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| .TH libcurl-tutorial 3 "October 31, 2021" "libcurl 7.80.0" "libcurl programming" |
| |
| .SH NAME |
| libcurl-tutorial \- libcurl programming tutorial |
| .SH "Objective" |
| This document attempts to describe the general principles and some basic |
| approaches to consider when programming with libcurl. The text will focus |
| mainly on the C interface but might apply fairly well on other interfaces as |
| well as they usually follow the C one pretty closely. |
| |
| This document will refer to 'the user' as the person writing the source code |
| that uses libcurl. That would probably be you or someone in your position. |
| What will be generally referred to as 'the program' will be the collected |
| source code that you write that is using libcurl for transfers. The program |
| is outside libcurl and libcurl is outside of the program. |
| |
| To get more details on all options and functions described herein, please |
| refer to their respective man pages. |
| |
| .SH "Building" |
| There are many different ways to build C programs. This chapter will assume a |
| Unix style build process. If you use a different build system, you can still |
| read this to get general information that may apply to your environment as |
| well. |
| .IP "Compiling the Program" |
| Your compiler needs to know where the libcurl headers are located. Therefore |
| you must set your compiler's include path to point to the directory where you |
| installed them. The 'curl-config'[3] tool can be used to get this information: |
| |
| $ curl-config --cflags |
| |
| .IP "Linking the Program with libcurl" |
| When having compiled the program, you need to link your object files to create |
| a single executable. For that to succeed, you need to link with libcurl and |
| possibly also with other libraries that libcurl itself depends on. Like the |
| OpenSSL libraries, but even some standard OS libraries may be needed on the |
| command line. To figure out which flags to use, once again the 'curl-config' |
| tool comes to the rescue: |
| |
| $ curl-config --libs |
| |
| .IP "SSL or Not" |
| libcurl can be built and customized in many ways. One of the things that |
| varies from different libraries and builds is the support for SSL-based |
| transfers, like HTTPS and FTPS. If a supported SSL library was detected |
| properly at build-time, libcurl will be built with SSL support. To figure out |
| if an installed libcurl has been built with SSL support enabled, use |
| \&'curl-config' like this: |
| |
| $ curl-config --feature |
| |
| And if SSL is supported, the keyword 'SSL' will be written to stdout, |
| possibly together with a few other features that could be either on or off on |
| for different libcurls. |
| |
| See also the "Features libcurl Provides" further down. |
| .IP "autoconf macro" |
| When you write your configure script to detect libcurl and setup variables |
| accordingly, we offer a prewritten macro that probably does everything you |
| need in this area. See docs/libcurl/libcurl.m4 file - it includes docs on how |
| to use it. |
| |
| .SH "Portable Code in a Portable World" |
| The people behind libcurl have put a considerable effort to make libcurl work |
| on a large amount of different operating systems and environments. |
| |
| You program libcurl the same way on all platforms that libcurl runs on. There |
| are only a few minor details that differ. If you just make sure to write your |
| code portable enough, you can create a portable program. libcurl should not |
| stop you from that. |
| |
| .SH "Global Preparation" |
| The program must initialize some of the libcurl functionality globally. That |
| means it should be done exactly once, no matter how many times you intend to |
| use the library. Once for your program's entire life time. This is done using |
| |
| curl_global_init() |
| |
| and it takes one parameter which is a bit pattern that tells libcurl what to |
| initialize. Using \fICURL_GLOBAL_ALL\fP will make it initialize all known |
| internal sub modules, and might be a good default option. The current two bits |
| that are specified are: |
| .RS |
| .IP "CURL_GLOBAL_WIN32" |
| which only does anything on Windows machines. When used on |
| a Windows machine, it will make libcurl initialize the win32 socket |
| stuff. Without having that initialized properly, your program cannot use |
| sockets properly. You should only do this once for each application, so if |
| your program already does this or of another library in use does it, you |
| should not tell libcurl to do this as well. |
| .IP CURL_GLOBAL_SSL |
| which only does anything on libcurls compiled and built SSL-enabled. On these |
| systems, this will make libcurl initialize the SSL library properly for this |
| application. This only needs to be done once for each application so if your |
| program or another library already does this, this bit should not be needed. |
| .RE |
| |
| libcurl has a default protection mechanism that detects if |
| \fIcurl_global_init(3)\fP has not been called by the time |
| \fIcurl_easy_perform(3)\fP is called and if that is the case, libcurl runs the |
| function itself with a guessed bit pattern. Please note that depending solely |
| on this is not considered nice nor good. |
| |
| When the program no longer uses libcurl, it should call |
| \fIcurl_global_cleanup(3)\fP, which is the opposite of the init call. It will |
| then do the reversed operations to cleanup the resources the |
| \fIcurl_global_init(3)\fP call initialized. |
| |
| Repeated calls to \fIcurl_global_init(3)\fP and \fIcurl_global_cleanup(3)\fP |
| should be avoided. They should only be called once each. |
| |
| .SH "Features libcurl Provides" |
| It is considered best-practice to determine libcurl features at run-time |
| rather than at build-time (if possible of course). By calling |
| \fIcurl_version_info(3)\fP and checking out the details of the returned |
| struct, your program can figure out exactly what the currently running libcurl |
| supports. |
| |
| .SH "Two Interfaces" |
| libcurl first introduced the so called easy interface. All operations in the |
| easy interface are prefixed with 'curl_easy'. The easy interface lets you do |
| single transfers with a synchronous and blocking function call. |
| |
| libcurl also offers another interface that allows multiple simultaneous |
| transfers in a single thread, the so called multi interface. More about that |
| interface is detailed in a separate chapter further down. You still need to |
| understand the easy interface first, so please continue reading for better |
| understanding. |
| .SH "Handle the Easy libcurl" |
| To use the easy interface, you must first create yourself an easy handle. You |
| need one handle for each easy session you want to perform. Basically, you |
| should use one handle for every thread you plan to use for transferring. You |
| must never share the same handle in multiple threads. |
| |
| Get an easy handle with |
| |
| easyhandle = curl_easy_init(); |
| |
| It returns an easy handle. Using that you proceed to the next step: setting |
| up your preferred actions. A handle is just a logic entity for the upcoming |
| transfer or series of transfers. |
| |
| You set properties and options for this handle using |
| \fIcurl_easy_setopt(3)\fP. They control how the subsequent transfer or |
| transfers will be made. Options remain set in the handle until set again to |
| something different. They are sticky. Multiple requests using the same handle |
| will use the same options. |
| |
| If you at any point would like to blank all previously set options for a |
| single easy handle, you can call \fIcurl_easy_reset(3)\fP and you can also |
| make a clone of an easy handle (with all its set options) using |
| \fIcurl_easy_duphandle(3)\fP. |
| |
| Many of the options you set in libcurl are "strings", pointers to data |
| terminated with a zero byte. When you set strings with |
| \fIcurl_easy_setopt(3)\fP, libcurl makes its own copy so that they do not need |
| to be kept around in your application after being set[4]. |
| |
| One of the most basic properties to set in the handle is the URL. You set your |
| preferred URL to transfer with \fICURLOPT_URL(3)\fP in a manner similar to: |
| |
| .nf |
| curl_easy_setopt(handle, CURLOPT_URL, "http://domain.com/"); |
| .fi |
| |
| Let's assume for a while that you want to receive data as the URL identifies a |
| remote resource you want to get here. Since you write a sort of application |
| that needs this transfer, I assume that you would like to get the data passed |
| to you directly instead of simply getting it passed to stdout. So, you write |
| your own function that matches this prototype: |
| |
| size_t write_data(void *buffer, size_t size, size_t nmemb, void *userp); |
| |
| You tell libcurl to pass all data to this function by issuing a function |
| similar to this: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION, write_data); |
| |
| You can control what data your callback function gets in the fourth argument |
| by setting another property: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_WRITEDATA, &internal_struct); |
| |
| Using that property, you can easily pass local data between your application |
| and the function that gets invoked by libcurl. libcurl itself will not touch the |
| data you pass with \fICURLOPT_WRITEDATA(3)\fP. |
| |
| libcurl offers its own default internal callback that will take care of the |
| data if you do not set the callback with \fICURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION(3)\fP. It |
| will then simply output the received data to stdout. You can have the default |
| callback write the data to a different file handle by passing a 'FILE *' to a |
| file opened for writing with the \fICURLOPT_WRITEDATA(3)\fP option. |
| |
| Now, we need to take a step back and have a deep breath. Here's one of those |
| rare platform-dependent nitpicks. Did you spot it? On some platforms[2], |
| libcurl will not be able to operate on files opened by the program. Thus, if you |
| use the default callback and pass in an open file with |
| \fICURLOPT_WRITEDATA(3)\fP, it will crash. You should therefore avoid this to |
| make your program run fine virtually everywhere. |
| |
| (\fICURLOPT_WRITEDATA(3)\fP was formerly known as \fICURLOPT_FILE\fP. Both |
| names still work and do the same thing). |
| |
| If you are using libcurl as a win32 DLL, you MUST use the |
| \fICURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION(3)\fP if you set \fICURLOPT_WRITEDATA(3)\fP - or you |
| will experience crashes. |
| |
| There are of course many more options you can set, and we will get back to a few |
| of them later. Let's instead continue to the actual transfer: |
| |
| success = curl_easy_perform(easyhandle); |
| |
| \fIcurl_easy_perform(3)\fP will connect to the remote site, do the necessary |
| commands and receive the transfer. Whenever it receives data, it calls the |
| callback function we previously set. The function may get one byte at a time, |
| or it may get many kilobytes at once. libcurl delivers as much as possible as |
| often as possible. Your callback function should return the number of bytes it |
| \&"took care of". If that is not the exact same amount of bytes that was |
| passed to it, libcurl will abort the operation and return with an error code. |
| |
| When the transfer is complete, the function returns a return code that informs |
| you if it succeeded in its mission or not. If a return code is not enough for |
| you, you can use the \fICURLOPT_ERRORBUFFER(3)\fP to point libcurl to a buffer |
| of yours where it will store a human readable error message as well. |
| |
| If you then want to transfer another file, the handle is ready to be used |
| again. Mind you, it is even preferred that you re-use an existing handle if |
| you intend to make another transfer. libcurl will then attempt to re-use the |
| previous connection. |
| |
| For some protocols, downloading a file can involve a complicated process of |
| logging in, setting the transfer mode, changing the current directory and |
| finally transferring the file data. libcurl takes care of all that |
| complication for you. Given simply the URL to a file, libcurl will take care |
| of all the details needed to get the file moved from one machine to another. |
| |
| .SH "Multi-threading Issues" |
| libcurl is thread safe but there are a few exceptions. Refer to |
| \fIlibcurl-thread(3)\fP for more information. |
| |
| .SH "When It does not Work" |
| There will always be times when the transfer fails for some reason. You might |
| have set the wrong libcurl option or misunderstood what the libcurl option |
| actually does, or the remote server might return non-standard replies that |
| confuse the library which then confuses your program. |
| |
| There's one golden rule when these things occur: set the |
| \fICURLOPT_VERBOSE(3)\fP option to 1. it will cause the library to spew out the |
| entire protocol details it sends, some internal info and some received |
| protocol data as well (especially when using FTP). If you are using HTTP, |
| adding the headers in the received output to study is also a clever way to get |
| a better understanding why the server behaves the way it does. Include headers |
| in the normal body output with \fICURLOPT_HEADER(3)\fP set 1. |
| |
| Of course, there are bugs left. We need to know about them to be able to fix |
| them, so we are quite dependent on your bug reports! When you do report |
| suspected bugs in libcurl, please include as many details as you possibly can: |
| a protocol dump that \fICURLOPT_VERBOSE(3)\fP produces, library version, as |
| much as possible of your code that uses libcurl, operating system name and |
| version, compiler name and version etc. |
| |
| If \fICURLOPT_VERBOSE(3)\fP is not enough, you increase the level of debug |
| data your application receive by using the \fICURLOPT_DEBUGFUNCTION(3)\fP. |
| |
| Getting some in-depth knowledge about the protocols involved is never wrong, |
| and if you are trying to do funny things, you might understand libcurl and how |
| to use it better if you study the appropriate RFC documents at least briefly. |
| |
| .SH "Upload Data to a Remote Site" |
| libcurl tries to keep a protocol independent approach to most transfers, thus |
| uploading to a remote FTP site is similar to uploading data to an HTTP server |
| with a PUT request. |
| |
| Of course, first you either create an easy handle or you re-use one existing |
| one. Then you set the URL to operate on just like before. This is the remote |
| URL, that we now will upload. |
| |
| Since we write an application, we most likely want libcurl to get the upload |
| data by asking us for it. To make it do that, we set the read callback and |
| the custom pointer libcurl will pass to our read callback. The read callback |
| should have a prototype similar to: |
| |
| size_t function(char *bufptr, size_t size, size_t nitems, void *userp); |
| |
| Where bufptr is the pointer to a buffer we fill in with data to upload and |
| size*nitems is the size of the buffer and therefore also the maximum amount |
| of data we can return to libcurl in this call. The 'userp' pointer is the |
| custom pointer we set to point to a struct of ours to pass private data |
| between the application and the callback. |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_READFUNCTION, read_function); |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_READDATA, &filedata); |
| |
| Tell libcurl that we want to upload: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_UPLOAD, 1L); |
| |
| A few protocols will not behave properly when uploads are done without any prior |
| knowledge of the expected file size. So, set the upload file size using the |
| \fICURLOPT_INFILESIZE_LARGE(3)\fP for all known file sizes like this[1]: |
| |
| .nf |
| /* in this example, file_size must be an curl_off_t variable */ |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_INFILESIZE_LARGE, file_size); |
| .fi |
| |
| When you call \fIcurl_easy_perform(3)\fP this time, it will perform all the |
| necessary operations and when it has invoked the upload it will call your |
| supplied callback to get the data to upload. The program should return as much |
| data as possible in every invoke, as that is likely to make the upload perform |
| as fast as possible. The callback should return the number of bytes it wrote |
| in the buffer. Returning 0 will signal the end of the upload. |
| |
| .SH "Passwords" |
| Many protocols use or even require that user name and password are provided |
| to be able to download or upload the data of your choice. libcurl offers |
| several ways to specify them. |
| |
| Most protocols support that you specify the name and password in the URL |
| itself. libcurl will detect this and use them accordingly. This is written |
| like this: |
| |
| protocol://user:[email protected]/path/ |
| |
| If you need any odd letters in your user name or password, you should enter |
| them URL encoded, as %XX where XX is a two-digit hexadecimal number. |
| |
| libcurl also provides options to set various passwords. The user name and |
| password as shown embedded in the URL can instead get set with the |
| \fICURLOPT_USERPWD(3)\fP option. The argument passed to libcurl should be a |
| char * to a string in the format "user:password". In a manner like this: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_USERPWD, "myname:thesecret"); |
| |
| Another case where name and password might be needed at times, is for those |
| users who need to authenticate themselves to a proxy they use. libcurl offers |
| another option for this, the \fICURLOPT_PROXYUSERPWD(3)\fP. It is used quite |
| similar to the \fICURLOPT_USERPWD(3)\fP option like this: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_PROXYUSERPWD, "myname:thesecret"); |
| |
| There's a long time Unix "standard" way of storing FTP user names and |
| passwords, namely in the $HOME/.netrc file. The file should be made private |
| so that only the user may read it (see also the "Security Considerations" |
| chapter), as it might contain the password in plain text. libcurl has the |
| ability to use this file to figure out what set of user name and password to |
| use for a particular host. As an extension to the normal functionality, |
| libcurl also supports this file for non-FTP protocols such as HTTP. To make |
| curl use this file, use the \fICURLOPT_NETRC(3)\fP option: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_NETRC, 1L); |
| |
| And a basic example of how such a .netrc file may look like: |
| |
| .nf |
| machine myhost.mydomain.com |
| login userlogin |
| password secretword |
| .fi |
| |
| All these examples have been cases where the password has been optional, or |
| at least you could leave it out and have libcurl attempt to do its job |
| without it. There are times when the password is not optional, like when |
| you are using an SSL private key for secure transfers. |
| |
| To pass the known private key password to libcurl: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_KEYPASSWD, "keypassword"); |
| |
| .SH "HTTP Authentication" |
| The previous chapter showed how to set user name and password for getting |
| URLs that require authentication. When using the HTTP protocol, there are |
| many different ways a client can provide those credentials to the server and |
| you can control which way libcurl will (attempt to) use them. The default HTTP |
| authentication method is called 'Basic', which is sending the name and |
| password in clear-text in the HTTP request, base64-encoded. This is insecure. |
| |
| At the time of this writing, libcurl can be built to use: Basic, Digest, NTLM, |
| Negotiate (SPNEGO). You can tell libcurl which one to use |
| with \fICURLOPT_HTTPAUTH(3)\fP as in: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_HTTPAUTH, CURLAUTH_DIGEST); |
| |
| And when you send authentication to a proxy, you can also set authentication |
| type the same way but instead with \fICURLOPT_PROXYAUTH(3)\fP: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_PROXYAUTH, CURLAUTH_NTLM); |
| |
| Both these options allow you to set multiple types (by ORing them together), |
| to make libcurl pick the most secure one out of the types the server/proxy |
| claims to support. This method does however add a round-trip since libcurl |
| must first ask the server what it supports: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_HTTPAUTH, |
| CURLAUTH_DIGEST|CURLAUTH_BASIC); |
| |
| For convenience, you can use the 'CURLAUTH_ANY' define (instead of a list |
| with specific types) which allows libcurl to use whatever method it wants. |
| |
| When asking for multiple types, libcurl will pick the available one it |
| considers "best" in its own internal order of preference. |
| |
| .SH "HTTP POSTing" |
| We get many questions regarding how to issue HTTP POSTs with libcurl the |
| proper way. This chapter will thus include examples using both different |
| versions of HTTP POST that libcurl supports. |
| |
| The first version is the simple POST, the most common version, that most HTML |
| pages using the <form> tag uses. We provide a pointer to the data and tell |
| libcurl to post it all to the remote site: |
| |
| .nf |
| char *data="name=daniel&project=curl"; |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS, data); |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_URL, "http://posthere.com/"); |
| |
| curl_easy_perform(easyhandle); /* post away! */ |
| .fi |
| |
| Simple enough, huh? Since you set the POST options with the |
| \fICURLOPT_POSTFIELDS(3)\fP, this automatically switches the handle to use |
| POST in the upcoming request. |
| |
| Ok, so what if you want to post binary data that also requires you to set the |
| Content-Type: header of the post? Well, binary posts prevent libcurl from |
| being able to do strlen() on the data to figure out the size, so therefore we |
| must tell libcurl the size of the post data. Setting headers in libcurl |
| requests are done in a generic way, by building a list of our own headers and |
| then passing that list to libcurl. |
| |
| .nf |
| struct curl_slist *headers=NULL; |
| headers = curl_slist_append(headers, "Content-Type: text/xml"); |
| |
| /* post binary data */ |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS, binaryptr); |
| |
| /* set the size of the postfields data */ |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_POSTFIELDSIZE, 23L); |
| |
| /* pass our list of custom made headers */ |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, headers); |
| |
| curl_easy_perform(easyhandle); /* post away! */ |
| |
| curl_slist_free_all(headers); /* free the header list */ |
| .fi |
| |
| While the simple examples above cover the majority of all cases where HTTP |
| POST operations are required, they do not do multi-part formposts. Multi-part |
| formposts were introduced as a better way to post (possibly large) binary data |
| and were first documented in the RFC1867 (updated in RFC2388). they are called |
| multi-part because they are built by a chain of parts, each part being a single |
| unit of data. Each part has its own name and contents. You can in fact create |
| and post a multi-part formpost with the regular libcurl POST support described |
| above, but that would require that you build a formpost yourself and provide |
| to libcurl. To make that easier, libcurl provides a MIME API consisting in |
| several functions: using those, you can create and fill a multi-part form. |
| Function \fIcurl_mime_init(3)\fP creates a multi-part body; you can then |
| append new parts to a multi-part body using \fIcurl_mime_addpart(3)\fP. |
| There are three possible data sources for a part: memory using |
| \fIcurl_mime_data(3)\fP, file using \fIcurl_mime_filedata(3)\fP and |
| user-defined data read callback using \fIcurl_mime_data_cb(3)\fP. |
| \fIcurl_mime_name(3)\fP sets a part's (i.e.: form field) name, while |
| \fIcurl_mime_filename(3)\fP fills in the remote file name. With |
| \fIcurl_mime_type(3)\fP, you can tell the MIME type of a part, |
| \fIcurl_mime_headers(3)\fP allows defining the part's headers. When a |
| multi-part body is no longer needed, you can destroy it using |
| \fIcurl_mime_free(3)\fP. |
| |
| The following example sets two simple text parts with plain textual contents, |
| and then a file with binary contents and uploads the whole thing. |
| |
| .nf |
| curl_mime *multipart = curl_mime_init(easyhandle); |
| curl_mimepart *part = curl_mime_addpart(multipart); |
| curl_mime_name(part, "name"); |
| curl_mime_data(part, "daniel", CURL_ZERO_TERMINATED); |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(multipart); |
| curl_mime_name(part, "project"); |
| curl_mime_data(part, "curl", CURL_ZERO_TERMINATED); |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(multipart); |
| curl_mime_name(part, "logotype-image"); |
| curl_mime_filedata(part, "curl.png"); |
| |
| /* Set the form info */ |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_MIMEPOST, multipart); |
| |
| curl_easy_perform(easyhandle); /* post away! */ |
| |
| /* free the post data again */ |
| curl_mime_free(multipart); |
| .fi |
| |
| To post multiple files for a single form field, you must supply each file in |
| a separate part, all with the same field name. Although function |
| \fIcurl_mime_subparts(3)\fP implements nested multi-parts, this way of |
| multiple files posting is deprecated by RFC 7578, chapter 4.3. |
| |
| To set the data source from an already opened FILE pointer, use: |
| |
| .nf |
| curl_mime_data_cb(part, filesize, (curl_read_callback) fread, |
| (curl_seek_callback) fseek, NULL, filepointer); |
| .fi |
| |
| A deprecated \fIcurl_formadd(3)\fP function is still supported in libcurl. |
| It should however not be used anymore for new designs and programs using it |
| ought to be converted to the MIME API. It is however described here as an |
| aid to conversion. |
| |
| Using \fIcurl_formadd\fP, you add parts to the form. When you are done adding |
| parts, you post the whole form. |
| |
| The MIME API example above is expressed as follows using this function: |
| |
| .nf |
| struct curl_httppost *post=NULL; |
| struct curl_httppost *last=NULL; |
| curl_formadd(&post, &last, |
| CURLFORM_COPYNAME, "name", |
| CURLFORM_COPYCONTENTS, "daniel", CURLFORM_END); |
| curl_formadd(&post, &last, |
| CURLFORM_COPYNAME, "project", |
| CURLFORM_COPYCONTENTS, "curl", CURLFORM_END); |
| curl_formadd(&post, &last, |
| CURLFORM_COPYNAME, "logotype-image", |
| CURLFORM_FILECONTENT, "curl.png", CURLFORM_END); |
| |
| /* Set the form info */ |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_HTTPPOST, post); |
| |
| curl_easy_perform(easyhandle); /* post away! */ |
| |
| /* free the post data again */ |
| curl_formfree(post); |
| .fi |
| |
| Multipart formposts are chains of parts using MIME-style separators and |
| headers. It means that each one of these separate parts get a few headers set |
| that describe the individual content-type, size etc. To enable your |
| application to handicraft this formpost even more, libcurl allows you to |
| supply your own set of custom headers to such an individual form part. You can |
| of course supply headers to as many parts as you like, but this little example |
| will show how you set headers to one specific part when you add that to the |
| post handle: |
| |
| .nf |
| struct curl_slist *headers=NULL; |
| headers = curl_slist_append(headers, "Content-Type: text/xml"); |
| |
| curl_formadd(&post, &last, |
| CURLFORM_COPYNAME, "logotype-image", |
| CURLFORM_FILECONTENT, "curl.xml", |
| CURLFORM_CONTENTHEADER, headers, |
| CURLFORM_END); |
| |
| curl_easy_perform(easyhandle); /* post away! */ |
| |
| curl_formfree(post); /* free post */ |
| curl_slist_free_all(headers); /* free custom header list */ |
| .fi |
| |
| Since all options on an easyhandle are "sticky", they remain the same until |
| changed even if you do call \fIcurl_easy_perform(3)\fP, you may need to tell |
| curl to go back to a plain GET request if you intend to do one as your next |
| request. You force an easyhandle to go back to GET by using the |
| \fICURLOPT_HTTPGET(3)\fP option: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_HTTPGET, 1L); |
| |
| Just setting \fICURLOPT_POSTFIELDS(3)\fP to "" or NULL will *not* stop libcurl |
| from doing a POST. It will just make it POST without any data to send! |
| |
| .SH "Converting from deprecated form API to MIME API" |
| Four rules have to be respected in building the multi-part: |
| .br |
| - The easy handle must be created before building the multi-part. |
| .br |
| - The multi-part is always created by a call to curl_mime_init(easyhandle). |
| .br |
| - Each part is created by a call to curl_mime_addpart(multipart). |
| .br |
| - When complete, the multi-part must be bound to the easy handle using |
| \fICURLOPT_MIMEPOST(3)\fP instead of \fICURLOPT_HTTPPOST(3)\fP. |
| |
| Here are some example of \fIcurl_formadd\fP calls to MIME API sequences: |
| |
| .nf |
| curl_formadd(&post, &last, |
| CURLFORM_COPYNAME, "id", |
| CURLFORM_COPYCONTENTS, "daniel", CURLFORM_END); |
| CURLFORM_CONTENTHEADER, headers, |
| CURLFORM_END); |
| .fi |
| becomes: |
| .nf |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(multipart); |
| curl_mime_name(part, "id"); |
| curl_mime_data(part, "daniel", CURL_ZERO_TERMINATED); |
| curl_mime_headers(part, headers, FALSE); |
| .fi |
| |
| Setting the last \fIcurl_mime_headers\fP argument to TRUE would have caused |
| the headers to be automatically released upon destroyed the multi-part, thus |
| saving a clean-up call to \fIcurl_slist_free_all(3)\fP. |
| |
| .nf |
| curl_formadd(&post, &last, |
| CURLFORM_PTRNAME, "logotype-image", |
| CURLFORM_FILECONTENT, "-", |
| CURLFORM_END); |
| .fi |
| becomes: |
| .nf |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(multipart); |
| curl_mime_name(part, "logotype-image"); |
| curl_mime_data_cb(part, (curl_off_t) -1, fread, fseek, NULL, stdin); |
| .fi |
| |
| \fIcurl_mime_name\fP always copies the field name. The special file name "-" |
| is not supported by \fIcurl_mime_file\fP: to read an open file, use |
| a callback source using fread(). The transfer will be chunked since the data |
| size is unknown. |
| |
| .nf |
| curl_formadd(&post, &last, |
| CURLFORM_COPYNAME, "datafile[]", |
| CURLFORM_FILE, "file1", |
| CURLFORM_FILE, "file2", |
| CURLFORM_END); |
| .fi |
| becomes: |
| .nf |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(multipart); |
| curl_mime_name(part, "datafile[]"); |
| curl_mime_filedata(part, "file1"); |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(multipart); |
| curl_mime_name(part, "datafile[]"); |
| curl_mime_filedata(part, "file2"); |
| .fi |
| |
| The deprecated multipart/mixed implementation of multiple files field is |
| translated to two distinct parts with the same name. |
| |
| .nf |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_READFUNCTION, myreadfunc); |
| curl_formadd(&post, &last, |
| CURLFORM_COPYNAME, "stream", |
| CURLFORM_STREAM, arg, |
| CURLFORM_CONTENTLEN, (curl_off_t) datasize, |
| CURLFORM_FILENAME, "archive.zip", |
| CURLFORM_CONTENTTYPE, "application/zip", |
| CURLFORM_END); |
| .fi |
| becomes: |
| .nf |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(multipart); |
| curl_mime_name(part, "stream"); |
| curl_mime_data_cb(part, (curl_off_t) datasize, |
| myreadfunc, NULL, NULL, arg); |
| curl_mime_filename(part, "archive.zip"); |
| curl_mime_type(part, "application/zip"); |
| .fi |
| |
| \fICURLOPT_READFUNCTION\fP callback is not used: it is replace by directly |
| setting the part source data from the callback read function. |
| |
| .nf |
| curl_formadd(&post, &last, |
| CURLFORM_COPYNAME, "memfile", |
| CURLFORM_BUFFER, "memfile.bin", |
| CURLFORM_BUFFERPTR, databuffer, |
| CURLFORM_BUFFERLENGTH, (long) sizeof databuffer, |
| CURLFORM_END); |
| .fi |
| becomes: |
| .nf |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(multipart); |
| curl_mime_name(part, "memfile"); |
| curl_mime_data(part, databuffer, (curl_off_t) sizeof databuffer); |
| curl_mime_filename(part, "memfile.bin"); |
| .fi |
| |
| \fIcurl_mime_data\fP always copies the initial data: data buffer is thus |
| free for immediate reuse. |
| |
| .nf |
| curl_formadd(&post, &last, |
| CURLFORM_COPYNAME, "message", |
| CURLFORM_FILECONTENT, "msg.txt", |
| CURLFORM_END); |
| .fi |
| becomes: |
| .nf |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(multipart); |
| curl_mime_name(part, "message"); |
| curl_mime_filedata(part, "msg.txt"); |
| curl_mime_filename(part, NULL); |
| .fi |
| |
| Use of \fIcurl_mime_filedata\fP sets the remote file name as a side effect: it |
| is therefore necessary to clear it for \fICURLFORM_FILECONTENT\fP emulation. |
| |
| .SH "Showing Progress" |
| |
| For historical and traditional reasons, libcurl has a built-in progress meter |
| that can be switched on and then makes it present a progress meter in your |
| terminal. |
| |
| Switch on the progress meter by, oddly enough, setting |
| \fICURLOPT_NOPROGRESS(3)\fP to zero. This option is set to 1 by default. |
| |
| For most applications however, the built-in progress meter is useless and |
| what instead is interesting is the ability to specify a progress |
| callback. The function pointer you pass to libcurl will then be called on |
| irregular intervals with information about the current transfer. |
| |
| Set the progress callback by using \fICURLOPT_PROGRESSFUNCTION(3)\fP. And pass |
| a pointer to a function that matches this prototype: |
| |
| .nf |
| int progress_callback(void *clientp, |
| double dltotal, |
| double dlnow, |
| double ultotal, |
| double ulnow); |
| .fi |
| |
| If any of the input arguments is unknown, a 0 will be passed. The first |
| argument, the 'clientp' is the pointer you pass to libcurl with |
| \fICURLOPT_PROGRESSDATA(3)\fP. libcurl will not touch it. |
| |
| .SH "libcurl with C++" |
| |
| There's basically only one thing to keep in mind when using C++ instead of C |
| when interfacing libcurl: |
| |
| The callbacks CANNOT be non-static class member functions |
| |
| Example C++ code: |
| |
| .nf |
| class AClass { |
| static size_t write_data(void *ptr, size_t size, size_t nmemb, |
| void *ourpointer) |
| { |
| /* do what you want with the data */ |
| } |
| } |
| .fi |
| |
| .SH "Proxies" |
| |
| What "proxy" means according to Merriam-Webster: "a person authorized to act |
| for another" but also "the agency, function, or office of a deputy who acts as |
| a substitute for another". |
| |
| Proxies are exceedingly common these days. Companies often only offer Internet |
| access to employees through their proxies. Network clients or user-agents ask |
| the proxy for documents, the proxy does the actual request and then it returns |
| them. |
| |
| libcurl supports SOCKS and HTTP proxies. When a given URL is wanted, libcurl |
| will ask the proxy for it instead of trying to connect to the actual host |
| identified in the URL. |
| |
| If you are using a SOCKS proxy, you may find that libcurl does not quite support |
| all operations through it. |
| |
| For HTTP proxies: the fact that the proxy is an HTTP proxy puts certain |
| restrictions on what can actually happen. A requested URL that might not be a |
| HTTP URL will be still be passed to the HTTP proxy to deliver back to |
| libcurl. This happens transparently, and an application may not need to |
| know. I say "may", because at times it is important to understand that all |
| operations over an HTTP proxy use the HTTP protocol. For example, you cannot |
| invoke your own custom FTP commands or even proper FTP directory listings. |
| |
| .IP "Proxy Options" |
| |
| To tell libcurl to use a proxy at a given port number: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_PROXY, "proxy-host.com:8080"); |
| |
| Some proxies require user authentication before allowing a request, and you |
| pass that information similar to this: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_PROXYUSERPWD, "user:password"); |
| |
| If you want to, you can specify the host name only in the |
| \fICURLOPT_PROXY(3)\fP option, and set the port number separately with |
| \fICURLOPT_PROXYPORT(3)\fP. |
| |
| Tell libcurl what kind of proxy it is with \fICURLOPT_PROXYTYPE(3)\fP (if not, |
| it will default to assume an HTTP proxy): |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_PROXYTYPE, CURLPROXY_SOCKS4); |
| |
| .IP "Environment Variables" |
| |
| libcurl automatically checks and uses a set of environment variables to know |
| what proxies to use for certain protocols. The names of the variables are |
| following an ancient de facto standard and are built up as "[protocol]_proxy" |
| (note the lower casing). Which makes the variable \&'http_proxy' checked for a |
| name of a proxy to use when the input URL is HTTP. Following the same rule, |
| the variable named 'ftp_proxy' is checked for FTP URLs. Again, the proxies are |
| always HTTP proxies, the different names of the variables simply allows |
| different HTTP proxies to be used. |
| |
| The proxy environment variable contents should be in the format |
| \&"[protocol://][user:password@]machine[:port]". Where the protocol:// part is |
| simply ignored if present (so http://proxy and bluerk://proxy will do the |
| same) and the optional port number specifies on which port the proxy operates |
| on the host. If not specified, the internal default port number will be used |
| and that is most likely *not* the one you would like it to be. |
| |
| There are two special environment variables. 'all_proxy' is what sets proxy |
| for any URL in case the protocol specific variable was not set, and |
| \&'no_proxy' defines a list of hosts that should not use a proxy even though a |
| variable may say so. If 'no_proxy' is a plain asterisk ("*") it matches all |
| hosts. |
| |
| To explicitly disable libcurl's checking for and using the proxy environment |
| variables, set the proxy name to "" - an empty string - with |
| \fICURLOPT_PROXY(3)\fP. |
| .IP "SSL and Proxies" |
| |
| SSL is for secure point-to-point connections. This involves strong encryption |
| and similar things, which effectively makes it impossible for a proxy to |
| operate as a "man in between" which the proxy's task is, as previously |
| discussed. Instead, the only way to have SSL work over an HTTP proxy is to ask |
| the proxy to tunnel trough everything without being able to check or fiddle |
| with the traffic. |
| |
| Opening an SSL connection over an HTTP proxy is therefore a matter of asking the |
| proxy for a straight connection to the target host on a specified port. This |
| is made with the HTTP request CONNECT. ("please mr proxy, connect me to that |
| remote host"). |
| |
| Because of the nature of this operation, where the proxy has no idea what kind |
| of data that is passed in and out through this tunnel, this breaks some of the |
| few advantages that come from using a proxy, such as caching. Many |
| organizations prevent this kind of tunneling to other destination port numbers |
| than 443 (which is the default HTTPS port number). |
| |
| .IP "Tunneling Through Proxy" |
| As explained above, tunneling is required for SSL to work and often even |
| restricted to the operation intended for SSL; HTTPS. |
| |
| This is however not the only time proxy-tunneling might offer benefits to |
| you or your application. |
| |
| As tunneling opens a direct connection from your application to the remote |
| machine, it suddenly also re-introduces the ability to do non-HTTP |
| operations over an HTTP proxy. You can in fact use things such as FTP |
| upload or FTP custom commands this way. |
| |
| Again, this is often prevented by the administrators of proxies and is |
| rarely allowed. |
| |
| Tell libcurl to use proxy tunneling like this: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_HTTPPROXYTUNNEL, 1L); |
| |
| In fact, there might even be times when you want to do plain HTTP |
| operations using a tunnel like this, as it then enables you to operate on |
| the remote server instead of asking the proxy to do so. libcurl will not |
| stand in the way for such innovative actions either! |
| |
| .IP "Proxy Auto-Config" |
| |
| Netscape first came up with this. It is basically a web page (usually using a |
| \&.pac extension) with a Javascript that when executed by the browser with the |
| requested URL as input, returns information to the browser on how to connect |
| to the URL. The returned information might be "DIRECT" (which means no proxy |
| should be used), "PROXY host:port" (to tell the browser where the proxy for |
| this particular URL is) or "SOCKS host:port" (to direct the browser to a SOCKS |
| proxy). |
| |
| libcurl has no means to interpret or evaluate Javascript and thus it does not |
| support this. If you get yourself in a position where you face this nasty |
| invention, the following advice have been mentioned and used in the past: |
| |
| - Depending on the Javascript complexity, write up a script that translates it |
| to another language and execute that. |
| |
| - Read the Javascript code and rewrite the same logic in another language. |
| |
| - Implement a Javascript interpreter; people have successfully used the |
| Mozilla Javascript engine in the past. |
| |
| - Ask your admins to stop this, for a static proxy setup or similar. |
| |
| .SH "Persistence Is The Way to Happiness" |
| |
| Re-cycling the same easy handle several times when doing multiple requests is |
| the way to go. |
| |
| After each single \fIcurl_easy_perform(3)\fP operation, libcurl will keep the |
| connection alive and open. A subsequent request using the same easy handle to |
| the same host might just be able to use the already open connection! This |
| reduces network impact a lot. |
| |
| Even if the connection is dropped, all connections involving SSL to the same |
| host again, will benefit from libcurl's session ID cache that drastically |
| reduces re-connection time. |
| |
| FTP connections that are kept alive save a lot of time, as the command- |
| response round-trips are skipped, and also you do not risk getting blocked |
| without permission to login again like on many FTP servers only allowing N |
| persons to be logged in at the same time. |
| |
| libcurl caches DNS name resolving results, to make lookups of a previously |
| looked up name a lot faster. |
| |
| Other interesting details that improve performance for subsequent requests |
| may also be added in the future. |
| |
| Each easy handle will attempt to keep the last few connections alive for a |
| while in case they are to be used again. You can set the size of this "cache" |
| with the \fICURLOPT_MAXCONNECTS(3)\fP option. Default is 5. There is rarely |
| any point in changing this value, and if you think of changing this it is |
| often just a matter of thinking again. |
| |
| To force your upcoming request to not use an already existing connection (it |
| will even close one first if there happens to be one alive to the same host |
| you are about to operate on), you can do that by setting |
| \fICURLOPT_FRESH_CONNECT(3)\fP to 1. In a similar spirit, you can also forbid |
| the upcoming request to be "lying" around and possibly get re-used after the |
| request by setting \fICURLOPT_FORBID_REUSE(3)\fP to 1. |
| |
| .SH "HTTP Headers Used by libcurl" |
| When you use libcurl to do HTTP requests, it will pass along a series of headers |
| automatically. It might be good for you to know and understand these. You |
| can replace or remove them by using the \fICURLOPT_HTTPHEADER(3)\fP option. |
| |
| .IP "Host" |
| This header is required by HTTP 1.1 and even many 1.0 servers and should be |
| the name of the server we want to talk to. This includes the port number if |
| anything but default. |
| |
| .IP "Accept" |
| \&"*/*". |
| |
| .IP "Expect" |
| When doing POST requests, libcurl sets this header to \&"100-continue" to ask |
| the server for an "OK" message before it proceeds with sending the data part |
| of the post. If the POSTed data amount is deemed "small", libcurl will not use |
| this header. |
| |
| .SH "Customizing Operations" |
| There is an ongoing development today where more and more protocols are built |
| upon HTTP for transport. This has obvious benefits as HTTP is a tested and |
| reliable protocol that is widely deployed and has excellent proxy-support. |
| |
| When you use one of these protocols, and even when doing other kinds of |
| programming you may need to change the traditional HTTP (or FTP or...) |
| manners. You may need to change words, headers or various data. |
| |
| libcurl is your friend here too. |
| |
| .IP CUSTOMREQUEST |
| If just changing the actual HTTP request keyword is what you want, like when |
| GET, HEAD or POST is not good enough for you, \fICURLOPT_CUSTOMREQUEST(3)\fP |
| is there for you. It is simple to use: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_CUSTOMREQUEST, "MYOWNREQUEST"); |
| |
| When using the custom request, you change the request keyword of the actual |
| request you are performing. Thus, by default you make a GET request but you can |
| also make a POST operation (as described before) and then replace the POST |
| keyword if you want to. you are the boss. |
| |
| .IP "Modify Headers" |
| HTTP-like protocols pass a series of headers to the server when doing the |
| request, and you are free to pass any amount of extra headers that you |
| think fit. Adding headers is this easy: |
| |
| .nf |
| struct curl_slist *headers=NULL; /* init to NULL is important */ |
| |
| headers = curl_slist_append(headers, "Hey-server-hey: how are you?"); |
| headers = curl_slist_append(headers, "X-silly-content: yes"); |
| |
| /* pass our list of custom made headers */ |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, headers); |
| |
| curl_easy_perform(easyhandle); /* transfer http */ |
| |
| curl_slist_free_all(headers); /* free the header list */ |
| .fi |
| |
| \&... and if you think some of the internally generated headers, such as |
| Accept: or Host: do not contain the data you want them to contain, you can |
| replace them by simply setting them too: |
| |
| .nf |
| headers = curl_slist_append(headers, "Accept: Agent-007"); |
| headers = curl_slist_append(headers, "Host: munged.host.line"); |
| .fi |
| |
| .IP "Delete Headers" |
| If you replace an existing header with one with no contents, you will prevent |
| the header from being sent. For instance, if you want to completely prevent the |
| \&"Accept:" header from being sent, you can disable it with code similar to this: |
| |
| headers = curl_slist_append(headers, "Accept:"); |
| |
| Both replacing and canceling internal headers should be done with careful |
| consideration and you should be aware that you may violate the HTTP protocol |
| when doing so. |
| |
| .IP "Enforcing chunked transfer-encoding" |
| |
| By making sure a request uses the custom header "Transfer-Encoding: chunked" |
| when doing a non-GET HTTP operation, libcurl will switch over to "chunked" |
| upload, even though the size of the data to upload might be known. By default, |
| libcurl usually switches over to chunked upload automatically if the upload |
| data size is unknown. |
| |
| .IP "HTTP Version" |
| |
| All HTTP requests includes the version number to tell the server which version |
| we support. libcurl speaks HTTP 1.1 by default. Some old servers do not like |
| getting 1.1-requests and when dealing with stubborn old things like that, you |
| can tell libcurl to use 1.0 instead by doing something like this: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_HTTP_VERSION, CURL_HTTP_VERSION_1_0); |
| |
| .IP "FTP Custom Commands" |
| |
| Not all protocols are HTTP-like, and thus the above may not help you when |
| you want to make, for example, your FTP transfers to behave differently. |
| |
| Sending custom commands to an FTP server means that you need to send the |
| commands exactly as the FTP server expects them (RFC959 is a good guide here), |
| and you can only use commands that work on the control-connection alone. All |
| kinds of commands that require data interchange and thus need a |
| data-connection must be left to libcurl's own judgement. Also be aware that |
| libcurl will do its best to change directory to the target directory before |
| doing any transfer, so if you change directory (with CWD or similar) you might |
| confuse libcurl and then it might not attempt to transfer the file in the |
| correct remote directory. |
| |
| A little example that deletes a given file before an operation: |
| |
| .nf |
| headers = curl_slist_append(headers, "DELE file-to-remove"); |
| |
| /* pass the list of custom commands to the handle */ |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_QUOTE, headers); |
| |
| curl_easy_perform(easyhandle); /* transfer ftp data! */ |
| |
| curl_slist_free_all(headers); /* free the header list */ |
| .fi |
| |
| If you would instead want this operation (or chain of operations) to happen |
| _after_ the data transfer took place the option to \fIcurl_easy_setopt(3)\fP |
| would instead be called \fICURLOPT_POSTQUOTE(3)\fP and used the exact same |
| way. |
| |
| The custom FTP command will be issued to the server in the same order they are |
| added to the list, and if a command gets an error code returned back from the |
| server, no more commands will be issued and libcurl will bail out with an |
| error code (CURLE_QUOTE_ERROR). Note that if you use \fICURLOPT_QUOTE(3)\fP to |
| send commands before a transfer, no transfer will actually take place when a |
| quote command has failed. |
| |
| If you set the \fICURLOPT_HEADER(3)\fP to 1, you will tell libcurl to get |
| information about the target file and output "headers" about it. The headers |
| will be in "HTTP-style", looking like they do in HTTP. |
| |
| The option to enable headers or to run custom FTP commands may be useful to |
| combine with \fICURLOPT_NOBODY(3)\fP. If this option is set, no actual file |
| content transfer will be performed. |
| |
| .IP "FTP Custom CUSTOMREQUEST" |
| If you do want to list the contents of an FTP directory using your own defined |
| FTP command, \fICURLOPT_CUSTOMREQUEST(3)\fP will do just that. "NLST" is the |
| default one for listing directories but you are free to pass in your idea of a |
| good alternative. |
| |
| .SH "Cookies Without Chocolate Chips" |
| In the HTTP sense, a cookie is a name with an associated value. A server sends |
| the name and value to the client, and expects it to get sent back on every |
| subsequent request to the server that matches the particular conditions |
| set. The conditions include that the domain name and path match and that the |
| cookie has not become too old. |
| |
| In real-world cases, servers send new cookies to replace existing ones to |
| update them. Server use cookies to "track" users and to keep "sessions". |
| |
| Cookies are sent from server to clients with the header Set-Cookie: and |
| they are sent from clients to servers with the Cookie: header. |
| |
| To just send whatever cookie you want to a server, you can use |
| \fICURLOPT_COOKIE(3)\fP to set a cookie string like this: |
| |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_COOKIE, "name1=var1; name2=var2;"); |
| |
| In many cases, that is not enough. You might want to dynamically save |
| whatever cookies the remote server passes to you, and make sure those cookies |
| are then used accordingly on later requests. |
| |
| One way to do this, is to save all headers you receive in a plain file and |
| when you make a request, you tell libcurl to read the previous headers to |
| figure out which cookies to use. Set the header file to read cookies from with |
| \fICURLOPT_COOKIEFILE(3)\fP. |
| |
| The \fICURLOPT_COOKIEFILE(3)\fP option also automatically enables the cookie |
| parser in libcurl. Until the cookie parser is enabled, libcurl will not parse |
| or understand incoming cookies and they will just be ignored. However, when |
| the parser is enabled the cookies will be understood and the cookies will be |
| kept in memory and used properly in subsequent requests when the same handle |
| is used. Many times this is enough, and you may not have to save the cookies |
| to disk at all. Note that the file you specify to \fICURLOPT_COOKIEFILE(3)\fP |
| does not have to exist to enable the parser, so a common way to just enable the |
| parser and not read any cookies is to use the name of a file you know does not |
| exist. |
| |
| If you would rather use existing cookies that you have previously received with |
| your Netscape or Mozilla browsers, you can make libcurl use that cookie file |
| as input. The \fICURLOPT_COOKIEFILE(3)\fP is used for that too, as libcurl |
| will automatically find out what kind of file it is and act accordingly. |
| |
| Perhaps the most advanced cookie operation libcurl offers, is saving the |
| entire internal cookie state back into a Netscape/Mozilla formatted cookie |
| file. We call that the cookie-jar. When you set a file name with |
| \fICURLOPT_COOKIEJAR(3)\fP, that file name will be created and all received |
| cookies will be stored in it when \fIcurl_easy_cleanup(3)\fP is called. This |
| enables cookies to get passed on properly between multiple handles without any |
| information getting lost. |
| |
| .SH "FTP Peculiarities We Need" |
| |
| FTP transfers use a second TCP/IP connection for the data transfer. This is |
| usually a fact you can forget and ignore but at times this fact will come |
| back to haunt you. libcurl offers several different ways to customize how the |
| second connection is being made. |
| |
| libcurl can either connect to the server a second time or tell the server to |
| connect back to it. The first option is the default and it is also what works |
| best for all the people behind firewalls, NATs or IP-masquerading setups. |
| libcurl then tells the server to open up a new port and wait for a second |
| connection. This is by default attempted with EPSV first, and if that does not |
| work it tries PASV instead. (EPSV is an extension to the original FTP spec |
| and does not exist nor work on all FTP servers.) |
| |
| You can prevent libcurl from first trying the EPSV command by setting |
| \fICURLOPT_FTP_USE_EPSV(3)\fP to zero. |
| |
| In some cases, you will prefer to have the server connect back to you for the |
| second connection. This might be when the server is perhaps behind a firewall |
| or something and only allows connections on a single port. libcurl then |
| informs the remote server which IP address and port number to connect to. |
| This is made with the \fICURLOPT_FTPPORT(3)\fP option. If you set it to "-", |
| libcurl will use your system's "default IP address". If you want to use a |
| particular IP, you can set the full IP address, a host name to resolve to an |
| IP address or even a local network interface name that libcurl will get the IP |
| address from. |
| |
| When doing the "PORT" approach, libcurl will attempt to use the EPRT and the |
| LPRT before trying PORT, as they work with more protocols. You can disable |
| this behavior by setting \fICURLOPT_FTP_USE_EPRT(3)\fP to zero. |
| |
| .SH "MIME API revisited for SMTP and IMAP" |
| In addition to support HTTP multi-part form fields, the MIME API can be used |
| to build structured e-mail messages and send them via SMTP or append such |
| messages to IMAP directories. |
| |
| A structured e-mail message may contain several parts: some are displayed |
| inline by the MUA, some are attachments. Parts can also be structured as |
| multi-part, for example to include another e-mail message or to offer several |
| text formats alternatives. This can be nested to any level. |
| |
| To build such a message, you prepare the nth-level multi-part and then include |
| it as a source to the parent multi-part using function |
| \fIcurl_mime_subparts(3)\fP. Once it has been |
| bound to its parent multi-part, a nth-level multi-part belongs to it and |
| should not be freed explicitly. |
| |
| E-mail messages data is not supposed to be non-ascii and line length is |
| limited: fortunately, some transfer encodings are defined by the standards |
| to support the transmission of such incompatible data. Function |
| \fIcurl_mime_encoder(3)\fP tells a part that its source data must be encoded |
| before being sent. It also generates the corresponding header for that part. |
| If the part data you want to send is already encoded in such a scheme, |
| do not use this function (this would over-encode it), but explicitly set the |
| corresponding part header. |
| |
| Upon sending such a message, libcurl prepends it with the header list |
| set with \fICURLOPT_HTTPHEADER(3)\fP, as 0th-level mime part headers. |
| |
| Here is an example building an e-mail message with an inline plain/html text |
| alternative and a file attachment encoded in base64: |
| |
| .nf |
| curl_mime *message = curl_mime_init(easyhandle); |
| |
| /* The inline part is an alternative proposing the html and the text |
| versions of the e-mail. */ |
| curl_mime *alt = curl_mime_init(easyhandle); |
| |
| /* HTML message. */ |
| curl_mimepart *part = curl_mime_addpart(alt); |
| curl_mime_data(part, "<html><body><p>This is HTML</p></body></html>", |
| CURL_ZERO_TERMINATED); |
| curl_mime_type(part, "text/html"); |
| |
| /* Text message. */ |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(alt); |
| curl_mime_data(part, "This is plain text message", |
| CURL_ZERO_TERMINATED); |
| |
| /* Create the inline part. */ |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(message); |
| curl_mime_subparts(part, alt); |
| curl_mime_type(part, "multipart/alternative"); |
| struct curl_slist *headers = curl_slist_append(NULL, |
| "Content-Disposition: inline"); |
| curl_mime_headers(part, headers, TRUE); |
| |
| /* Add the attachment. */ |
| part = curl_mime_addpart(message); |
| curl_mime_filedata(part, "manual.pdf"); |
| curl_mime_encoder(part, "base64"); |
| |
| /* Build the mail headers. */ |
| headers = curl_slist_append(NULL, "From: [email protected]"); |
| headers = curl_slist_append(headers, "To: [email protected]"); |
| |
| /* Set these into the easy handle. */ |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, headers); |
| curl_easy_setopt(easyhandle, CURLOPT_MIMEPOST, mime); |
| .fi |
| |
| It should be noted that appending a message to an IMAP directory requires |
| the message size to be known prior upload. It is therefore not possible to |
| include parts with unknown data size in this context. |
| |
| .SH "Headers Equal Fun" |
| |
| Some protocols provide "headers", meta-data separated from the normal |
| data. These headers are by default not included in the normal data stream, but |
| you can make them appear in the data stream by setting \fICURLOPT_HEADER(3)\fP |
| to 1. |
| |
| What might be even more useful, is libcurl's ability to separate the headers |
| from the data and thus make the callbacks differ. You can for example set a |
| different pointer to pass to the ordinary write callback by setting |
| \fICURLOPT_HEADERDATA(3)\fP. |
| |
| Or, you can set an entirely separate function to receive the headers, by using |
| \fICURLOPT_HEADERFUNCTION(3)\fP. |
| |
| The headers are passed to the callback function one by one, and you can |
| depend on that fact. It makes it easier for you to add custom header parsers |
| etc. |
| |
| \&"Headers" for FTP transfers equal all the FTP server responses. They are not |
| actually true headers, but in this case we pretend they are! ;-) |
| |
| .SH "Post Transfer Information" |
| See \fIcurl_easy_getinfo(3)\fP. |
| .SH "The multi Interface" |
| The easy interface as described in detail in this document is a synchronous |
| interface that transfers one file at a time and does not return until it is |
| done. |
| |
| The multi interface, on the other hand, allows your program to transfer |
| multiple files in both directions at the same time, without forcing you to use |
| multiple threads. The name might make it seem that the multi interface is for |
| multi-threaded programs, but the truth is almost the reverse. The multi |
| interface allows a single-threaded application to perform the same kinds of |
| multiple, simultaneous transfers that multi-threaded programs can perform. It |
| allows many of the benefits of multi-threaded transfers without the complexity |
| of managing and synchronizing many threads. |
| |
| To complicate matters somewhat more, there are even two versions of the multi |
| interface. The event based one, also called multi_socket and the "normal one" |
| designed for using with select(). See the libcurl-multi.3 man page for details |
| on the multi_socket event based API, this description here is for the select() |
| oriented one. |
| |
| To use this interface, you are better off if you first understand the basics |
| of how to use the easy interface. The multi interface is simply a way to make |
| multiple transfers at the same time by adding up multiple easy handles into |
| a "multi stack". |
| |
| You create the easy handles you want, one for each concurrent transfer, and |
| you set all the options just like you learned above, and then you create a |
| multi handle with \fIcurl_multi_init(3)\fP and add all those easy handles to |
| that multi handle with \fIcurl_multi_add_handle(3)\fP. |
| |
| When you have added the handles you have for the moment (you can still add new |
| ones at any time), you start the transfers by calling |
| \fIcurl_multi_perform(3)\fP. |
| |
| \fIcurl_multi_perform(3)\fP is asynchronous. It will only perform what can be |
| done now and then return back control to your program. It is designed to never |
| block. You need to keep calling the function until all transfers are |
| completed. |
| |
| The best usage of this interface is when you do a select() on all possible |
| file descriptors or sockets to know when to call libcurl again. This also |
| makes it easy for you to wait and respond to actions on your own application's |
| sockets/handles. You figure out what to select() for by using |
| \fIcurl_multi_fdset(3)\fP, that fills in a set of fd_set variables for you |
| with the particular file descriptors libcurl uses for the moment. |
| |
| When you then call select(), it will return when one of the file handles signal |
| action and you then call \fIcurl_multi_perform(3)\fP to allow libcurl to do |
| what it wants to do. Take note that libcurl does also feature some time-out |
| code so we advise you to never use long timeouts on select() before you call |
| \fIcurl_multi_perform(3)\fP again. \fIcurl_multi_timeout(3)\fP is provided to |
| help you get a suitable timeout period. |
| |
| Another precaution you should use: always call \fIcurl_multi_fdset(3)\fP |
| immediately before the select() call since the current set of file descriptors |
| may change in any curl function invoke. |
| |
| If you want to stop the transfer of one of the easy handles in the stack, you |
| can use \fIcurl_multi_remove_handle(3)\fP to remove individual easy |
| handles. Remember that easy handles should be \fIcurl_easy_cleanup(3)\fPed. |
| |
| When a transfer within the multi stack has finished, the counter of running |
| transfers (as filled in by \fIcurl_multi_perform(3)\fP) will decrease. When |
| the number reaches zero, all transfers are done. |
| |
| \fIcurl_multi_info_read(3)\fP can be used to get information about completed |
| transfers. It then returns the CURLcode for each easy transfer, to allow you |
| to figure out success on each individual transfer. |
| |
| .SH "SSL, Certificates and Other Tricks" |
| |
| [ seeding, passwords, keys, certificates, ENGINE, ca certs ] |
| |
| .SH "Sharing Data Between Easy Handles" |
| You can share some data between easy handles when the easy interface is used, |
| and some data is share automatically when you use the multi interface. |
| |
| When you add easy handles to a multi handle, these easy handles will |
| automatically share a lot of the data that otherwise would be kept on a |
| per-easy handle basis when the easy interface is used. |
| |
| The DNS cache is shared between handles within a multi handle, making |
| subsequent name resolving faster, and the connection pool that is kept to |
| better allow persistent connections and connection re-use is also shared. If |
| you are using the easy interface, you can still share these between specific |
| easy handles by using the share interface, see \fIlibcurl-share(3)\fP. |
| |
| Some things are never shared automatically, not within multi handles, like for |
| example cookies so the only way to share that is with the share interface. |
| .SH "Footnotes" |
| |
| .IP "[1]" |
| libcurl 7.10.3 and later have the ability to switch over to chunked |
| Transfer-Encoding in cases where HTTP uploads are done with data of an unknown |
| size. |
| .IP "[2]" |
| This happens on Windows machines when libcurl is built and used as a |
| DLL. However, you can still do this on Windows if you link with a static |
| library. |
| .IP "[3]" |
| The curl-config tool is generated at build-time (on Unix-like systems) and |
| should be installed with the 'make install' or similar instruction that |
| installs the library, header files, man pages etc. |
| .IP "[4]" |
| This behavior was different in versions before 7.17.0, where strings had to |
| remain valid past the end of the \fIcurl_easy_setopt(3)\fP call. |
| .SH "SEE ALSO" |
| .BR libcurl-errors "(3), " libcurl-multi "(3), " libcurl-easy "(3) " |