1 .\" You can view this file with:
3 .\" Adapted from libcurl docs by fandom@telefonica.net
4 .TH TclCurl 3 "3 October 2011" "TclCurl 7.22.0 "TclCurl Easy Interface"
6 TclCurl: - get a URL with FTP, FTPS, HTTP, HTTPS, SCP, SFTP, TFTP, TELNET, DICT, FILE, LDAP,
7 LDAPS, IMAP, IMAPS, POP, POP3, SMTP, SMTPS and gopher syntax.
12 .IB curlHandle " configure " "?options?"
14 .IB curlHandle " perform"
16 .IB curlHandle " getinfo " curlinfo_option
18 .IB curlhandle " cleanup"
20 .IB curlhandle " reset"
22 .IB curlHandle " duphandle"
24 .IB curlHandle " pause"
26 .IB curlHandle " resume"
28 .BI curl::transfer " ?options?"
32 .BI "curl::escape " url
34 .BI "curl::unescape " url
36 .BI "curl::curlConfig " option
38 .BI "curl::versioninfo " option
40 .BI "curl::easystrerror " errorCode
43 The TclCurl extension gives Tcl programmers access to the libcurl
44 library written by \fBDaniel Stenberg\fP, with it you can download urls,
45 upload them and many other neat tricks, for more information check
46 .I http://curl.haxx.se
48 This procedure must be the first one to call, it returns a
50 that you need to use to invoke TclCurl procedures. The init calls intializes
51 curl and this call MUST have a corresponding call to
53 when the operation is completed.
54 You should perform all your sequential file transfers using the same
55 curlHandle. This enables TclCurl to use persistent connections when
62 .SH curlHandle configure ?options?
65 is called to set the options for the transfer. Most operations in TclCurl
66 have default actions, and by using the appropriate options you can
67 make them behave differently (as documented). All options are set with
68 the \fIoption\fP followed by a parameter.
71 the options set with this procedure are valid for the
72 forthcoming data transfers that are performed when you invoke
75 The options are not reset between transfers (except where noted), so if
76 you want subsequent transfers with different options, you must change them
77 between the transfers. You can optionally reset all options back to the internal
78 default with \fBcurlHandle reset\fP.
81 is the return code from the
92 Set the parameter to 1 to get the library to display a lot of verbose
93 information about its operations. Very useful for libcurl and/or protocol
94 debugging and understanding.
96 You hardly ever want this set in production use, you will almost always want
97 this when you debug/report problems. Another neat option for debugging is
102 A 1 tells the extension to include the headers in the body output. This is
103 only relevant for protocols that actually have headers preceding the data (like HTTP).
107 A 1 tells the extension to turn on the progress meter
108 completely. It will also prevent the \fIprogessproc\fP from getting called.
112 A 1 tells TclCurl not use any functions that install signal
113 handlers or any functions that cause signals to be sent to the process. This
114 option is mainly here to allow multi-threaded unix applications to still
115 set/use all timeout options etc, without risking getting signals.
117 If this option is set and libcurl has been built with the standard name resolver,
118 timeouts will not occur while the name resolve takes place. Consider building
119 libcurl with c-ares support to enable asynchronous DNS lookups, which enables
120 nice timeouts for name resolves without signals.
122 Setting \fInosignal\fP to 1 makes libcurl NOT ask the system to ignore
123 SIGPIPE signals, which otherwise are sent by the system when trying to send
124 data to a socket which is closed in the other end. libcurl makes an effort to
125 never cause such SIGPIPEs to trigger, but some operating systems have no way
126 to avoid them and even on those that have there are some corner cases when
127 they may still happen, contrary to our desire. In addition, using
128 \fIntlm_Wb\fP authentication could cause a SIGCHLD signal to be raised.
132 Set this option to 1 if you want to transfer multiple files according to a
133 file name pattern. The pattern can be specified as part of the
134 \fB-url\fP option, using an fnmatch-like pattern (Shell Pattern
135 Matching) in the last part of URL (file name).
137 By default, TClCurl uses its internal wildcard matching implementation. You
138 can provide your own matching function by the \fB-fnmatchproc\fP option.
140 This feature is only supported by the FTP download for now.
142 A brief introduction of its syntax follows:
145 \&ftp://example.com/some/path/\fB*.txt\fP (for all txt's from the root
149 .IP "? - QUESTION MARK"
150 Question mark matches any (exactly one) character.
152 \&ftp://example.com/some/path/\fBphoto?.jpeg\fP
155 .IP "[ - BRACKET EXPRESSION"
156 The left bracket opens a bracket expression. The question mark and asterisk have
157 no special meaning in a bracket expression. Each bracket expression ends by the
158 right bracket and matches exactly one character. Some examples follow:
160 \fB[a-zA-Z0\-9]\fP or \fB[f\-gF\-G]\fP \- character interval
162 \fB[abc]\fP - character enumeration
164 \fB[^abc]\fP or \fB[!abc]\fP - negation
166 \fB[[:\fP\fIname\fP\fB:]]\fP class expression. Supported classes are
167 \fBalnum\fP,\fBlower\fP, \fBspace\fP, \fBalpha\fP, \fBdigit\fP, \fBprint\fP,
168 \fBupper\fP, \fBblank\fP, \fBgraph\fP, \fBxdigit\fP.
170 \fB[][-!^]\fP - special case \- matches only '\-', ']', '[', '!' or '^'. These
171 characters have no special purpose.
173 \fB[\\[\\]\\\\]\fP - escape syntax. Matches '[', ']' or '\\'.
175 Using the rules above, a file name pattern can be constructed:
177 \&ftp://example.com/some/path/\fB[a-z[:upper:]\\\\].jpeg\fP
185 Use it to set a Tcl procedure that will be invoked by TclCurl as soon as
186 there is received data that needs to be saved. The procedure will receive
187 a single parameter with the data to be saved.
189 NOTE: you will be passed as much data as possible in all invokes, but you
190 cannot possibly make any assumptions. It may be nothing if the file is
191 empty or it may be thousands of bytes.
195 File in which the transfered data will be saved.
199 Sets a Tcl procedure to be called by TclCurl as soon as it needs to read
200 data in order to send it to the peer. The procedure has to take one
201 parameter, which will contain the maximun numbers of bytes to read. It
202 should return the actual number of bytes read, or '0' if you want to
205 If you stop the current transfer by returning 0 "pre-maturely" (i.e before
206 the server expected it, like when you've said you will upload N bytes and
207 you upload less than N bytes), you may experience that the server "hangs"
208 waiting for the rest of the data that won't come.
210 Bugs: when doing TFTP uploads, you must return the exact amount of data
211 that the callback wants, or it will be considered the final packet by the
212 server end and the transfer will end there.
216 File from which the data will be transfered.
220 Name of the Tcl procedure that will invoked by TclCurl with a frequent
221 interval during operation (roughly once per second or sooner), no matter if data
222 is being transfered or not. Unknown/unused
223 argument values passed to the callback will be set to zero (like if you
224 only download data, the upload size will remain 0), the prototype of the
227 .B proc ProgressCallback {dltotal dlnow ultotal ulnow}
229 In order to this option to work you have to set the \fBnoprogress\fP
230 option to '0'. Setting this option to the empty string will restore the
231 original progress function.
233 If you transfer data with the multi interface, this procedure will not be
234 called during periods of idleness unless you call the appropriate procedure
235 that performs transfers.
237 You can pause and resume a transfer from within this procedure using the
238 \fBpause\fP and \fBresume\fP commands.
242 Pass a the file name to be used to write the header part of the received data to.
243 The headers are guaranteed to be written one-by-one to this file and
244 only complete lines are written. Parsing headers should be easy enough using
247 See also the \f-headervar\fP option to get the headers into an array.
251 Name of the procedure that will receive the debug data produced by the
253 option, it should match the following prototype:
255 .B debugProc {infoType data}
257 where \fBinfoType\fP specifies what kind of information it is (0 text,
258 1 incoming header, 2 outgoing header, 3 incoming data, 4 outgoing data,
259 5 incoming SSL data, 6 outgoing SSL data).
263 Name of the procedure that will be called before a file will be transfered by
264 ftp, it should match the following prototype:
266 .B ChunkBgnProc {remains}
269 Where remains is the number of files left to be transfered (or skipped)
271 This callback makes sense only when using the \fB-wildcard\fP option.
275 Name of the variable in the global scope that will contain the data of the file about
276 to be transfered. If you don't use this option '::fileData' will be used.
278 The available data is: filename, filetype (file, directory, symlink, device block, device char,
279 named pipe, socket, door or error if it couldn't be identified), time, perm, uid, gid,
280 size, hardlinks and flags.
284 Name of the procedure that will be called after a file is transfered (or skipped)
285 by ftp, it should match the following prototype:
289 It should return '0' if everyhting is fine and '1' if some error occurred.
293 Name of the procedure that will be called instead of the internal wildcard
294 matching function, it should match the following prototype:
296 .B FnMatchProc {pattern string}
298 Returns '0' if it matches, '1' if it doesn't.
304 Pass a variable name where TclCurl may store human readable error
305 messages in. This may be more helpful than just the return code from the
310 Pass a file name as parameter. This is the stream to use internally instead
311 of stderr when reporting errors.
314 A 1 parameter tells the extension to fail silently if the HTTP code
315 returned is equal or larger than 400. The default action would be to return
316 the page normally, ignoring that code.
318 This method is not fail-safe and there are occasions where non-successful response
319 codes will slip through, especially when authentication is involved
320 (response codes 401 and 407).
322 You might get some amounts of headers transferred before this situation is detected,
323 like for when a "100-continue" is received as a response to a POST/PUT and a 401
324 or 407 is received immediately afterwards.
330 The actual URL to deal with.
332 If the given URL lacks the protocol part ("http://" or "ftp://" etc), it will
333 attempt to guess which protocol to use based on the given host name. If the
334 given protocol of the set URL is not supported, TclCurl will return the
335 \fBunsupported protocol\fP error when you call \fBperform\fP. Use
336 \fBcurl::versioninfo\fP for detailed info on which protocols are supported.
338 Starting with version 7.22.0, the fragment part of the URI will not be send as
339 part of the path, which was the case previously.
341 \fBNOTE\fP: this is the one option required to be set before \fBperform\fP is called.
345 Pass a list in lowecase of protocols to limit what protocols TclCurl may use in the transfer. This
346 allows you to have a TclCurl built to support a wide range of protocols but still limit
347 specific transfers to only be allowed to use a subset of them.
349 Accepted protocols are 'http', 'https', 'ftp', 'ftps', 'scp', 'sftp', 'telnet', 'ldap',
350 \&'ldaps', 'dict', 'file','tftp', 'imap', 'imaps', 'pop', 'pop3', 'smtp', 'smtps', 'gopher'
355 Pass a list in lowercase of accepted protocols to limit what protocols TclCurl may use in a transfer
356 that it follows to in a redirect when \fB-followlocation\fP is enabled. This allows you
357 to limit specific transfers to only be allowed to use a subset of protocols in redirections.
359 By default TclCurl will allow all protocols except for FILE and SCP. This is a difference
360 compared to pre-7.19.4 versions which unconditionally would follow to all protocols supported.
364 If you need to use a http proxy to access the outside world, set the
365 proxy string with this option. To specify port number in this string,
366 append :[port] to the end of the host name. The proxy string may be
367 prefixed with [protocol]:// since any such prefix will be ignored.
369 When you tell the extension to use a HTTP proxy, TclCurl will
370 transparently convert operations to HTTP even if you specify a FTP
371 URL etc. This may have an impact on what other features of the library
374 and similar FTP specifics that will not work unless you tunnel through
375 the HTTP proxy. Such tunneling is activated with
378 TclCurl respects the environment variables http_proxy, ftp_proxy,
379 all_proxy etc, if any of those are set. The use of this option does
380 however override any possibly set environment variables.
382 Setting the proxy string to "" (an empty string) will explicitly disable
383 the use of a proxy, even if there is an environment variable set for it.
385 The proxy host string can be specified the exact same way as the proxy
386 environment variables, include protocol prefix (http://) and embedded
389 Since 7.22.0, the proxy string may be specified with a protocol:// prefix to
390 specify alternative proxy protocols. Use socks4://, socks4a://, socks5:// or
391 socks5h:// (the last one to enable socks5 and asking the proxy to do the resolving)
392 to request the specific SOCKS version
393 to be used. No protocol specified, http:// and all others will be treated as
398 Use this option to set the proxy port to use unless it is specified in
399 the proxy string by \fB-proxy\fP. If not specified, TclCurl will default
400 to using port 1080 for proxies.
404 Pass the type of the proxy. Available options are 'http', 'http1.0', 'socks4', 'socks4a',
405 \&'socks5' and 'socks5h', with the HTTP one being the default.
407 If you set it to \fIhttp1.0\fP, it will only affect how libcurl speaks to a proxy
408 when CONNECT is used. The HTTP version used for "regular" HTTP requests is instead
409 controled with \fIhttpversion\fP.
413 Pass a string, a comma-separated list of hosts which do not use a proxy, if one
414 is specified. The only wildcard is a single * character, which matches all hosts,
415 and effectively disables the proxy. Each name in this list is matched as either
416 a domain which contains the hostname, or the hostname itself. For example, local.com
417 would match local.com, local.com:80, and www.local.com, but not www.notlocal.com.
421 Set the parameter to 1 to get the extension to tunnel all non-HTTP
422 operations through the given HTTP proxy. Do note that there is a big
423 difference between using a proxy and tunneling through it. If you don't know what
424 this means, you probably don't want this tunnel option.
427 .B -socks5gssapiservice
428 Pass thee name of the service. The default service name for a SOCKS5 server is
429 rcmd/server-fqdn. This option allows you to change it.
433 Pass a 1 to enable or 0 to disable. As part of the gssapi negotiation a protection
434 mode is negotiated. The rfc1961 says in section 4.3/4.4 it should be protected, but
435 the NEC reference implementation does not. If enabled, this option allows the
436 unprotected exchange of the protection mode negotiation.
440 Pass the interface name to use as outgoing
441 network interface. The name can be an interface name, an IP address or a host
446 This sets the local port number of the socket used for connection. This can
447 be used in combination with \fB-interface\fP and you are recommended to use
448 \fBlocalportrange\fP as well when this is set. Valid port numbers
453 This is the number of attempts TclCurl should do to find a working local port
454 number. It starts with the given \fB-localport\fP and adds
455 one to the number for each retry. Setting this value to 1 or below will make
456 TclCurl do only one try for each port number. Port numbers by nature
457 are a scarce resource that will be busy at times so setting this value to something
458 too low might cause unnecessary connection setup failures.
462 Pass the timeout in seconds. Name resolves will be kept in memory for this number
463 of seconds. Set to '0' to completely disable caching, or '\-1' to make the
464 cached entries remain forever. By default, TclCurl caches this info for 60 seconds.
466 The name resolve functions of various libc implementations don't re-read name
467 server information unless explicitly told so (for example, by calling
468 \fIres_init(3)\fP). This may cause TclCurl to keep using the older server even
469 if DHCP has updated the server info, and this may look like a DNS cache issue.
472 .B -dnsuseglobalcache
473 If the value passed is 1, it tells TclCurl to use a global DNS cache that
474 will survive between curl handles creations and deletions. This is not thread-safe
475 as it uses a global varible.
477 \fBWARNING:\fP this option is considered obsolete. Stop using it. Switch over
478 to using the share interface instead! See \fItclcurl_share\fP.
482 Pass your preferred size for the receive buffer in TclCurl. The main point of this
483 would be that the write callback gets called more often and with smaller chunks.
484 This is just treated as a request, not an order. You cannot be guaranteed to
485 actually get the given size.
490 Pass the number specifying what remote port to connect to, instead of the one specified
491 in the URL or the default port for the used protocol.
496 Pass a number to specify whether the TCP_NODELAY option should be set or cleared (1 = set, 0 = clear).
497 The option is cleared by default. This will have no effect after the connection has been established.
499 Setting this option will disable TCP's Nagle algorithm. The purpose of this algorithm is to try to
500 minimize the number of small packets on the network (where "small packets" means TCP segments less
501 than the Maximum Segment Size (MSS) for the network).
503 Maximizing the amount of data sent per TCP segment is good because it amortizes the overhead of the
504 send. However, in some cases (most notably telnet or rlogin) small segments may need to be sent without
505 delay. This is less efficient than sending larger amounts of data at a time, and can contribute to
506 congestion on the network if overdone.
510 Pass a number specifying the scope_id value to use when connecting to IPv6 link-local or site-local
513 .SH Names and Passwords options
517 A 1 parameter tells the extension to scan your
519 file to find user name and password for the remote site you are about to
520 access. Do note that TclCurl does not verify that the file has the correct
521 properties set (as the standard unix ftp client does), and that only machine
522 name, user name and password is taken into account (init macros and similar
523 things are not supported).
525 You can set it to the following values:
529 The use of your ~/.netrc file is optional, and information in the URL is to
530 be preferred. The file will be scanned with the host and user name (to find
531 the password only) or with the host only, to find the first user name and
532 password after that machine, which ever information is not specified in
535 Undefined values of the option will have this effect.
538 The extension will ignore the file and use only the information in the URL.
542 This value tells the library that use of the file is required, to ignore
543 the information in the URL, and to search the file with the host only.
548 Pass a string containing the full path name to the file you want to use as .netrc
549 file. For the option to work, you have to set the \fBnetrc\fP option to
550 \fBrequired\fP. If this option is omitted, and \fBnetrc\fP is set, TclCurl
551 will attempt to find the a .netrc file in the current user's home directory.
555 Pass a string as parameter, which should be [username]:[password] to use for
556 the connection. Use \fB-httpauth\fP to decide authentication method.
558 When using NTLM, you can set domain by prepending it to the user name and
559 separating the domain and name with a forward (/) or backward slash (\\). Like
560 this: "domain/user:password" or "domain\\user:password". Some HTTP servers (on
561 Windows) support this style even for Basic authentication.
563 When using HTTP and \fB-followlocation\fP, TclCurl might perform several
564 requests to possibly different hosts. TclCurl will only send this user and
565 password information to hosts using the initial host name (unless
566 \fB-unrestrictedauth\fP is set), so if TclCurl follows locations to other
567 hosts it will not send the user and password to those. This is enforced to
568 prevent accidental information leakage.
572 Pass a string as parameter, which should be [username]:[password] to use for
573 the connection to the HTTP proxy.
577 Pass a string with the user name to use for the transfer. It sets the user name
578 to be used in protocol authentication. You should not use this option together
579 with the (older) \fB-userpwd\fP option.
581 In order to specify the password to be used in conjunction with the user name
582 use the \fB-password\fP option.
586 Pass a string with the password to use for the transfer.
588 It should be used in conjunction with the \fB-username\fP option.
592 Pass a string with the user name to use for the transfer while connecting to Proxy.
594 It should be used in same way as the \fB-proxyuserpwd\fP is used, except that it
595 allows the username to contain a colon, like in the following example:
596 "sip:user@example.com".
598 Note the \fB-proxyusername\fP option is an alternative way to set the user name
599 while connecting to Proxy. It doesn't make sense to use them together.
603 Pass a string with the password to use for the transfer while connecting to Proxy. It
604 is meant to use together with \fB-proxyusername\fP.
608 Set to the authentication method you want, the available ones are:
612 HTTP Basic authentication. This is the default choice, and the only
613 method that is in widespread use and supported virtually everywhere.
614 It sends the user name and password over the network in plain text,
615 easily captured by others.
619 HTTP Digest authentication. Digest authentication is a more secure
620 way to do authentication over public networks than the regular
621 old-fashioned Basic method.
625 HTTP Digest authentication with an IE flavor. TclCurl will use a special
626 "quirk" that IE is known to have used before version 7 and that some
627 servers require the client to use.
631 HTTP GSS-Negotiate authentication. The GSS-Negotiate method, also known as
632 plain "Negotiate",was designed by Microsoft and is used in their web
633 applications. It is primarily meant as a support for Kerberos5 authentication
634 but may be also used along with another authentication methods.
638 HTTP NTLM authentication. A proprietary protocol invented and used by Microsoft.
639 It uses a challenge-response and hash concept similar to Digest, to prevent the
640 password from being eavesdropped.
644 NTLM delegating to winbind helper. Authentication is performed by a separate
645 binary application that is executed when needed. The name of the application is
646 specified at libcurl's compile time but is typically /usr/bin/ntlm_auth.
648 Note that libcurl will fork when necessary to run the winbind application and kill
649 it when complete, calling waitpid() to await its exit when done. On POSIX operating
650 systems, killing the process will cause a SIGCHLD signal to be raised
651 (regardless of whether \fB-nosignal\fP is set). This behavior is subject to change
652 in future versions of libcurl.
656 TclCurl will automatically select the one it finds most secure.
660 It may use anything but basic, TclCurl will automatically select the
661 one it finds most secure.
666 Use it to tell TclCurl which authentication method(s) you want it to use for TLS authentication.
671 TLS-SRP authentication. Secure Remote Password authentication for TLS is
672 defined in RFC 5054 and provides mutual authentication if both sides have a
673 shared secret. To use TLS-SRP, you must also set the
674 \fB-tlsauthusername\fP and \fB-tlsauthpassword\fP options.
676 You need to build libcurl with GnuTLS or OpenSSL with TLS-SRP support for this
682 Pass a string with the username to use for the TLS authentication method specified
683 with the \fB-tlsauthtype\fP option. Requires that the \fB-tlsauthpassword\fP option
688 Pass a string with the password to use for the TLS authentication method specified
689 with the \fB-tlsauthtype\fP option. Requires that the \fB-tlsauthusername\fP option
694 Use it to tell TclCurl which authentication method(s) you want it to use for
695 your proxy authentication. Note that for some methods, this will induce an
696 extra network round-trip. Set the actual name and password with the
697 \fBproxyuserpwd\fP option.
699 The methods are those listed above for the \fBhttpauth\fP option. As of this
700 writing, only Basic and NTLM work.
706 Pass an 1 parameter to enable this. When enabled, TclCurl will
707 automatically set the Referer: field in requests where it follows a Location:
712 Sets the contents of the Accept-Encoding: header sent in an HTTP
713 request, and enables decoding of a response when a Content-Encoding:
714 header is received. Three encodings are supported: \fIidentity\fP,
715 which does nothing, \fIdeflate\fP which requests the server to
716 compress its response using the zlib algorithm, and \fIgzip\fP which
717 requests the gzip algorithm. Use \fIall\fP to send an
718 Accept-Encoding: header containing all supported encodings.
720 This is a request, not an order; the server may or may not do it. This
721 option must be set or else any unsolicited
722 encoding done by the server is ignored. See the special file
723 lib/README.encoding in libcurl docs for details.
727 Adds a request for compressed Transfer Encoding in the outgoing HTTP
728 request. If the server supports this and so desires, it can respond with the
729 HTTP resonse sent using a compressed Transfer-Encoding that will be
730 automatically uncompressed by TclCurl on receival.
732 Transfer-Encoding differs slightly from the Content-Encoding you ask for with
733 \fB-encoding\fP in that a Transfer-Encoding is strictly meant to
734 be for the transfer and thus MUST be decoded before the data arrives in the
735 client. Traditionally, Transfer-Encoding has been much less used and supported
736 by both HTTP clients and HTTP servers.
740 An 1 tells the library to follow any
742 that the server sends as part of a HTTP header.
744 This means that the extension will re-send the same request on the new location
745 and follow new \fBLocation: headers\fP all the way until no more such headers are
746 returned. \fB-maxredirs\fP can be used to limit the number of redirects
749 Since 7.19.4, TclCurl can limit what protocols it will automatically follow.
750 The accepted protocols are set with \fB-redirprotocols\fP and it excludes the FILE
755 An 1 parameter tells the extension it can continue
756 to send authentication (user+password) when following
757 locations, even when hostname changed. Note that this
758 is meaningful only when setting \fB-followlocation\fP.
762 Sets the redirection limit. If that many redirections have been followed,
763 the next redirect will cause an error. This option only makes sense if the
764 \fB-followlocation\fP option is used at the same time. Setting the limit
765 to 0 will make libcurl refuse any redirect. Set it to \-1 for an infinite
766 number of redirects (which is the default)
770 Controls how TclCurl acts on redirects after POSTs that get a 301 or 302 response back.
771 A "301" as parameter tells the TclCurl to respect RFC 2616/10.3.2 and not convert POST
772 requests into GET requests when following a 301 redirection. Passing a "302" makes
773 TclCurl maintain the request method after a 302 redirect. "all" is a convenience string
774 that activates both behaviours.
776 The non-RFC behaviour is ubiquitous in web browsers, so the extension does the conversion
777 by default to maintain consistency. However, a server may require a POST to remain a POST
778 after such a redirection.
780 This option is meaningful only when setting \fB-followlocation\fP
782 The option used to be known as \fB-post301\fP, which should still work but is know
787 An 1 parameter tells the extension to use HTTP PUT a file. The file to put
788 must be set with \fB-infile\fP and \fB-infilesize\fP.
790 This option is deprecated starting with version 0.12.1, you should use \fB-upload\fP.
792 This option does not limit how much data TclCurl will actually send, as that is
793 controlled entirely by what the read callback returns.
797 An 1 parameter tells the library to do a regular HTTP post. This is a
798 normal application/x-www-form-urlencoded kind, which is the most commonly used
799 one by HTML forms. See the \fB-postfields\fP option for how to specify the
800 data to post and \fB-postfieldsize\fP about how to set the data size.
802 Use the \fB-postfields\fP option to specify what data to post and \fB-postfieldsize\fP
803 to set the data size. Optionally, you can provide data to POST using the \fB-readproc\fP
806 You can override the default POST Content-Type: header by setting your own with
809 Using POST with HTTP 1.1 implies the use of a "Expect: 100-continue" header.
810 You can disable this header with \fB-httpheader\fP as usual.
812 If you use POST to a HTTP 1.1 server, you can send data without knowing the
813 size before starting the POST if you use chunked encoding. You enable this
814 by adding a header like "Transfer-Encoding: chunked" with \fB-httpheader\fP.
815 With HTTP 1.0 or without chunked transfer, you must specify the size in the
818 When setting \fBpost\fP to an 1 value, it will automatically set
821 NOTE: if you have issued a POST request and want to make a HEAD or GET instead, you must
822 explicitly pick the new request type using \fB-nobody\fP or \fB-httpget\fP or similar.
826 Pass a string as parameter, which should be the full data to post in a HTTP
827 POST operation. You must make sure that the data is formatted the way you
828 want the server to receive it. TclCurl will not convert or encode it for you.
829 Most web servers will assume this data to be url-encoded.
831 This is a normal application/x-www-form-urlencoded kind,
832 which is the most commonly used one by HTML forms.
834 If you want to do a zero-byte POST, you need to set
835 \fB-postfieldsize\fP explicitly to zero, as simply setting
836 \fB-postfields\fP to NULL or "" just effectively disables the sending
837 of the specified string. TclCurl will instead assume that the POST
838 data will be send using the read callback!
840 Using POST with HTTP 1.1 implies the use of a "Expect: 100-continue" header.
841 You can disable this header with \fB-httpheader\fP as usual.
843 \fBNote\fP: to make multipart/formdata posts (aka rfc1867-posts), check out
844 \fB-httppost\fP option.
848 If you want to post data to the server without letting TclCurl do a strlen()
849 to measure the data size, this option must be used. Also, when this option is
850 used, you can post fully binary data which otherwise is likely to fail. If
851 this size is set to zero, the library will use strlen() to get the data
856 Tells TclCurl you want a multipart/formdata HTTP POST to be made and you
857 instruct what data to pass on to the server through a
860 \fBThis is the only case where the data is reset after a transfer.\fP
862 First, there are some basics you need to understand about multipart/formdata
863 posts. Each part consists of at least a \fBNAME\fP and a \fBCONTENTS\fP part. If the part
864 is made for file upload, there are also a stored \fBCONTENT-TYPE\fP and a
865 \fBFILENAME\fP. Below, we'll discuss on what options you use to set these
866 properties in the parts you want to add to your post.
868 The list must contain a \fB'name'\fP tag with the name of the section followed
869 by a string with the name, there are three tags to indicate the value of
870 the section: \fB'value'\fP followed by a string with the data to post, \fB'file'\fP
871 followed by the name of the file to post and \fB'contenttype'\fP with the
872 type of the data (text/plain, image/jpg, ...), you can also indicate a \fIfalse\fP
873 file name with \fB'filename'\fP, this is useful in case the server checks if the given
874 file name is valid, for example, by testing if it starts with 'c:\\' as any real file
875 name does or if you want to include the full path of the file to post. You can also post
876 the content of a variable as if it were a file with the options \fB'bufferName'\fP and
877 \fB'buffer'\fP or use \fB'filecontent'\fP followed by a file name to read that file and
878 use the contents as data.
880 Should you need to specify extra headers for the form POST section, use
881 \fB'contentheader\fP' followed by a list with the headers to post.
883 Please see 'httpPost.tcl' and 'httpBufferPost.tcl' for examples.
885 If TclCurl can't set the data to post an error will be returned:
889 If the memory allocation fails.
892 If one option is given twice for one form.
895 If an empty string was given.
898 If an unknown option was used.
901 If the some form info is not complete (or error)
904 If an illegal option is used in an array.
907 TclCurl has no http support.
912 Pass a string as parameter. It will be used to set the
914 header in the http request sent to the remote server. This can be used to
915 fool servers or scripts. You can also set any custom header with
920 Pass a string as parameter. It will be used to set the
922 header in the http request sent to the remote server. This can be used to fool
923 servers or scripts. You can also set any custom header with
930 with the HTTP headers to pass to the server in your request.
931 If you add a header that is otherwise generated
932 and used by TclCurl internally, your added one will be used instead. If you
933 add a header with no contents as in 'Accept:', the internally used header will
934 just get disabled. Thus, using this option you can add new headers, replace
935 and remove internal headers.
937 The headers included in the linked list must not be CRLF-terminated, because
938 TclCurl adds CRLF after each header item. Failure to comply with this will
939 result in strange bugs because the server will most likely ignore part of the
940 headers you specified.
942 The first line in a request (containing the method, usually a GET or POST) is
943 not a header and cannot be replaced using this option. Only the lines
944 following the request-line are headers. Adding this method line in this list
945 of headers will only cause your request to send an invalid header.
947 \fBNOTE\fP:The most commonly replaced headers have "shortcuts" in the options:
948 .B cookie, useragent,
954 Pass a list of aliases to be treated as valid HTTP 200 responses. Some servers
955 respond with a custom header response line. For example, IceCast servers respond
956 with "ICY 200 OK". By including this string in your list of aliases, the
957 response will be treated as a valid HTTP header line such as "HTTP/1.0 200 OK".
959 \fBNOTE\fP:The alias itself is not parsed for any version strings. Before version
960 7.16.3, TclCurl used the value set by option \fBhttpversion\fP, but starting with
961 7.16.3 the protocol is assumed to match HTTP 1.0 when an alias matched.
965 Pass a string as parameter.
966 It will be used to set a cookie in the http request. The format of
967 the string should be '[NAME]=[CONTENTS];'. Where NAME is the cookie
968 name and CONTENTS is what the cookie should contain.
970 If you need to set mulitple cookies, you need to set them all using
971 a single option and thus you need to concatenate them all in one single string.
972 Set multiple cookies in one string like this: "name1=content1; name2=content2;"
975 This option sets the cookie header explicitly in the outgoing request(s).
976 If multiple requests are done due to authentication, followed redirections or similar,
977 they will all get this cookie passed on.
979 Using this option multiple times will only make the latest string override
984 Pass a string as parameter. It should contain the name of your file holding
985 cookie data. The cookie data may be in netscape cookie data format or just
986 regular HTTP-style headers dumped to a file.
988 Given an empty or non-existing file, this option will enable cookies for this
989 curl handle, making it understand and parse received cookies and then use
990 matching cookies in future requests.
992 If you use this option multiple times, you add more files to read.
996 Pass a file name in which TclCurl will dump all internally known cookies
998 .B curlHandle cleanup
999 is called. If no cookies are known, no file will be created.
1000 Specify "-" to have the cookies written to stdout.
1002 Using this option also enables cookies for this session, so if you, for
1003 example, follow a location it will make matching cookies get sent accordingly.
1005 TclCurl will not and cannot report an error for this. Using '\fBverbose\fP'
1006 will get a warning to display, but that is the only visible feedback you get
1007 about this possibly lethal situation.
1011 Pass an 1 to mark this as a new cookie "session". It will
1012 force TclCurl to ignore all cookies it is about to load that are "session
1013 cookies" from the previous session. By default, TclCurl always stores and
1014 loads all cookies, independent of whether they are session cookies are not.
1015 Session cookies are cookies without expiry date and they are meant to be
1016 alive and existing for this "session" only.
1020 Pass a string with a cookie. The cookie can be either in Netscape / Mozilla
1021 format or just regular HTTP-style header (Set-Cookie: ...) format. If the
1022 cookie engine was not enabled it will be enabled. Passing a
1023 magic string "ALL" will erase all known cookies while "FLUSH" will write
1024 all cookies known by TclCurl to the file specified by \fB-cookiejar\fP.
1028 If set to 1 forces the HTTP request to get back to GET, usable if
1029 POST, PUT or a custom request have been used previously with the
1032 When setting \fBhttpget\fP to 1, \fBnobody\fP will automatically be set to 0.
1036 Set to one of the values decribed below, they force TclCurl to use the
1037 specific http versions. It should only be used if you really MUST do
1038 that because of a silly remote server.
1042 We do not care about what version the library uses. TclCurl will use whatever
1046 Enforce HTTP 1.0 requests.
1049 Enforce HTTP 1.1 requests.
1052 Enforce HTTP version 2 requests.
1055 Enforce version 2 requests for HTTPS, version 1.1 for HTTP.
1057 .B 2_PRIOR_KNOWLEDGE
1058 Enforce HTTP 2 requests without performing HTTP/1.1 Upgrade first.
1062 .B -ignorecontentlength
1063 Ignore the Content-Length header. This is useful for Apache 1.x (and similar
1064 servers) which will report incorrect content length for files over 2
1065 gigabytes. If this option is used, TclCurl will not be able to accurately
1066 report progress, and will simply stop the download when the server ends the
1070 .B -httpcontentdecoding
1071 Set to zero to disable content decoding. If set to 1 it is enabled. Note however
1072 that TclCurl has no default content decoding but requires you to use \fBencoding\fP for that.
1075 .B -httptransferencoding
1076 Set to zero to disable transfer decoding, if set to 1 it is enabled (default). TclCurl does
1077 chunked transfer decoding by default unless this option is set to zero.
1083 Pass a string to specify the sender address in a mail when sending an SMTP mail with TclCurl.
1087 Pass a list of recipients to pass to the server in your SMTP mail request.
1089 Each recipient in SMTP lingo is specified with angle brackets (<>), but should you not use an
1090 angle bracket as first letter, TclCurl will assume you provide a single email address only and
1091 enclose that with angle brackets for you.
1098 Specify the block size to use for TFTP data transmission. Valid range as per RFC 2348 is 8-65464 bytes.
1099 The default of 512 bytes will be used if this option is not specified. The specified block size will
1100 only be used pending support by the remote server. If the server does not return an option acknowledgement
1101 or returns an option acknowledgement with no blksize, the default of 512 bytes will be used.
1107 Pass a string as parameter. It will be used to
1108 get the IP address to use for the ftp PORT instruction. The PORT instruction
1109 tells the remote server to connect to our specified IP address. The string may
1110 be a plain IP address, a host name, a network interface name (under unix) or
1111 just a '-' to let the library use your systems default IP address. Default FTP
1112 operations are passive, and thus will not use PORT.
1114 The address can be followed by a ':' to specify a port, optionally followed by a '-'
1115 o specify a port range. If the port specified is 0, the operating system will pick
1116 a free port. If a range is provided and all ports in the range are not available,
1117 libcurl will report CURLE_FTP_PORT_FAILED for the handle. Invalid port/range settings
1118 are ignored. IPv6 addresses followed by a port or portrange have to be in brackets.
1119 IPv6 addresses without port/range specifier can be in brackets.
1121 Examples with specified ports:
1123 eth0:0 192.168.1.2:32000-33000 curl.se:32123 [::1]:1234-4567
1125 You disable PORT again and go back to using the passive version by setting this option to
1130 Pass a \fBlist\fP list with the FTP or SFTP commands to pass to the server prior to your
1131 ftp request. This will be done before any other FTP commands are issued (even
1132 before the CWD command).If you do not want to transfer any files, set
1133 \fBnobody\fP to '1' and \fBheader\fP to '0'.
1135 Prefix the command with an asterisk (*) to make TclCurl continue even if the command
1136 fails as by default TclCurl will stop.
1138 Disable this operation again by setting an empty string to this option.
1140 Keep in mind the commands to send must be 'raw' ftp commands, for example, to
1141 create a directory you need to send \fBmkd Test\fP, not \fBmkdir Test\fP.
1143 Valid SFTP commands are: chgrp, chmod, chown, ln, mkdir, pwd, rename, rm,
1148 Pass a \fBlist\fP with the FTP commands to pass to the server after your
1149 ftp transfer request. If you do not want to transfer any files, set
1150 \fBnobody\fP to '1' and \fBheader\fP to '0'.
1154 Pass a \fBlist\fP of FTP or SFTP commands to pass to the server after the
1155 transfer type is set.
1159 A 1 tells the library to just list the names of files in a
1160 directory, instead of doing a full directory listing that would include file
1161 sizes, dates etc. It works with both FTP and SFTP urls.
1163 This causes an FTP NLST command to be sent. Beware that some FTP servers list
1164 only files in their response to NLST, they might not include subdirectories
1167 Setting this option to 1 also implies a directory listing even if the URL
1168 doesn't end with a slash, which otherwise is necessary.
1170 Do NOT use this option if you also use \fB-wildcardmatch\fP as it will
1171 effectively break that feature.
1175 A 1 parameter tells the extension to append to the remote file instead of
1176 overwriting it. This is only useful when uploading to a ftp site.
1180 Set to 1 to tell TclCurl to use the EPRT (and LPRT) command when doing
1181 active FTP downloads (which is enabled by '\fBftpport\fP'). Using EPRT means
1182 that it will first attempt to use EPRT and then LPRT before using PORT, if
1183 you pass zero to this option, it will not try using EPRT or LPRT, only plain PORT.
1187 Set to one to tell TclCurl to use the EPSV command when doing passive FTP
1188 downloads (which it always does by default). Using EPSV means that it will
1189 first attempt to use EPSV before using PASV, but if you pass a zero to this
1190 option, it will not try using EPSV, only plain PASV.
1195 Set to one to tell TclCurl to send a PRET command before PASV (and EPSV). Certain
1196 FTP servers, mainly drftpd, require this non-standard command for directory listings
1197 as well as up and downloads in PASV mode. Has no effect when using the active FTP
1201 .B -ftpcreatemissingdirs
1202 If set to 1, TclCurl will attempt to create any remote directory that it
1203 fails to CWD into. CWD is the command that changes working directory.
1205 This setting also applies to SFTP-connections. TclCurl will attempt to create
1206 the remote directory if it can't obtain a handle to the target-location. The
1207 creation will fail if a file of the same name as the directory to create
1208 already exists or lack of permissions prevents creation.
1210 If set to 2, TclCurl will retry the CWD command again if the subsequent MKD
1211 command fails. This is especially useful if you're doing many simultanoeus
1212 connections against the same server and they all have this option enabled,
1213 as then CWD may first fail but then another connection does MKD before this
1214 connection and thus MKD fails but trying CWD works
1217 .B -ftpresponsetimeout
1218 Causes TclCurl to set a timeout period (in seconds) on the amount of time that
1219 the server is allowed to take in order to generate a response message for a
1220 command before the session is considered hung. Note that while TclCurl is waiting
1221 for a response, this value overrides \fBtimeout\fP. It is recommended that if used
1222 in conjunction with \fBtimeout\fP, you set it to a value smaller than \fBtimeout\fP.
1225 .B -ftpalternativetouser
1226 Pass a string which will be used to authenticate if the usual FTP "USER user" and
1227 "PASS password" negotiation fails. This is currently only known to be required when
1228 connecting to Tumbleweed's Secure Transport FTPS server using client certificates for
1233 If set to 1, it instructs TclCurl not to use the IP address the
1234 server suggests in its 227-response to TclCurl's PASV command when TclCurl
1235 connects the data connection. Instead TclCurl will re-use the same IP address
1236 it already uses for the control connection. But it will use the port number
1237 from the 227-response.
1239 This option has no effect if PORT, EPRT or EPSV is used instead of PASV.
1244 Pass TclCurl one of the values from below, to alter how TclCurl issues
1245 "AUTH TLS" or "AUTH SSL" when FTP over SSL is activated (see \fB-ftpssl\fP).
1247 You may need this option because of servers like BSDFTPD-SSL from
1248 http://bsdftpd-ssl.sc.ru/ "which won't work properly when "AUTH SSL" is issued
1249 (although the server responds fine and everything) but requires "AUTH TLS"
1255 Allows TclCurl to decide.
1258 Try "AUTH SSL" first, and only if that fails try "AUTH TLS".
1261 Try "AUTH TLS" first, and only if that fails try "AUTH SSL".
1266 Set it to make TclCurl use CCC (Clear Command Channel). It shuts down the
1267 SSL/TLS layer after authenticating. The rest of the control channel
1268 communication will be unencrypted. This allows NAT routers to follow the
1269 FTP transaction. Possible values are:
1274 Do not attempt to use CCC.
1277 Do not initiate the shutdown, wait for the server to do it. Do not send a reply.
1280 Initiate the shutdown and wait for a reply.
1285 Pass string (or "" to disable). When an FTP server asks for "account data" after
1286 user name and password has been provided, this data is sent off using the ACCT
1291 It allows three values:
1295 The default, TclCurl will do a single CWD operation for each path part in the given
1296 URL. For deep hierarchies this means very many commands. This is how RFC1738 says it
1300 No CWD at all is done, TclCurl will do SIZE, RETR, STOR, etc and give a full path to
1304 Make one CWD with the full target directory and then operate on the file "normally".
1305 This is somewhat more standards compliant than 'nocwd' but without the full penalty of 'multicwd'.
1308 .SH Protocol options
1312 A 1 tells the extension to use ASCII mode for ftp transfers,
1313 instead of the default binary transfer. For win32 systems it does not set the
1314 stdout to binary mode. This option can be usable when transferring text data
1315 between systems with different views on certain characters, such as newlines
1318 \fBNOTE:\fP TclCurl does not do a complete ASCII conversion when doing ASCII
1319 transfers over FTP. This is a known limitation/flaw that nobody has
1320 rectified. TclCurl simply sets the mode to ascii and performs a standard
1324 .B -proxytransfermode
1325 If set to 1, TclCurl sets the transfer mode (binary or ASCII) for FTP transfers
1326 done via an HTTP proxy, by appending ;type=a or ;type=i to the URL.
1327 Without this setting, or it being set to 0, the default, \fB-transfertext\fP has
1328 no effect when doing FTP via a proxy. Beware that not all proxies support this feature.
1332 If set to '1', TclCurl converts Unix newlines to CRLF newlines on transfers. Disable
1333 this option again by setting the value to '0'.
1337 Pass a string as parameter, which should contain the specified range you
1338 want. It should be in the format
1340 , where X or Y may be left out. HTTP
1341 transfers also support several intervals, separated with commas as in
1343 Using this kind of multiple intervals will cause the HTTP server to send the
1344 response document in pieces (using standard MIME separation techniques).
1346 Ranges only work on HTTP, FTP and FILE transfers.
1350 Pass the offset in number of bytes that you want the transfer to start from.
1351 Set this option to 0 to make the transfer start from the beginning
1352 (effectively disabling resume).
1354 For FTP, set this option to \-1 to make the transfer start from the end of the
1355 target file (useful to continue an interrupted upload).
1357 When doing uploads with FTP, the resume position is where in the local/source
1358 file TclCurl should try to resume the upload from and it will then append the
1359 source file to the remote target file.
1363 Pass a string as parameter. It will be used instead of GET or HEAD when doing
1364 the HTTP request. This is useful for doing DELETE or other more obscure HTTP
1365 requests. Do not do this at will, make sure your server supports the command first.
1367 Note that TclCurl will still act and assume the keyword it would use if you
1368 do not set your custom and it will act according to that. Thus, changing this
1369 to a HEAD when TclCurl otherwise would do a GET might cause TclCurl to act funny,
1370 and similar. To switch to a proper HEAD, use \fB-nobody\fP, to switch to a proper
1371 POST, use \fB-post\fP or \fB-postfields\fP and so on.
1375 If you pass a 1, TclCurl will attempt to get the
1376 modification date of the remote document in this operation. This requires that
1377 the remote server sends the time or replies to a time querying command. The
1378 getinfo procedure with the
1380 argument can be used after a transfer to extract the received time (if any).
1384 A 1 tells the library not to include the body-part in the
1385 output. This is only relevant for protocols that have a separate header and
1386 body part. On HTTP(S) servers, this will make TclCurl do a HEAD request.
1388 To change request to GET, you should use \fBhttpget\fP. Change request
1389 to POST with \fBpost\fP etc.
1393 When uploading a file to a remote site, this option should be used to tell
1394 TclCurl what the expected size of the infile is.
1396 This option is mandatory for uploading using SCP.
1400 A 1 tells the library to prepare for an upload. The
1401 \fB-infile\fP and \fB-infilesize\fP options are also interesting for uploads.
1402 If the protocol is HTTP, uploading means using the PUT request unless you tell
1405 Using PUT with HTTP 1.1 implies the use of a "Expect: 100-continue" header.
1406 You can disable this header with \fB-httpheader\fP as usual.
1408 If you use PUT to a HTTP 1.1 server, you can upload data without knowing the
1409 size before starting the transfer if you use chunked encoding. You enable this
1410 by adding a header like "Transfer-Encoding: chunked" with \fB-httpheader\fP.
1411 With HTTP 1.0 or without chunked transfer, you must specify the size.
1415 This allows you to specify the maximum size (in bytes) of a file to download.
1416 If the file requested is larger than this value, the transfer will not start
1417 and error 'filesize exceeded' (63) will be returned.
1419 NOTE: The file size is not always known prior to download, and for such files
1420 this option has no effect even if the file transfer ends up being larger than
1421 this given limit. This concerns both FTP and HTTP transfers.
1425 This defines how the \fBtimevalue\fP value is treated. You can set this
1426 parameter to \fBifmodsince\fP or \fBifunmodsince\fP. This feature applies to
1431 This should be the time in seconds since 1 jan 1970, and the time will be
1432 used in a condition as specified with \fBtimecondition\fP.
1435 .SH Connection options
1439 Pass the maximum time in seconds that you allow
1440 the TclCurl transfer operation to take. Do note that normally, name lookups
1441 may take a considerable time and that limiting the operation to less than a
1442 few minutes risks aborting perfectly normal operations. This option will
1443 cause libcurl to use the SIGALRM to enable time-outing system calls.
1445 In unix-like systems, this might cause signals to be used unless
1446 \fB-nosignal\fP is used.
1450 Like \fBtimeout\fP but takes a number of milliseconds instead. If libcurl is
1451 built to use the standard system name resolver, that part will still use
1452 full-second resolution for timeouts.
1456 Pass the speed in bytes per second that the transfer should be below during
1458 seconds for the extension to consider it too slow and abort.
1462 Pass the time in seconds that the transfer should be below the
1464 for the extension to consider it too slow and abort.
1468 Pass a speed in bytes per seconds. If an upload exceeds this speed on cumulative
1469 average during the transfer, the transfer will pause to keep the average rate less
1470 than or equal to the parameter value. Defaults to unlimited speed.
1474 Pass a speed in bytes per second. If a download exceeds this speed on cumulative
1475 average during the transfer, the transfer will pause to keep the average rate less
1476 than or equal to the parameter value. Defaults to unlimited speed.
1480 Sets the persistent connection cache size in all the protocols that support
1481 persistent conecctions. The set amount will be the maximum amount of simultaneous
1482 connections that TclCurl may cache in this easy handle. Default is 5, and there
1483 isn't much point in changing this value unless you are perfectly aware of how this
1484 work and changes TclCurl's behaviour.
1486 When reaching the maximum limit, TclCurl closes the oldest connection in the cache
1487 to prevent the number of open connections to increase.
1489 \fBNote\fP: if you have already performed transfers with this curl handle,
1492 than before may cause open connections to unnecessarily get closed.
1494 If you add this easy handle to a multi handle, this setting is not
1495 being acknowledged, instead you must configure the multi handle its own
1496 \fBmaxconnects\fP option.
1500 Maximum time in seconds that you allow the
1501 connection to the server to take. This only limits the connection phase, once
1502 it has connected, this option is of no more use. Set to zero to disable
1503 connection timeout (it will then only timeout on the internal timeouts).
1505 In unix-like systems, this might cause signals to be used unless
1506 \fB-nosignal\fP is set.
1509 .B -connecttimeoutms
1510 Like \fBconnecttimeout\fP but takes a number of milliseconds instead. If libcurl
1511 is built to use the standard system name resolver, that part will still use
1512 full-second resolution for timeouts.
1516 Allows an application to select what kind of IP addresses to use when
1517 resolving host names. This is only interesting when using host names
1518 that resolve addresses using more than one version of IP. The allowed
1523 Default, resolves addresses to all IP versions that your system allows.
1526 Resolve to ipv4 addresses.
1529 Resolve to ipv6 addresses.
1534 Pass a list of strings with host name resolve information to use for requests with
1537 Each single name resolve string should be written using the format
1538 HOST:PORT:ADDRESS where HOST is the name TclCurl will try to resolve, PORT is
1539 the port number of the service where TclCurl wants to connect to the HOST and
1540 ADDRESS is the numerical IP address. If libcurl is built to support IPv6,
1541 ADDRESS can be either IPv4 or IPv6 style addressing.
1543 This option effectively pre-populates the DNS cache with entries for the
1544 host+port pair so redirects and everything that operations against the
1545 HOST+PORT will instead use your provided ADDRESS.
1547 You can remove names from the DNS cache again, to stop providing these fake
1548 resolves, by including a string in the linked list that uses the format
1549 "\-HOST:PORT". The host name must be prefixed with a dash, and the host name
1550 and port number must exactly match what was already added previously.
1554 Pass a one of the values from below to make TclCurl use your desired level of SSL for the transfer.
1555 This is for enabling SSL/TLS when you use FTP, SMTP, POP3, IMAP etc.
1557 You can use ftps:// URLs to explicitly switch on SSL/TSL for the control
1558 connection and the data connection.
1560 Alternatively you can set the option to one of these values:
1565 Do not attempt to use SSL
1568 Try using SSL, proceed anyway otherwise.
1571 Use SSL for the control conecction or fail with "use ssl failed" (64).
1574 Use SSL for all communication or fail with "use ssl failed" (64).
1577 .SH SSL and security options
1581 Pass a string as parameter. The string should be the file name of your certificate.
1582 The default format is "PEM" and can be changed with \fB-sslcerttype\fP.
1584 With NSS this is the nickname of the certificate you wish to authenticate with.
1585 If you want to use a file from the current directory, please precede it with the
1586 "./" prefix, in order to avoid confusion with a nickname.
1590 Pass a string as parameter. The string should be the format of your certificate.
1591 Supported formats are "PEM" and "DER".
1595 Pass a pointer to a zero terminated string as parameter. The string should be
1596 the file name of your private key. The default format is "PEM" and can be
1597 changed with \fB-sslkeytype\fP.
1601 Pass a pointer to a zero terminated string as parameter. The string should be
1602 the format of your private key. Supported formats are "PEM", "DER" and "ENG"
1604 \fBNOTE:\fPThe format "ENG" enables you to load the private key from a crypto
1605 engine. in this case \fB-sslkey\fP is used as an identifier passed to
1606 the engine. You have to set the crypto engine with \fB-sslengine\fP. The "DER"
1607 format key file currently does not work because of a bug in OpenSSL.
1611 Pass a string as parameter. It will be used as the password required to use the
1612 \fB-sslkey\fP or \fB-sshprivatekeyfile\fP private key.
1614 You never need a pass phrase to load a certificate but you need one to load you
1617 This option used to be known as \fB-sslkeypasswd\fP and \fB-sslcertpasswd\fP.
1621 Pass a string as parameter. It will be used as the identifier for the crypto
1622 engine you want to use for your private key.
1624 \fBNOTE:\fPIf the crypto device cannot be loaded, an error will be returned.
1627 .B -sslenginedefault
1628 Pass a 1 to set the actual crypto engine as the default for (asymmetric) crypto operations.
1630 \fBNOTE:\fPIf the crypto device cannot be set, an error will be returned.
1634 Use it to set what version of SSL/TLS to use. The available options are:
1638 The default action. This will attempt to figure out the remote SSL protocol version,
1639 i.e. either SSLv3 or TLSv1 (but not SSLv2, which became disabled by default with 7.18.1).
1662 This option determines whether TclCurl verifies the authenticity of the peer's certificate.
1663 A 1 means it verifies; zero means it doesn't. The default is 1.
1665 When negotiating an SSL connection, the server sends a certificate indicating its identity.
1666 TclCurl verifies whether the certificate is authentic, i.e. that you can trust that the
1667 server is who the certificate says it is. This trust is based on a chain of digital signatures,
1668 rooted in certification authority (CA) certificates you supply.
1670 TclCurl uses a default bundle of CA certificates that comes with libcurl but you can specify
1671 alternate certificates with the \fB-cainfo\fP or the \fB-capath\fP options.
1673 When \fB-sslverifypeer\fP is nonzero, and the verification fails to prove that the certificate
1674 is authentic, the connection fails. When the option is zero, the peer certificate verification
1675 succeeds regardless.
1677 Authenticating the certificate is not by itself very useful. You typically want to ensure
1678 that the server, as authentically identified by its certificate, is the server you mean to
1679 be talking to, use \fB-sslverifyhost\fP to control that. The check that the host name in
1680 the certificate is valid for the host name you're connecting to is done
1681 independently of this option.
1685 Pass a file naming holding the certificate to verify the peer with. This only
1686 makes sense when used in combination with the \fB-sslverifypeer\fP option, if
1687 it is set to zero \fB-cainfo\fP need not even indicate an accessible file.
1689 This option is by default set to the system path where libcurl's cacert bundle
1690 is assumed to be stored, as established at build time.
1692 When built against NSS this is the directory that the NSS certificate database
1697 Pass a string naming a file holding a CA certificate in PEM format. If the option
1698 is set, an additional check against the peer certificate is performed to verify
1699 the issuer is indeed the one associated with the certificate provided by the option.
1700 This additional check is useful in multi-level PKI where one need to enforce the peer
1701 certificate is from a specific branch of the tree.
1703 This option makes sense only when used in combination with the \fB-sslverifypeer\fP
1704 option. Otherwise, the result of the check is not considered as failure.
1708 Pass the directory holding multiple CA certificates to verify the peer with.
1709 If libcurl is built against OpenSSL, the certificate directory must be prepared
1710 using the openssl c_rehash utility.
1711 This only makes sense when used in combination with the \fB-sslverifypeer\fP
1712 option, if it is set to zero, \fB-capath\fP need not even indicate an accessible
1715 This option apparently does not work in Windows due to some limitation in openssl.
1717 This option is OpenSSL-specific and does nothing if libcurl is built to use GnuTLS.
1718 NSS-powered libcurl provides the option only for backward compatibility.
1722 Pass a string naming a file with the concatenation of CRL (in PEM format) to use in
1723 the certificate validation that occurs during the SSL exchange.
1725 When libcurl is built to use NSS or GnuTLS, there is no way to influence the use of
1726 CRL passed to help in the verification process. When built with OpenSSL support,
1727 X509_V_FLAG_CRL_CHECK and X509_V_FLAG_CRL_CHECK_ALL are both set, requiring CRL
1728 check against all the elements of the certificate chain if a CRL file is passed.
1730 This option makes sense only when used in combination with the \fB-sslverifypeer\fP
1733 A specific error code (CURLE_SSL_CRL_BADFILE) is defined with the option. It is returned
1734 when the SSL exchange fails because the CRL file cannot be loaded. A failure in certificate
1735 verification due to a revocation information found in the CRL does not trigger this specific
1740 This option determines whether TclCurl verifies that the server claims to be
1741 who you want it to be.
1743 When negotiating an SSL connection, the server sends a certificate
1744 indicating its identity.
1746 When \fB-sslverifyhost\fP is set to 2, that certificate must indicate
1747 that the server is the server to which you meant to connect, or the
1750 TclCurl considers the server the intended one when the Common Name field
1751 or a Subject Alternate Name field in the certificate matches the host
1752 name in the URL to which you told Curl to connect.
1754 When set to 1, the certificate must contain a Common Name field,
1755 but it does not matter what name it says. (This is not ordinarily a
1758 When the value is 0, the connection succeeds regardless of the names in
1761 The default value for this option is 2.
1763 This option controls the identity that the server \fIclaims\fP. The server
1764 could be lying. To control lying, see \fB-sslverifypeer\fP. If libcurl is built
1765 against NSS and \fB-verifypeer\fP is zero, \fB-verifyhost\fP is ignored.
1769 Set to '1' to enable TclCurl's certificate chain info gatherer. With this enabled, TclCurl
1770 (if built with OpenSSL) will extract lots of information and data about the certificates
1771 in the certificate chain used in the SSL connection. This data can then be to extracted
1772 after a transfer using the \fBgetinfo\fP command and its option \fBcertinfo\fP.
1776 Pass a file name. The file will be used to read from to seed the random engine
1777 for SSL. The more random the specified file is, the more secure the SSL
1782 Pass a path name to the Entropy Gathering Daemon socket. It will be used to seed
1783 the random engine for SSL.
1787 Pass a string holding the ciphers to use for the SSL connection. The list must
1788 consists of one or more cipher strings separated by colons. Commas or spaces
1789 are also acceptable separators but colons are normally used, , - and + can be
1792 For OpenSSL and GnuTLS valid examples of cipher lists include 'RC4-SHA', 'SHA1+DES',
1793 \&'TLSv1' and 'DEFAULT'. The default list is normally set when you compile OpenSSL.
1795 You will find more details about cipher lists on this URL:
1796 http://www.openssl.org/docs/apps/ciphers.html
1798 For NSS valid examples of cipher lists include 'rsa_rc4_128_md5', 'rsa_aes_128_sha',
1799 etc. With NSS you don't add/remove ciphers. If you use this option then all known
1800 ciphers are disabled and only those passed in are enabled.
1802 You'll find more details about the NSS cipher lists on this URL:
1803 <http://directory.fedora.redhat.com/docs/mod_nss.html>
1806 .B -sslsessionidcache
1807 Pass a 0 to disable TclCurl's use of SSL session-ID caching or a 1 to enable it.
1808 By default all transfers are done using the cache. While nothing ever
1809 should get hurt by attempting to reuse SSL session-IDs, there seem to be broken SSL
1810 implementations in the wild that may require you to disable this in order for you to
1815 Set the kerberos security level for FTP, this also enables kerberos awareness.
1816 This is a string, 'clear', 'safe', 'confidential' or 'private'. If the string
1817 is set but does not match one of these, 'private' will be used. Set the string
1818 to NULL to disable kerberos4. Set the string to "" to disable kerberos
1822 .B -gssapidelegation
1823 Set the option to 'flag' to allow unconditional GSSAPI credential delegation. The delegation
1824 is disabled by default since 7.21.7. Set the parameter to 'policyflag' to delegate only if
1825 the OK-AS-DELEGATE flag is set in the service ticket in case this feature is supported by the
1826 GSSAPI implementation and the definition of GSS_C_DELEG_POLICY_FLAG was available at compile-time.
1833 The allowed types are:
1846 To let TclCurl pick one
1850 .B -sshhostpublickeymd5
1851 Pass a string containing 32 hexadecimal digits. The string should be the 128
1852 bit MD5 cheksum of the remote host public key, and TclCurl will reject the
1853 connection to the host unless the md5sums match. This option is only for SCP
1858 Pass the file name for your public key. If not used, TclCurl defaults to using \fB$HOME/.ssh/id_dsa.pub\fP.
1859 HOME environment variable is set, and just \fBid_dsa\fP in the current directory if not.
1863 Pass the file name for your private key. If not used, TclCurl defaults to using \fB$HOME/.ssh/id_dsa.pub\fP.
1864 HOME environment variable is set, and just \fBid_dsa\fP in the current directory if not.
1865 If the file is password-protected, set the password with \fB-keypasswd\fP.
1869 Pass a string holding the file name of the known_host file to use. The known_hosts
1870 file should use the OpenSSH file format as supported by libssh2. If this file is
1871 specified, TclCurl will only accept connections with hosts that are known and present
1872 in that file, with a matching public key. Use \fB-sshkeyproc\fP to alter the default
1873 behavior on host and key (mis)matching.
1877 Pass a the name of the procedure that will be called when the known_host matching has
1878 been done, to allow the application to act and decide for TclCurl how to proceed. The
1879 callback will only be called if \fB-knownhosts\fP is also set.
1881 It gets passed a list with three elements, the first one is a list with the type of the
1882 key from the known_hosts file and the key itself, the second is another list with
1883 the type of the key from the remote site and the key itslef, the third tells you
1884 what TclCurl thinks about the matching status.
1886 The known key types are: "rsa", "rsa1" and "dss", in any other case "unknown" is given.
1888 TclCurl opinion about how they match may be: "match", "mismatch", "missing" or "error".
1890 The procedure must return:
1894 The host+key is accepted and TclCurl will append it to the known_hosts file before
1895 continuing with the connection. This will also add the host+key combo to the known_host
1896 pool kept in memory if it wasn't already present there. The adding of data to
1897 the file is done by completely replacing the file with a new copy, so the permissions of
1898 the file must allow this.
1901 The host+key is accepted, TclCurl will continue with the connection. This will also add
1902 the host+key combo to the known_host pool kept in memory if it wasn't already present
1906 The host+key is rejected. TclCurl will close the connection.
1909 The host+key is rejected, but the SSH connection is asked to be kept alive. This feature
1910 could be used when the app wants to somehow return back and act on the host+key situation
1911 and then retry without needing the overhead of setting it up from scratch again.
1914 Any other value will cause the connection to be closed.
1920 Name of the Tcl array variable where TclCurl will store the headers returned
1925 Name of the Tcl variable where TclCurl will store the file requested, the file
1926 may contain text or binary data.
1930 Name of a Tcl variable, in case you have defined a procedure to call with
1931 \fB-progressproc\fP setting this variable to '1' will cancel the transfer.
1935 Executes the given command after the transfer is done, since it only works
1936 with blocking transfers, it is pretty much useless.
1940 Pass a share handle as a parameter. The share handle must have been created by
1941 a previous call to \fBcurl::shareinit\fP. Setting this option, will make this
1942 handle use the data from the shared handle instead of keeping the data to itself.
1943 See \fItclcurl_share\fP for details.
1947 Pass a number as a parameter, containing the value of the permissions that will
1948 be assigned to newly created files on the remote server. The default value is 0644,
1949 but any valid value can be used. The only protocols that can use this are sftp://,
1953 .B -newdirectoryperms
1954 Pass a number as a parameter, containing the value of the permissions that will be
1955 assigned to newly created directories on the remote server. The default value is 0755,
1956 but any valid value can be used. The only protocols that can use this are sftp://, scp://
1963 Pass a list with variables to pass to the telnet negotiations. The variables should be in
1964 the format <option=value>. TclCurl supports the options 'TTYPE', 'XDISPLOC' and 'NEW_ENV'.
1965 See the TELNET standard for details.
1968 Some of the options libcurl offers are not supported, I don't think them
1969 worth supporting in TclCurl but if you need one of them don't forget to
1972 .B CURLOPT_FRESH_CONNECT, CURLOPT_FORBID_REUSE, CURLOPT_PRIVATE,
1973 .B CURLOPT_SSL_CTX_FUNCTION, CURLOPT_SSL_CTX_DATA, CURLOPT_SSL_CTX_FUNCTION and
1974 .B CURLOPT_CONNECT_ONLY, CURLOPT_OPENSOCKETFUNCTION, CURLOPT_OPENSOCKETDATA.
1976 .SH curlHandle perform
1977 This procedure is called after the
1981 calls are made, and will perform the transfer as described in the options.
1983 It must be called with the same
1984 \fIcurlHandle\fP \fBcurl::init\fP call returned.
1985 You can do any amount of calls to perform while using the same handle. If you
1986 intend to transfer more than one file, you are even encouraged to do
1987 so. TclCurl will then attempt to re-use the same connection for the following
1988 transfers, thus making the operations faster, less CPU intense and using less
1989 network resources. Just note that you will have to use
1991 between the invokes to set options for the following perform.
1993 You must never call this procedure simultaneously from two places using the
1994 same handle. Let it return first before invoking it another time. If
1995 you want parallel transfers, you must use several curl handles.
1998 \&'0' if all went well, non-zero if it didn't. In case of error, if the
2002 there will be a readable error message.
2003 The error codes are:
2005 Unsupported protocol. This build of TclCurl has no support for this protocol.
2007 Very early initialization code failed. This is likely to be and internal error
2008 or a resource problem where something fundamental couldn't get done at init time.
2010 URL malformat. The syntax was not correct.
2012 A requested feature, protocol or option was not found built-in in this libcurl
2013 due to a build-time decision. This means that a feature or option was not
2014 enabled or explicitly disabled when libcurl was built and in order to get it
2015 to function you have to get a rebuilt libcurl.
2017 Couldn't resolve proxy. The given proxy host could not be resolved.
2019 Couldn't resolve host. The given remote host was not resolved.
2021 Failed to connect to host or proxy.
2023 FTP weird server reply. The server sent data TclCurl couldn't parse.
2024 The given remote server is probably not an OK FTP server.
2026 We were denied access to the resource given in the URL. For FTP, this occurs
2027 while trying to change to the remote directory.
2029 FTP weird PASS reply. TclCurl couldn't parse the reply sent to the PASS request.
2031 FTP weird PASV reply, TclCurl couldn't parse the reply sent to the PASV or EPSV
2034 FTP weird 227 format. TclCurl couldn't parse the 227-line the server sent.
2036 FTP can't get host. Couldn't resolve the host IP we got in the 227-line.
2038 FTP couldn't set type. Couldn't change transfer method to either binary or
2041 Partial file. Only a part of the file was transfered, this happens when
2042 the server first reports an expected transfer size and then delivers data
2043 that doesn't match the given size.
2045 FTP couldn't RETR file, we either got a weird reply to a 'RETR' command or
2046 a zero byte transfer.
2048 Quote error. A custom 'QUOTE' returned error code 400 or higher (for FTP) or
2049 otherwise indicated unsuccessful completion of the command.
2051 HTTP returned error. This return code only appears if \fB-failonerror\fP is
2052 used and the HTTP server returns an error code that is 400 or higher.
2054 Write error. TclCurl couldn't write data to a local filesystem or an error
2055 was returned from a write callback.
2057 Failed upload failed. For FTP, the server typcially denied the STOR
2058 command. The error buffer usually contains the server's explanation to this.
2060 Read error. There was a problem reading from a local file or an error was returned
2061 from the read callback.
2063 Out of memory. A memory allocation request failed. This should never happen unless
2064 something weird is going on in your computer.
2066 Operation timeout. The specified time-out period was reached according to the
2069 The FTP PORT command failed, not all FTP servers support the PORT command,
2070 try doing a transfer using PASV instead!.
2072 FTP couldn't use REST. This command is used for resumed FTP transfers.
2074 Range error. The server doesn't support or accept range requests.
2076 HTTP post error. Internal post-request generation error.
2078 SSL connect error. The SSL handshaking failed, the error buffer may have
2079 a clue to the reason, could be certificates, passwords, ...
2081 The download could not be resumed because the specified offset was out of the
2084 A file given with FILE:// couldn't be read. Did you checked the permissions?
2086 LDAP cannot bind. LDAP bind operation failed.
2090 A required zlib function was not found.
2092 Aborted by callback. An application told TclCurl to abort the operation.
2094 Internal error. A function was called with a bad parameter.
2096 Interface error. A specified outgoing interface could not be used.
2098 Too many redirects. When following redirects, TclCurl hit the maximum amount, set
2099 your limit with \-\-maxredirs
2101 An option passed to TclCurl is not recognized/known. Refer to the appropriate
2102 documentation. This is most likely a problem in the program that uses
2103 TclCurl. The error buffer might contain more specific information about which
2104 exact option it concerns.
2106 A telnet option string was illegally formatted.
2108 The remote peer's SSL certificate or SSH md5 fingerprint wasn't ok
2110 The server didn't reply anything, which here is considered an error.
2112 The specified crypto engine wasn't found.
2114 Failed setting the selected SSL crypto engine as default!
2116 Failed sending network data.
2118 Failure with receiving network data.
2120 Problem with the local client certificate.
2122 Couldn't use specified SSL cipher.
2124 Peer certificate cannot be authenticated with known CA certificates.
2126 Unrecognized transfer encoding.
2130 Maximum file size exceeded.
2134 Sending the data requires a rewind that failed, since TclCurl should
2135 take care of it for you, it means you found a bug.
2137 Failed to initialise ssl engine.
2139 Failed to login, user password or similar was not accepted.
2141 File not found on TFTP server.
2143 There is a permission problem with the TFTP request.
2145 The remote server has run out of space.
2147 Illegal TFTP operation.
2149 Unknown transfer ID.
2151 TFTP file already exists and will not be overwritten.
2153 No such user in the TFTP server and good behaving TFTP servers
2154 should never return this.
2156 Character conversion failed.
2158 Problem with reading the SSL CA cert (path? access rights?).
2160 Remote file not found
2162 Error from the SSH layer
2164 Failed to shut down the SSL connection
2166 Failed to load CRL file
2170 The FTP server does not understand the PRET command at all or does not support
2171 the given argument. Be careful when using \fB-customrequest\fP, a
2172 custom LIST command will be sent with PRET CMD before PASV as well.
2174 Mismatch of RTSP CSeq numbers.
2176 Mismatch of RTSP Session Identifiers.
2178 Unable to parse FTP file list (during FTP wildcard downloading).
2180 Chunk callback reported error.
2182 .SH curlHandle getinfo option
2183 Request internal information from the curl session with this procedure.
2184 This procedure is intended to get used *AFTER* a performed transfer,
2185 and can be relied upon only if the \fBperform\fP returns 0. Use
2186 this function AFTER a performed transfer if you want to get
2187 transfer-oriented data.
2189 The following information can be extracted:
2193 Returns the last used effective URL.
2197 Returns the last received HTTP or FTP code. This will be zero if no server
2198 response code has been received. Note that a proxy's CONNECT response should
2199 be read with \fBhttpconnectcode\fP and not this.
2203 Returns the last received proxy response code to a CONNECT request.
2207 Returns the remote time of the retrieved document (in number of seconds
2208 since 1 jan 1970 in the GMT/UTC time zone). If you get \-1,
2209 it can be because of many reasons (unknown, the server hides it or the
2210 server doesn't support the command that tells document time etc) and the time
2211 of the document is unknown.
2213 In order for this to work you have to set the \fB-filetime\fP option before
2218 Returns the time, in seconds, it took from the start until the name resolving
2223 Returns the time, in seconds, it took from the start until the connect to the
2224 remote host (or proxy) was completed.
2228 Returns the time, in seconds, it took from the start until the SSL/SSH
2229 connect/handshake to the remote host was completed. This time is most often very
2230 near to the PRETRANSFER time, except for cases such as HTTP pippelining where the
2231 pretransfer time can be delayed due to waits in line for the pipeline and more.
2235 Returns the time, in seconds, it took from the start until the file transfer
2236 is just about to begin. This includes all pre-transfer commands and
2237 negotiations that are specific to the particular protocol(s) involved.
2240 .B starttransfertime
2241 Returns the time, in seconds, it took from the start until the first byte
2242 is just about to be transfered. This includes the \fBpretransfertime\fP,
2243 and also the time the server needs to calculate the result.
2247 Returns the total transaction time, in seconds, for the previous transfer,
2248 including name resolving, TCP connect etc.
2252 Returns the URL a redirect would take you to if you enable \fBfollowlocation\fP.
2253 This can come very handy if you think using the built-in libcurl redirect logic
2254 isn't good enough for you but you would still prefer to avoid implementing all
2255 the magic of figuring out the new URL.
2259 Returns the total time, in seconds, it took for all redirection steps
2260 including name lookup, connect, pretransfer and transfer before
2261 the final transaction was started, it returns the complete execution
2262 time for multiple redirections, so it returns zero if no redirections
2267 Returns the total number of redirections that were actually followed.
2271 Returns how many new connections TclCurl had to create to achieve the
2272 previous transfer (only the successful connects are counted). Combined
2273 with \fBredirectcount\fP you are able to know how many times TclCurl
2274 successfully reused existing connection(s) or not. See the Connection
2275 Options of \fBsetopt\fP to see how TclCurl tries to make persistent
2276 connections to save time.
2280 Returns the IP address of the most recent connection done with this handle.
2281 This string may be IPv6 if that's enabled.
2285 Returns the destination port of the most recent connection done with this handle.
2289 Returns the local (source) IP address of the most recent connection done
2290 with this handle. This string may be IPv6 if that's enabled.
2294 Returns the local (source) port of the most recent connection done with this handle.
2298 Returns the total amount of bytes that were uploaded.
2302 Returns the total amount of bytes that were downloaded. The amount is only
2303 for the latest transfer and will be reset again for each new transfer.
2307 Returns the average download speed, measured in bytes/second, for the complete download.
2311 Returns the average upload speed, measured in bytes/second, for the complete upload.
2315 Returns the total size in bytes of all the headers received.
2319 Returns the total size of the issued requests. This is so far only for HTTP
2320 requests. Note that this may be more than one request if followLocation is true.
2324 Returns the result of the certification verification that was requested
2325 (using the \-sslverifypeer option to configure).
2329 Returns a \fBlist\fP of the OpenSSL crypto-engines supported. Note that engines are
2330 normally implemented in separate dynamic libraries. Hence not all the returned
2331 engines may be available at run-time.
2334 .B contentlengthdownload
2335 Returns the content-length of the download. This is the value read from the
2337 field. If the size isn't known, it returns \-1.
2340 .B contentlengthupload
2341 Returns the specified size of the upload.
2345 Returns the content-type of the downloaded object. This is the value
2346 read from the Content-Type: field. If you get an empty string, it means
2347 the server didn't send a valid Content-Type header or that the protocol
2348 used doesn't support this.
2352 Returns a list with the authentication method(s) available.
2356 Returns a list with the authentication method(s) available for your
2357 proxy athentication.
2361 Returns the errno value from a connect failure. This value is only set on
2362 failure, it is no reset after a successfull operation.
2366 Returns a list of all cookies TclCurl knows (expired ones, too). If there
2367 are no cookies (cookies for the handle have not been enabled or simply
2368 none have been received) the list will be empty.
2372 Returns a string holding the path of the entry path. That is the initial path
2373 TclCurl ended up in when logging on to the remote FTP server. Returns an empty
2374 string if something is wrong.
2378 Returns list with information about the certificate chain, assuming you had the
2379 \fB-certinfo\fP option enabled when the previous request was done. The list
2380 first item reports how many certs it found and then you can extract info for each
2381 of those certs by following the list. The info chain is provided in a series of data
2382 in the format "name:content" where the content is for the specific named data.
2384 NOTE: this option is only available in libcurl built with OpenSSL support.
2388 Returns the number 1 if the condition provided in the previous request
2389 didn't match (see \fItimecondition\fP), you will get a zero if the condition
2392 .SH curlHandle cleanup
2393 This procedure must be the last one to call for a curl session. It is the
2396 procedure and must be called with the same
2398 as input as the curl::init call returned.
2399 This will effectively close all connections TclCurl has used and possibly
2400 has kept open until now. Don't call this procedure if you intend to transfer
2403 .SH curlHandle reset
2405 Re-initializes all options previously set on a specified handle to the
2408 This puts back the handle to the same state as it was in when it was just
2409 created with curl::init.
2411 It does not change the following information kept in the handle: live
2412 connections, the Session ID cache, the DNS cache, the cookies and shares.
2414 .SH curlHandle duphandle
2415 This procedure will return a new curl handle, a duplicate,
2416 using all the options previously set in the input curl handle.
2417 Both handles can subsequently be used independently and
2418 they must both be freed with
2420 The new handle will not inherit any state information,
2421 connections, SSL sessions or cookies.
2424 A new curl handle or an error message if the copy fails.
2426 .SH curlHandle pause
2427 You can use this command from within a progress callback procedure
2428 to pause the transfer.
2430 .SH curlHandle resume
2431 Resumes a transfer paused with \fBcurlhandle pause\fP
2434 In case you do not want to use persistent connections you can use this
2435 command, it takes the same arguments as the \fIcurlHandle\fP \fBconfigure\fP
2436 and will init, configure, perform and cleanup a connection for you.
2438 You can also get the \fIgetinfo\fP information by using \fI-infooption variable\fP
2439 pairs, after the transfer \fIvariable\fP will contain the value that would have
2440 been returned by \fI$curlHandle getinfo option\fP.
2443 The same error code \fBperform\fP would return.
2446 Returns a string with the version number of tclcurl, libcurl and some of
2447 its important components (like OpenSSL version).
2450 The string with the version info.
2452 .SH curl::escape url
2453 This procedure will convert the given input string to an URL encoded string and
2454 return that. All input characters that are not a-z,
2455 A-Z or 0-9 will be converted to their "URL escaped" version (%NN where NN is a
2456 two-digit hexadecimal number)
2459 The converted string.
2460 .SH curl::unescape url
2461 This procedure will convert the given URL encoded input string to a "plain
2462 string" and return that. All input characters that
2463 are URL encoded (%XX where XX is a two-digit hexadecimal number) will be
2464 converted to their plain text versions.
2467 The string unencoded.
2469 .SH curl::curlConfig option
2470 Returns some information about how you have
2476 Returns the directory root where you installed
2480 Returns a list containing particular main features the installed
2482 was built with. The list may include SSL, KRB4 or IPv6, do not
2483 assume any particular order.
2486 Outputs version information about the installed libcurl, in
2487 numerical mode. This outputs the version number, in hexadecimal,
2488 with 8 bits for each part; major, minor, patch. So that libcurl
2489 7.7.4 would appear as 070704 and libcurl 12.13.14 would appear as
2492 .SH curl::versioninfo option
2493 Returns information about various run-time features in TclCurl.
2495 Applications should use this information to judge if things are possible to do
2496 or not, instead of using compile-time checks, as dynamic/DLL libraries can be
2497 changed independent of applications.
2501 Returns the version of libcurl we are using.
2505 Retuns the version of libcurl we are using in hexadecimal with 8 bits for each
2506 part; major, minor, patch. So that libcurl 7.7.4 would appear as 070704 and
2507 libcurl 12.13.14 would appear as 0c0d0e... Note that the initial zero might be
2512 Returns a string with the host information as discovered by a configure
2513 script or set by the build environment.
2517 Returns a list with the features compiled into libcurl, the possible elements are:
2521 Libcurl was built with support for asynchronous name lookups, which allows
2522 more exact timeouts (even on Windows) and less blocking when using the multi
2526 Libcurl was built with support for character conversions.
2529 Libcurl was built with extra debug capabilities built-in. This is mainly of
2530 interest for libcurl hackers.
2533 Supports HTTP GSS-Negotiate.
2536 Supports IDNA, domain names with international letters.
2542 Supports kerberos4 (when using FTP).
2545 Libcurl was built with support for large files.
2548 Supports HTTP deflate using libz.
2554 Libcurl was built with support for SPNEGO authentication (Simple and Protected
2555 GSS-API Negotiation Mechanism, defined in RFC 2478)
2558 Supports SSL (HTTPS/FTPS)
2561 Libcurl was built with support for SSPI. This is only available on Windows and
2562 makes libcurl use Windows-provided functions for NTLM authentication. It also
2563 allows libcurl to use the current user and the current user's password without
2564 the app having to pass them on.
2567 Libcurl was built with support for TLS-SRP.
2569 Libcurl was built with support for NTLM delegation to a winbind helper.
2571 Do not assume any particular order.
2575 Returns a string with the OpenSSL version used, like OpenSSL/0.9.6b.
2579 Returns the numerical OpenSSL version value as defined by the OpenSSL project.
2580 If libcurl has no SSL support, this is 0.
2584 Returns a string, there is no numerical version, for example: 1.1.3.
2588 Lists what particular protocols the installed TclCurl was built to support.
2589 At the time of writing, this list may include HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, FTPS,
2590 FILE, TELNET, LDAP, DICT. Do not assume any particular order. The protocols
2591 will be listed using uppercase. There may be none, one or several protocols
2594 .SH curl::easystrerror errorCode
2595 This procedure returns a string describing the error code passed in the argument.
2598 .I curl, The art of HTTP scripting (at http://curl.haxx.se), RFC 2396,