curl/docs/cmdline-opts/data.d
Frank Gevaerts 7c189c6608
curl.1: Fix cmdline-opts reference errors.
--data, --form, and --ntlm were declared to be mutually exclusive with
non-existing options. --data and --form referred to --upload (which is
short for --upload-file and therefore did work, so this one was merely
a bit confusing), --ntlm referred to --negotiated instead of --negotiate.

Closes #2612
2018-05-28 15:02:03 +02:00

31 lines
1.4 KiB
Makefile

Long: data
Short: d
Arg: <data>
Help: HTTP POST data
Protocols: HTTP
See-also: data-binary data-urlencode data-raw
Mutexed: form head upload-file
---
Sends the specified data in a POST request to the HTTP server, in the same way
that a browser does when a user has filled in an HTML form and presses the
submit button. This will cause curl to pass the data to the server using the
content-type application/x-www-form-urlencoded. Compare to --form.
--data-raw is almost the same but does not have a special interpretation of
the @ character. To post data purely binary, you should instead use the
--data-binary option. To URL-encode the value of a form field you may use
--data-urlencode.
If any of these options is used more than once on the same command line, the
data pieces specified will be merged together with a separating
&-symbol. Thus, using '-d name=daniel -d skill=lousy' would generate a post
chunk that looks like \&'name=daniel&skill=lousy'.
If you start the data with the letter @, the rest should be a file name to
read the data from, or - if you want curl to read the data from
stdin. Multiple files can also be specified. Posting data from a file named
'foobar' would thus be done with --data @foobar. When --data is told to read
from a file like that, carriage returns and newlines will be stripped out. If
you don't want the @ character to have a special interpretation use --data-raw
instead.