curl/docs/cmdline-opts/quote.md
Daniel Stenberg 911fc964a1
cmdline-docs: quote and angle bracket cleanup
- make sure angle brackets are escaped
- remove a lot of superfluous double quotes
- replace several double quotes with backticks

To make nicer-looking markdown.

Closes #12884
2024-02-07 08:35:28 +01:00

3.2 KiB

c SPDX-License-Identifier Long Arg Short Help Protocols Category Added Multi See-also Example
Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, <daniel@haxx.se>, et al. curl quote <command> Q Send command(s) to server before transfer FTP SFTP ftp sftp 5.3 append
request
--quote "DELE file" ftp://example.com/foo

--quote

Send an arbitrary command to the remote FTP or SFTP server. Quote commands are sent BEFORE the transfer takes place (just after the initial PWD command in an FTP transfer, to be exact). To make commands take place after a successful transfer, prefix them with a dash '-'.

(FTP only) To make commands be sent after curl has changed the working directory, just before the file transfer command(s), prefix the command with a '+'. This is not performed when a directory listing is performed.

You may specify any number of commands.

By default curl stops at first failure. To make curl continue even if the command fails, prefix the command with an asterisk (*). Otherwise, if the server returns failure for one of the commands, the entire operation is aborted.

You must send syntactically correct FTP commands as RFC 959 defines to FTP servers, or one of the commands listed below to SFTP servers.

SFTP is a binary protocol. Unlike for FTP, curl interprets SFTP quote commands itself before sending them to the server. File names may be quoted shell-style to embed spaces or special characters. Following is the list of all supported SFTP quote commands:

atime date file

The atime command sets the last access time of the file named by the file operand. The date expression can be all sorts of date strings, see the curl_getdate(3) man page for date expression details. (Added in 7.73.0)

chgrp group file

The chgrp command sets the group ID of the file named by the file operand to the group ID specified by the group operand. The group operand is a decimal integer group ID.

chmod mode file

The chmod command modifies the file mode bits of the specified file. The mode operand is an octal integer mode number.

chown user file

The chown command sets the owner of the file named by the file operand to the user ID specified by the user operand. The user operand is a decimal integer user ID.

ln source_file target_file

The ln and symlink commands create a symbolic link at the target_file location pointing to the source_file location.

mkdir directory_name

The mkdir command creates the directory named by the directory_name operand.

mtime date file

The mtime command sets the last modification time of the file named by the file operand. The date expression can be all sorts of date strings, see the curl_getdate(3) man page for date expression details. (Added in 7.73.0)

pwd

The pwd command returns the absolute path name of the current working directory.

rename source target

The rename command renames the file or directory named by the source operand to the destination path named by the target operand.

rm file

The rm command removes the file specified by the file operand.

rmdir directory

The rmdir command removes the directory entry specified by the directory operand, provided it is empty.

See ln.