This Curl cheat sheet contains commands and examples of some common Curl tricks.
Curl
is a tool for transferring data between servers, supporting protocols, including:
-o <file> # --output: write to file
-u user:pass # --user: authentication
-v # --verbose: Make curl verbose during operation
-vv # more verbose
-s # --silent: don't show progress meter or errors
-S # --show-error: When used with --silent (-sS), show errors but no progress meter
-i # --include: include HTTP headers in the output
-I # --head: header only
-X POST # --request
-L # If the page redirects, follow the link
-F # --form: HTTP POST data for multipart/form-data
# --data: HTTP post data
# URL encoding (eg, status="Hello")
-d 'data'
# --data pass file
-d @file
# --get: send -d data via get
-G
-A <str> # --user-agent
-b name=val # --cookie
-b, --cookie FILE # Load cookies from the specified file for the URL
-c, --cookie-jar FILE # Save cookies to the specified file from the URL
-H "X-Foo: y" # --header
--compressed # use deflate/gzip
command | description |
---|---|
curl -I https://cheatsheets.zip |
curl sends a request |
curl -v -I https://cheatsheets.zip |
curl request with details |
curl -X GET https://cheatsheets.zip |
use explicit http method for curl |
curl --noproxy 127.0.0.1 http://www.stackoverflow.com |
curl without http proxy |
curl --connect-timeout 10 -I -k https://cheatsheets.zip |
curl has no timeout by default |
curl --verbose --header "Host: www.mytest.com:8182" cheatsheets.zip |
curl get extra header |
curl -k -v https://www.google.com |
curl get response with headers |
$ curl -v --include \
--form key1=value1 \
--form upload=@localfilename URL
$ curl -XGET http://${elasticsearch_ip}:9200/_cluster/nodes | python -m json.tool
command | description |
---|---|
curl -d "name=username&password=123456" <URL> |
curl send request |
curl <URL> -H "content-type: application/json" -d "{ \"woof\": \"bark\"}" |
curl sends json |
curl -sSL https://get.rvm.io | bash
command | description |
---|---|
curl -L -s http://ipecho.net/plain, curl -L -s http://whatismijnip.nl |
get my public IP |
curl -u $username:$password http://repo.dennyzhang.com/README.txt |
curl with credentials |
curl -v -F key1=value1 -F upload=@localfilename <URL> |
curl upload |
curl -k -v --http2 https://www.google.com/ |
use http2 curl |
curl -T cryptopp552.zip -u test:test ftp://10.32.99.187/ |
curl ftp upload |
curl -u test:test ftp://10.32.99.187/cryptopp552.zip -o cryptopp552.zip |
curl ftp download |
curl -v -u admin:admin123 --upload-file package1.zip http://mysever:8081/dir/package1.zip |
upload with credentials curl |
curl -s -w \
'\nLookup time:\t%{time_namelookup}\nConnect time:\t%{time_connect}\nAppCon time:\t%{time_appconnect}\nRedirect time:\t%{time_redirect}\nPreXfer time:\t%{time_pretransfer }\nStartXfer time:\t%{time_starttransfer}\n\nTotal time:\t%{time_total}\n' \
-o /dev/null https://www.google.com
curl -o /dev/null --silent -Iw "%{http_code}" https://example.com/my.remote.tarball.gz
curl https://example.com | \
grep --only-matching 'src="[^"]*.[png]"' | \
cut -d \" -f2 | \
while read i; do curl https://example.com/"${i}" \
-o "${i##*/}"; done
Download all PNG files from the site (using GNU grep)
curl --remote-name "https://example.com/linux-distro.iso"
rename file
curl --remote-name "http://example.com/index.html" --output foo.html
curl --remote-name --continue-at -"https://example.com/linux-distro.iso"
curl "https://www.{example,w3,iana}.org/index.html" --output "file_#1.html"
curl "https://{foo,bar}.com/file_[1-4].webp" --output "#1_#2.webp"
Download a series of files (output foo_file1.webp
, foo_file2.webp...bar_file1_webp
, etc.)
$ curl http://url/file > file
$ curl --user username:password http://example.com/
$ curl -u username:password http://example.com/
$ curl -o file http://url/file
$ curl --output file http://url/file
$ curl -I url
# display header information
$ curl -o file http://url/file
$ curl --output file http://url/file
$ curl -s http://url/myscript.sh
curl -K file
# read configuration from file
curl --config file
$HOME/.curlrc # default configuration file on UNIX-like systems