Super User Asked by Laurie Young on November 22, 2021
If you are lazy, you can get google-chrome or firefox to do all the work for you.
Chrome will copy all the request data in cURL syntax.
Chrome uses --data 'param1=hello¶m2=world'
which you can make more readable by using a single -d
or -F
per parameter depending on which type of POST request you want to send, which can be either application/x-www-form-urlencoded
or multipart/form-data
accordingly.
This will be POST-ed as application/x-www-form-urlencoded
(used for the majority of forms that don't contain file uploads):
curl http://httpbin.org/post
-H "User-Agent: Mozilla/2.2"
-d param1=hello
-d name=dinsdale
For a multipart/form-data
POST use -F
(typically used with forms that contain file uploads, or where order of fields is important, or where multiple fields with the same name are required):
curl http://httpbin.org/post
-H "User-Agent: Mozilla/2.2"
-F param1=hello
-F name=dinsdale
-F name=piranha
The User-Agent
header is not normally needed, but I've thrown it in just in case. If you need a custom agent then you can avoid having to set it on every request by creating the ~/.curlrc
file which contains e.g. User-Agent: "Mozilla/2.2"
Answered by ccpizza on November 22, 2021
Data from stdin with -d @-
Example:
echo '{"text": "Hello **world**!"}' | curl -d @- https://api.github.com/markdown
Output:
<p>Hello <strong>world</strong>!</p>
Answered by Ciro Santilli 新疆再教育营六四事件法轮功郝海东 on November 22, 2021
If you want to login to a site, do the following:
curl -d "username=admin&password=admin&submit=Login" --dump-header headers http://localhost/Login
curl -L -b headers http://localhost/
The first request saves the session cookie (that is provided upon successful login) in the "headers" file. From now on you can use that cookie to authenticate you to any part of the website that you usually access after logging in with a browser.
Answered by Martin Konecny on November 22, 2021
For a RESTful HTTP POST containing XML:
curl -X POST -d @filename.txt http://example.com/path/to/resource --header "Content-Type:text/xml"
or for JSON, use this:
curl -X POST -d @filename.txt http://example.com/path/to/resource --header "Content-Type:application/json"
This will read the contents of the file named filename.txt
and send it as the post request.
Answered by soundmonster on November 22, 2021
With fields:
curl --data "param1=value1¶m2=value2" https://example.com/resource.cgi
With fields specified individually:
curl --data "param1=value1" --data "param2=value2" https://example.com/resource.cgi
Multipart:
curl --form "[email protected]" https://example.com/resource.cgi
Multipart with fields and a filename:
curl --form "[email protected];filename=desired-filename.txt" --form param1=value1 --form param2=value2 https://example.com/resource.cgi
Without data:
curl --data '' https://example.com/resource.cgi
curl -X POST https://example.com/resource.cgi
curl --request POST https://example.com/resource.cgi
For more information see the cURL manual. The cURL tutorial on emulating a web browser is helpful.
With libcurl
, use the curl_formadd()
function to build your form before submitting it in the usual way. See the libcurl documentation for more information.
For large files, consider adding parameters to show upload progress:
curl --tr-encoding -X POST -v -# -o output -T filename.dat
http://example.com/resource.cgi
The -o output
is required, otherwise, no progress bar will appear.
Answered by Stephen Deken on November 22, 2021
curl -v --data-ascii var=value http://example.com
and there are many more options, check curl --help
for more information.
Answered by Vinko Vrsalovic on November 22, 2021
curl -d "name=Rafael%20Sagula&phone=3320780" http://www.where.com/guest.cgi
is the example found in the Curl Example Manual.
Use %26 for the ampersands though if the above doesn't work:
curl -d "name=Rafael%20Sagula%26phone=3320780" http://www.where.com/guest.cgi
Answered by Patrick Desjardins on November 22, 2021
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