm
https://www.bis.doc.gov/licensing/do_i_needaneccn.html
If you for any reason can't or won't deal with github, send your patch to
the curl-library mailing list. We're many subscribers there and there are
lots of people who can review patches, comment on them and "receive" them
properly.
You may find that configure fails to properly detect the entire dependency
chain of libraries when you provide static versions of the libraries that
configure checks for.
The reason why static libraries is much harder to deal with is that for them
we don't get any help but the script itself must know or check what more
libraries that are needed (with shared libraries, that dependency "chain" is
handled automatically). This is a very error-prone process and one that also
tends to vary over time depending on the release versions of the involved
components and may also differ between operating systems.
For that reason, configure does very little attempts to actually figure this
out and you are instead encouraged to set LIBS and LDFLAGS accordingly when
you invoke configure, and point out the needed libraries and set the
necessary flags yourself.
curl has been written to use a generic SSL function layer internally, and
that SSL functionality can then be provided by one out of many different SSL
backends.
curl can be built to use one of the following SSL alternatives: OpenSSL,
libressl, BoringSSL, GnuTLS, wolfSSL, NSS, mbedTLS, MesaLink, Secure
Transport (native iOS/OS X), Schannel (native Windows), GSKit (native IBM
i), or BearSSL. They all have their pros and cons, and we try to maintain a
comparison of them here: https://curl.se/docs/ssl-compared.html
3. Usage problems
If you get this output when trying to get anything from a https:// server,
it means that the instance of curl/libcurl that you're using was built
without support for this protocol.
This could've happened if the configure script that was run at build time
couldn't find all libs and include files curl requires for SSL to work. If
the configure script fails to find them, curl is simply built without SSL
support.
To get the https:// support into a curl that was previously built but that
reports that https:// is not supported, you should dig through the document
and logs and check out why the configure script doesn't find the SSL libs
and/or include files.
Also, check out the other paragraph in this FAQ labeled "configure doesn't
find OpenSSL even when it is installed".
curl supports resumed transfers both ways on both FTP and HTTP.
Try the -C option.
You can tell curl to perform optional commands both before and/or after a
file transfer. Study the -Q/--quote option.
Since curl is used for file transfers, you don't normally use curl to
perform FTP commands without transferring anything. Therefore you must
always specify a URL to transfer to/from even when doing custom FTP
commands, or use -I which implies the "no body" option sent to libcurl.
You can change all internally generated headers by adding a replacement with
the -H/--header option. By adding a header with empty contents you safely
disable that one. Use -H "Accept:" to disable that specific header.
To curl, all contents are alike. It doesn't matter how the page was
generated. It may be ASP, PHP, Perl, shell-script, SSI or plain HTML
files. There's no difference to curl and it doesn't even know what kind of
language that generated the page.
One example would be to delete a file after you have downloaded it:
curl does not follow so-called redirects by default. The Location: header
that informs the client about this is only interpreted if you're using the
-L/--location option. As in:
curl -L http://redirector.com
Find out more about which languages that support curl directly, and how to
install and use them, in the libcurl section of the curl website:
https://curl.se/libcurl/
All the various bindings to libcurl are made by other projects and people,
outside of the cURL project. The cURL project itself only produces libcurl
with its plain C API. If you don't find anywhere else to ask you can ask
about bindings on the curl-library list too, but be prepared that people on
that list may not know anything about bindings.
In February 2019, there were interfaces available for the following
languages: Ada95, Basic, C, C++, Ch, Cocoa, D, Delphi, Dylan, Eiffel,
Euphoria, Falcon, Ferite, Gambas, glib/GTK+, Go, Guile, Harbour, Haskell,
Java, Julia, Lisp, Lua, Mono, .NET, node.js, Object-Pascal, OCaml, Pascal,
Perl, PHP, PostgreSQL, Python, R, Rexx, Ring, RPG, Ruby, Rust, Scheme,
Scilab, S-Lang, Smalltalk, SP-Forth, SPL, Tcl, Visual Basic, Visual FoxPro,
Q, wxwidgets, XBLite and Xoho. By the time you read this, additional ones
may have appeared!
3.10 What about SOAP, WebDAV, XML-RPC or similar protocols over HTTP?
curl adheres to the HTTP spec, which basically means you can play with *any*
protocol that is built on top of HTTP. Protocols such as SOAP, WEBDAV and
XML-RPC are all such ones. You can use -X to set custom requests and -H to
set custom headers (or replace internally generated ones).
Using libcurl is of course just as good and you'd just use the proper
library options to do the same.
You can always replace the internally generated headers with -H/--header.
To make a simple HTTP POST with text/xml as content-type, do something like:
Because when you use a HTTP proxy, the protocol spoken on the network will
be HTTP, even if you specify a FTP URL. This effectively means that you
normally can't use FTP-specific features such as FTP upload and FTP quote
etc.
There is one exception to this rule, and that is if you can "tunnel through"
the given HTTP proxy. Proxy tunneling is enabled with a special option (-p)
and is generally not available as proxy admins usually disable tunneling to
ports other than 443 (which is used for HTTPS access through proxies).
To specify a command line option that includes spaces, you might need to
put the entire option within quotes. Like in:
or perhaps
Exactly what kind of quotes and how to do this is entirely up to the shell
or command line interpreter that you are using. For most unix shells, you
can more or less pick either single (') or double (") quotes. For
Windows/DOS prompts I believe you're forced to use double (") quotes.
Many web pages do magic stuff using embedded Javascript. curl and libcurl
have no built-in support for that, so it will be treated just like any other
contents.
.pac files are a netscape invention and are sometimes used by organizations
to allow them to differentiate which proxies to use. The .pac contents is
just a Javascript program that gets invoked by the browser and that returns
the name of the proxy to connect to. Since curl doesn't support Javascript,
it can't support .pac proxy configuration either.
Read the Javascript code and rewrite the same logic in another language.
Ask your admins to stop this, for a static proxy setup or similar.
No. curl itself has no code that performs recursive operations, such as
those performed by wget and similar tools.
There exists wrapper scripts with that functionality (for example the
curlmirror perl script), and you can write programs based on libcurl to do
it, but the command line tool curl itself cannot.
CLIENT CERTIFICATE
The server you communicate with may require that you can provide this in
order to prove that you actually are who you claim to be. If the server
doesn't require this, you don't need a client certificate.
A client certificate is always used together with a private key, and the
private key has a pass phrase that protects it.
SERVER CERTIFICATE
The server you communicate with has a server certificate. You can and should
verify this certificate to make sure that you are truly talking to the real
server and not a server impersonating it.
You often have several CA certs in a CA cert bundle that can be used to
verify a server certificate that was signed by one of the authorities in the
bundle. curl does not come with a CA cert bundle but most curl installs
provide one. You can also override the default.
There are two ways. The way defined in the RFC is to use an encoded slash
in the first path part. List the "/tmp" dir like this:
curl ftp://ftp.sunet.se/%2ftmp/
curl ftp://ftp.sunet.se//tmp/
3.18 Can I use curl to send a POST/PUT and not wait for a response?
No.
But you could easily write your own program using libcurl to do such stunts.
For example, you may be trying out a website installation that isn't yet in
the DNS. Or you have a site using multiple IP addresses for a given host
name and you want to address a specific one out of the set.
Set a custom Host: header that identifies the server name you want to reach
but use the target IP address in the URL:
You can also opt to add faked host name entries to curl with the --resolve
option. That has the added benefit that things like redirects will also work
properly. The above operation would instead be done as:
Contrary to how FTP works, SFTP and SCP URLs specify the exact directory to
work with. It means that if you don't specify that you want the user's home
directory, you get the actual root directory.
To specify a file in your user's home directory, you need to use the correct
URL syntax which for SFTP might look similar to:
curl -O -u user:password sftp://example.com/~/file.txt
When passing on a URL to curl to use, it may respond that the particular
protocol is not supported or disabled. The particular way this error message
is phrased is because curl doesn't make a distinction internally of whether
a particular protocol is not supported (i.e. never got any code added that
knows how to speak that protocol) or if it was explicitly disabled. curl can
be built to only support a given set of protocols, and the rest would then
be disabled or not supported.
Note that this error will also occur if you pass a wrongly spelled protocol
part as in "htpt://example.com" or as in the less evident case if you prefix
the protocol part with a space as in " http://example.com/".
By default you use curl without explicitly saying which request method to
use when the URL identifies a HTTP transfer. If you just pass in a URL like
"curl http://example.com" it will use GET. If you use -d or -F curl will use
POST, -I will cause a HEAD and -T will make it a PUT.
If for whatever reason you're not happy with these default choices that curl
does for you, you can override those request methods by specifying -X
[WHATEVER]. This way you can for example send a DELETE by doing "curl -X
DELETE [URL]".
Note that -X doesn't actually change curl's behavior as it only modifies the
actual string sent in the request, but that may of course trigger a
different set of events.
Accordingly, by using -XPOST on a command line that for example would follow
a 303 redirect, you will effectively prevent curl from behaving
correctly. Be aware.
4. Running Problems
In general unix shells, the & symbol is treated specially and when used, it
runs the specified command in the background. To safely send the & as a part
of a URL, you should quote the entire URL by using single (') or double (")
quotes around it. Similar problems can also occur on some shells with other
characters, including ?*!$~(){}<>\|;`. When in doubt, quote the URL.
An example that would invoke a remote CGI that uses &-symbols could be:
curl 'http://www.altavista.com/cgi-bin/query?text=yes&q=curl'
In Windows, the standard DOS shell treats the percent sign specially and you
need to use TWO percent signs for each single one you want to use in the
URL.
If you want a literal percent sign to be part of the data you pass in a POST
using -d/--data you must encode it as '%25' (which then also needs the
percent sign doubled on Windows machines).
curl '{curl,www}.haxx.se'
To be able to use those characters as actual parts of the URL (without using
them for the curl URL "globbing" system), use the -g/--globoff option:
curl -g 'www.site.com/weirdname[].html'
4.4 Why do I get downloaded data even though the web page doesn't exist?
curl asks remote servers for the page you specify. If the page doesn't exist
at the server, the HTTP protocol defines how the server should respond and
that means that headers and a "page" will be returned. That's simply how
HTTP works.
By using the --fail option you can tell curl explicitly to not get any data
if the HTTP return code doesn't say success.
The server has not found anything matching the Request-URI. No indication
is given of whether the condition is temporary or permanent.
4.5.5 "405 Method Not Allowed"
The method specified in the Request-Line is not allowed for the resource
identified by the Request-URI. The response MUST include an Allow header
containing a list of valid methods for the requested resource.
If you get this return code and an HTML output similar to this:
it might be because you requested a directory URL but without the trailing
slash. Try the same operation again _with_ the trailing URL, or use the
-L/--location option to follow the redirection.
All curl error codes are described at the end of the man page, in the
section called "EXIT CODES".
Error codes that are larger than the highest documented error code means
that curl has exited due to a crash. This is a serious error, and we
appreciate a detailed bug report from you that describes how we could go
ahead and repeat this!
4.7 How do I keep user names and passwords secret in curl command lines?
The first part is to avoid having clear-text passwords in the command line
so that they don't appear in 'ps' outputs and similar. That is easily
avoided by using the "-K" option to tell curl to read parameters from a file
or stdin to which you can pass the secret info. curl itself will also
attempt to "hide" the given password by blanking out the option - this
doesn't work on all platforms.
To keep the passwords in your account secret from the rest of the world is
not a task that curl addresses. You could of course encrypt them somehow to
at least hide them from being read by human eyes, but that is not what
anyone would call security.
Also note that regular HTTP (using Basic authentication) and FTP passwords
are sent as cleartext across the network. All it takes for anyone to fetch
them is to listen on the network. Eavesdropping is very easy. Use more secure
authentication methods (like Digest, Negotiate or even NTLM) or consider the
SSL-based alternatives HTTPS and FTPS.
Many web servers allow or demand that the administrator configures the
server properly for these requests to work on the web server.
To fully grasp this, try the documentation for the particular server
software you're trying to interact with. This is not anything curl can do
anything about.
Because the range may not be supported by the server, or the server may
choose to ignore it and return the full document anyway.
When you invoke curl and get an error 60 error back it means that curl
couldn't verify that the server's certificate was good. curl verifies the
certificate using the CA cert bundle and verifying for which names the
certficiate has been granted.
If you get this failure with a CA cert bundle installed and used, the
server's certificate might not be signed by one of the CA's in yout CA
store. It might for example be self-signed. You then correct this problem by
obtaining a valid CA cert for the server. Or again, decrease the security by
disabling this check.
At times, you find that the verification works in your favorite browser but
fails in curl. When this happens, the reason is usually that the server
sends an incomplete cert chain. The server is mandated to send all
"intermediate certificates" but doesn't. This typically works with browsers
anyway since they A) cache such certs and B) supports AIA which downloads
such missing certificates on demand. This is a server misconfiguration. A
good way to figure out if this is the case it to use the SSL Labs server
test and check the certificate chain: https://www.ssllabs.com/ssltest/
Since curl 7.53.0 this issue should be fixed as long as curl was built with
any modern compiler that allows for a 64-bit curl_off_t type. For older
compilers or prior curl versions it may set a time that appears one hour off.
This happens due to a flaw in how Windows stores and uses file modification
times and it is not easily worked around. For more details read this:
https://www.codeproject.com/Articles/1144/Beating-the-Daylight-Savings-Time-bug-
and-getting
curl supports HTTP redirects well (see item 3.8). Browsers generally support
at least two other ways to perform redirects that curl does not:
Meta tags. You can write a HTML tag that will cause the browser to redirect
to another given URL after a certain time.
Javascript. You can write a Javascript program embedded in a HTML page that
redirects the browser to another given URL.
There is no way to make curl follow these redirects. You must either
manually figure out what the page is set to do, or write a script that parses
the results and fetches the new URL.
curl supports FTPS (sometimes known as FTP-SSL) both implicit and explicit
mode.
When a URL is used that starts with FTPS://, curl assumes implicit SSL on
the control connection and will therefore immediately connect and try to
speak SSL. FTPS:// connections default to port 990.
To use explicit FTPS, you use a FTP:// URL and the --ftp-ssl option (or one
of its related flavors). This is the most common method, and the one
mandated by RFC4217. This kind of connection will then of course use the
standard FTP port 21 by default.
libcurl makes all POST and PUT requests (except for POST requests with a
very tiny request body) use the "Expect: 100-continue" header. This header
allows the server to deny the operation early so that libcurl can bail out
before having to send any data. This is useful in authentication
cases and others.
However, many servers don't implement the Expect: stuff properly and if the
server doesn't respond (positively) within 1 second libcurl will continue
and send off the data anyway.
You can disable libcurl's use of the Expect: header the same way you disable
any header, using -H / CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, or by forcing it to use HTTP 1.0.
When using curl to try to download a local file, one might use a URL
in this format:
file://D:/blah.txt
You'll find that even if D:\blah.txt does exist, curl returns a 'file
not found' error.
To fix this problem, use file:// URLs with *three* leading slashes:
file:///D:/blah.txt
file://localhost/D:/blah.txt
In either case, curl should now be looking for the correct file.
4.19 Why doesn't curl return an error when the network cable is unplugged?
In such cases, the TCP/IP stack is responsible for detecting when the
network connection is irrevocably lost. Since with some protocols it is
perfectly legal for the client to wait indefinitely for data, the stack may
never report a problem, and even when it does, it can take up to 20 minutes
for it to detect an issue. The curl option --keepalive-time enables
keep-alive support in the TCP/IP stack which makes it periodically probe the
connection to make sure it is still available to send data. That should
reliably detect any TCP/IP network failure.
But even that won't detect the network going down before the TCP/IP
connection is established (e.g. during a DNS lookup) or using protocols that
don't use TCP. To handle those situations, curl offers a number of timeouts
on its own. --speed-limit/--speed-time will abort if the data transfer rate
falls too low, and --connect-timeout and --max-time can be used to put an
overall timeout on the connection phase or the entire transfer.
A libcurl-using application running in a known physical environment (e.g.
an embedded device with only a single network connection) may want to act
immediately if its lone network connection goes down. That can be achieved
by having the application monitor the network connection on its own using an
OS-specific mechanism, then signaling libcurl to abort (see also item 5.13).
When doing HTTP transfers, curl will perform exactly what you're asking it
to do and if successful it will not return an error. You can use curl to
test your web server's "file not found" page (that gets 404 back), you can
use it to check your authentication protected web pages (that gets a 401
back) and so on.
The specific HTTP response code does not constitute a problem or error for
curl. It simply sends and delivers HTTP as you asked and if that worked,
everything is fine and dandy. The response code is generally providing more
higher level error information that curl doesn't care about. The error was
not in the HTTP transfer.
If you want your command line to treat error codes in the 400 and up range
as errors and thus return a non-zero value and possibly show an error
message, curl has a dedicated option for that: -f (CURLOPT_FAILONERROR in
libcurl speak).
You can also use the -w option and the variable %{response_code} to extract
the exact response code that was returned in the response.
5. libcurl Issues
Yes.
There may be some exceptions to thread safety depending on how libcurl was
built. Please review the guidelines for thread safety to learn more:
https://curl.se/libcurl/c/threadsafe.html
5.2 How can I receive all data into a large memory chunk?
You are in full control of the callback function that gets called every time
there is data received from the remote server. You can make that callback do
whatever you want. You do not have to write the received data to a file.
One solution to this problem could be to have a pointer to a struct that you
pass to the callback function. You set the pointer using the
CURLOPT_WRITEDATA option. Then that pointer will be passed to the callback
instead of a FILE * to a file:
/* imaginary struct */
struct MemoryStruct {
char *memory;
size_t size;
};
libcurl has excellent support for transferring multiple files. You should
just repeatedly set new URLs with curl_easy_setopt() and then transfer it
with curl_easy_perform(). The handle you get from curl_easy_init() is not
only reusable, but you're even encouraged to reuse it if you can, as that
will enable libcurl to use persistent connections.
Yes, but you cannot open a FILE * and pass the pointer to a DLL and have
that DLL use the FILE * (as the DLL and the client application cannot access
each others' variable memory areas). If you set CURLOPT_WRITEDATA you must
also use CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION as well to set a function that writes the
file, even if that simply writes the data to the specified FILE *.
Similarly, if you use CURLOPT_READDATA you must also specify
CURLOPT_READFUNCTION.
curl and libcurl have excellent support for persistent connections when
transferring several files from the same server. curl will attempt to reuse
connections for all URLs specified on the same command line/config file, and
libcurl will reuse connections for all transfers that are made using the
same libcurl handle.
When you use the easy interface the connection cache is kept within the easy
handle. If you instead use the multi interface, the connection cache will be
kept within the multi handle and will be shared among all the easy handles
that are used within the same multi handle.
This is determined by the /MD, /ML, /MT (and their corresponding /M?d)
options to the command line compiler. /MD (linking against MSVCRT dll) seems
to be the most commonly used option.
When building an application that uses the static libcurl library, you must
add -DCURL_STATICLIB to your CFLAGS. Otherwise the linker will look for
dynamic import symbols. If you're using Visual Studio, you need to instead
add CURL_STATICLIB in the "Preprocessor Definitions" section.
If you get linker error like "unknown symbol __imp__curl_easy_init ..." you
have linked against the wrong (static) library. If you want to use the
libcurl.dll and import lib, you don't need any extra CFLAGS, but use one of
the import libraries below. These are the libraries produced by the various
lib/Makefile.* files:
This is an error message you might get when you try to run a program linked
with a shared version of libcurl and your run-time linker (ld.so) couldn't
find the shared library named libcurl.so.X. (Where X is the number of the
current libcurl ABI, typically 3 or 4).
You need to make sure that ld.so finds libcurl.so.X. You can do that
multiple ways, and it differs somewhat between different operating systems,
but they are usually:
* Add an option to the linker command line that specify the hard-coded path
the run-time linker should check for the lib (usually -R)
* Adjust the system's config to check for libs in the directory where you've
put the dir (like Linux's /etc/ld.so.conf)
'man ld.so' and 'man ld' will tell you more details
- The non-IPv6 resolver that can use one of four different host name resolve
calls (depending on what your system supports):
A - gethostbyname()
B - gethostbyname_r() with 3 arguments
C - gethostbyname_r() with 5 arguments
D - gethostbyname_r() with 6 arguments
- The c-ares based name resolver that uses the c-ares library for resolves.
Using this offers asynchronous name resolves.
libcurl provides a default built-in write function that writes received data
to stdout. Set the CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION to receive the data, or possibly
set CURLOPT_WRITEDATA to a different FILE * handle.
5.11 How do I make libcurl not receive the whole HTTP response?
You make the write callback (or progress callback) return an error and
libcurl will then abort the transfer.
If you use a proxy to access remote sites, the sites will not see your local
IP address but instead the address of the proxy.
Also note that on many networks NATs or other IP-munging techniques are used
that makes you see and use a different IP address locally than what the
remote server will see you coming from. You may also consider using
https://www.torproject.org/ .
With the easy interface you make sure to return the correct error code from
one of the callbacks, but none of them are instant. There is no function you
can call from another thread or similar that will stop it immediately.
Instead, you need to make sure that one of the callbacks you use returns an
appropriate value that will stop the transfer. Suitable callbacks that you
can do this with include the progress callback, the read callback and the
write callback.
If you're using the multi interface, you can also stop a transfer by
removing the particular easy handle from the multi stack at any moment you
think the transfer is done or when you wish to abort the transfer.
You can overcome this "limitation" with relative ease using a static
member function that is passed a pointer to the class:
If you end the FTP URL you request with a slash, libcurl will provide you
with a directory listing of that given directory. You can also set
CURLOPT_CUSTOMREQUEST to alter what exact listing command libcurl would use
to list the files.
curl -s ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/ | \
perl -lne 'print if s/^d[-rwx]{9}(?: +[^ ]+){7} (.+)$/$1/'
Put simply: no, libcurl will execute in the same thread you call it in. All
callbacks will be called in the same thread as the one you call libcurl in.
If you want to avoid your thread to be blocked by the libcurl call, you make
sure you use the non-blocking API which will do transfers asynchronously -
but still in the same single thread.
6. License Issues
curl and libcurl are released under a MIT/X derivate license. The license is
very liberal and should not impose a problem for your project. This section
is just a brief summary for the cases we get the most questions. (Parts of
this section was much enhanced by Bjorn Reese.)
We are not lawyers and this is not legal advice. You should probably consult
one if you want true and accurate legal insights without our prejudice. Note
especially that this section concerns the libcurl license only; compiling in
features of libcurl that depend on other libraries (e.g. OpenSSL) may affect
the licensing obligations of your application.
Yes!
Since libcurl may be distributed under the MIT/X derivate license, it can be
used together with GPL in any software.
Yes!
libcurl does not put any restrictions on the program that uses the library.
6.3 I have a BSD licensed program, can I use the libcurl library?
Yes!
libcurl does not put any restrictions on the program that uses the library.
6.4 I have a program that uses LGPL libraries, can I use libcurl?
Yes!
6.5 Can I modify curl/libcurl for my program and keep the changes secret?
Yes!
The MIT/X derivate license practically allows you to do almost anything with
the sources, on the condition that the copyright texts in the sources are
left intact.
No.
Next to none. All you need to adhere to is the MIT-style license (stated in
the COPYING file) which basically says you have to include the copyright
notice in "all copies" and that you may not use the copyright holder's name
when promoting your software.
You do not have to reveal or make public any changes to the libcurl source
code.
You do not have to broadcast to the world that you are using libcurl within
your app.
All we ask is that you disclose "the copyright notice and this permission
notice" somewhere. Most probably like in the documentation or in the section
where other third party dependencies already are mentioned and acknowledged.
7. PHP/CURL Issues
The module for PHP that makes it possible for PHP programs to access curl-
functions from within PHP.
Yes - at least in PHP version 4.3.8 and later (this has been known to not
work in earlier versions, but the exact version when it started to work is
unknown to me).
After a transfer, you just set new options in the handle and make another
transfer. This will make libcurl re-use the same connection if it can.
PHP/CURL is a module that comes with the regular PHP package. It depends on
and uses libcurl, so you need to have libcurl installed properly before
PHP/CURL can be used.