The mandatory header now has a mandatory list of protocols for which the manpage is relevant. Most man pages already has a "PROTOCOLS" section, but this introduces a stricter way to specify the relevant protocols. cd2nroff verifies that at least one protocol is mentioned (which can be `*`). This information is not used just yet, but A) the PROTOCOLS section can now instead get generated and get a unified wording across all manpages and B) this allows us to more reliably filter/search for protocol specific manpages/options. Closes #13166
2.4 KiB
NAME
CURLOPT_TIMEOUT - maximum time the transfer is allowed to complete
SYNOPSIS
#include <curl/curl.h>
CURLcode curl_easy_setopt(CURL *handle, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT, long timeout);
DESCRIPTION
Pass a long as parameter containing timeout - the maximum time in seconds that you allow the entire transfer operation to take. The whole thing, from start to end. Normally, name lookups can take a considerable time and limiting operations risk aborting perfectly normal operations.
CURLOPT_TIMEOUT_MS(3) is the same function but set in milliseconds.
If both CURLOPT_TIMEOUT(3) and CURLOPT_TIMEOUT_MS(3) are set, the value set last is used.
Since this option puts a hard limit on how long time a request is allowed to take, it has limited use in dynamic use cases with varying transfer times. That is especially apparent when using the multi interface, which may queue the transfer, and that time is included. You are advised to explore CURLOPT_LOW_SPEED_LIMIT(3), CURLOPT_LOW_SPEED_TIME(3) or using CURLOPT_PROGRESSFUNCTION(3) to implement your own timeout logic.
The connection timeout set with CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT(3) is included in this general all-covering timeout.
With CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT(3) set to 3 and CURLOPT_TIMEOUT(3) set to 5, the operation can never last longer than 5 seconds.
With CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT(3) set to 4 and CURLOPT_TIMEOUT(3) set to 2, the operation can never last longer than 2 seconds.
This option may cause libcurl to use the SIGALRM signal to timeout system calls on builds not using asynch DNS. In unix-like systems, this might cause signals to be used unless CURLOPT_NOSIGNAL(3) is set.
DEFAULT
Default timeout is 0 (zero) which means it never times out during transfer.
PROTOCOLS
All
EXAMPLE
int main(void)
{
CURL *curl = curl_easy_init();
if(curl) {
curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_URL, "https://example.com");
/* complete within 20 seconds */
curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT, 20L);
curl_easy_perform(curl);
}
}
AVAILABILITY
Always
RETURN VALUE
Returns CURLE_OK. Returns CURLE_BAD_FUNCTION_ARGUMENT if set to a negative value or a value that when converted to milliseconds is too large.