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Markdown
396 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
<!--
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Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, <daniel@haxx.se>, et al.
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SPDX-License-Identifier: curl
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-->
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# URL syntax and their use in curl
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## Specifications
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The official "URL syntax" is primarily defined in these two different
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specifications:
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- [RFC 3986](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3986) (although URL is called
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"URI" in there)
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- [The WHATWG URL Specification](https://url.spec.whatwg.org/)
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RFC 3986 is the earlier one, and curl has always tried to adhere to that one
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(since it shipped in January 2005).
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The WHATWG URL spec was written later, is incompatible with the RFC 3986 and
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changes over time.
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## Variations
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URL parsers as implemented in browsers, libraries and tools usually opt to
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support one of the mentioned specifications. Bugs, differences in
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interpretations and the moving nature of the WHATWG spec does however make it
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unlikely that multiple parsers treat URLs the same way.
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## Security
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Due to the inherent differences between URL parser implementations, it is
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considered a security risk to mix different implementations and assume the
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same behavior!
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For example, if you use one parser to check if a URL uses a good hostname or
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the correct auth field, and then pass on that same URL to a *second* parser,
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there is always a risk it treats the same URL differently. There is no right
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and wrong in URL land, only differences of opinions.
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libcurl offers a separate API to its URL parser for this reason, among others.
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Applications may at times find it convenient to allow users to specify URLs
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for various purposes and that string would then end up fed to curl. Getting a
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URL from an external untrusted party and using it with curl brings several
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security concerns:
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1. If you have an application that runs as or in a server application, getting
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an unfiltered URL can trick your application to access a local resource
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instead of a remote resource. Protecting yourself against localhost accesses
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is hard when accepting user provided URLs.
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2. Such custom URLs can access other ports than you planned as port numbers
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are part of the regular URL format. The combination of a local host and a
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custom port number can allow external users to play tricks with your local
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services.
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3. Such a URL might use other schemes than you thought of or planned for.
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## "RFC 3986 plus"
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curl recognizes a URL syntax that we call "RFC 3986 plus". It is grounded on
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the well established RFC 3986 to make sure previously written command lines
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and curl using scripts remain working.
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curl's URL parser allows a few deviations from the spec in order to
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inter-operate better with URLs that appear in the wild.
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### spaces
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A URL provided to curl cannot contain spaces. They need to be provided URL
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encoded to be accepted in a URL by curl.
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An exception to this rule: `Location:` response headers that indicate to a
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client where a resource has been redirected to, sometimes contain spaces. This
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is a violation of RFC 3986 but is fine in the WHATWG spec. curl handles these
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by re-encoding them to `%20`.
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### non-ASCII
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Byte values in a provided URL that are outside of the printable ASCII range
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are percent-encoded by curl.
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### multiple slashes
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An absolute URL always starts with a "scheme" followed by a colon. For all the
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schemes curl supports, the colon must be followed by two slashes according to
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RFC 3986 but not according to the WHATWG spec - which allows one to infinity
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amount.
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curl allows one, two or three slashes after the colon to still be considered a
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valid URL.
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### "scheme-less"
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curl supports "URLs" that do not start with a scheme. This is not supported by
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any of the specifications. This is a shortcut to entering URLs that was
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supported by browsers early on and has been mimicked by curl.
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Based on what the hostname starts with, curl "guesses" what protocol to use:
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- `ftp.` means FTP
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- `dict.` means DICT
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- `ldap.` means LDAP
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- `imap.` means IMAP
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- `smtp.` means SMTP
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- `pop3.` means POP3
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- all other means HTTP
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### globbing letters
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The curl command line tool supports "globbing" of URLs. It means that you can
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create ranges and lists using `[N-M]` and `{one,two,three}` sequences. The
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letters used for this (`[]{}`) are reserved in RFC 3986 and can therefore not
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legitimately be part of such a URL.
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They are however not reserved or special in the WHATWG specification, so
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globbing can mess up such URLs. Globbing can be turned off for such occasions
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(using `--globoff`).
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# URL syntax details
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A URL may consist of the following components - many of them are optional:
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[scheme][divider][userinfo][hostname][port number][path][query][fragment]
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Each component is separated from the following component with a divider
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character or string.
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For example, this could look like:
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http://user:password@www.example.com:80/index.html?foo=bar#top
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## Scheme
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The scheme specifies the protocol to use. A curl build can support a few or
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many different schemes. You can limit what schemes curl should accept.
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curl supports the following schemes on URLs specified to transfer. They are
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matched case insensitively:
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`dict`, `file`, `ftp`, `ftps`, `gopher`, `gophers`, `http`, `https`, `imap`,
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`imaps`, `ldap`, `ldaps`, `mqtt`, `pop3`, `pop3s`, `rtmp`, `rtmpe`, `rtmps`,
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`rtmpt`, `rtmpte`, `rtmpts`, `rtsp`, `smb`, `smbs`, `smtp`, `smtps`, `telnet`,
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`tftp`
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When the URL is specified to identify a proxy, curl recognizes the following
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schemes:
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`http`, `https`, `socks4`, `socks4a`, `socks5`, `socks5h`, `socks`
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## Userinfo
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The userinfo field can be used to set username and password for
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authentication purposes in this transfer. The use of this field is discouraged
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since it often means passing around the password in plain text and is thus a
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security risk.
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URLs for IMAP, POP3 and SMTP also support *login options* as part of the
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userinfo field. They are provided as a semicolon after the password and then
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the options.
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## Hostname
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The hostname part of the URL contains the address of the server that you want
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to connect to. This can be the fully qualified domain name of the server, the
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local network name of the machine on your network or the IP address of the
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server or machine represented by either an IPv4 or IPv6 address (within
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brackets). For example:
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http://www.example.com/
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http://hostname/
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http://192.168.0.1/
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http://[2001:1890:1112:1::20]/
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### "localhost"
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Starting in curl 7.77.0, curl uses loopback IP addresses for the name
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`localhost`: `127.0.0.1` and `::1`. It does not resolve the name using the
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resolver functions.
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This is done to make sure the host accessed is truly the localhost - the local
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machine.
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### IDNA
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If curl was built with International Domain Name (IDN) support, it can also
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handle hostnames using non-ASCII characters.
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When built with libidn2, curl uses the IDNA 2008 standard. This is equivalent
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to the WHATWG URL spec, but differs from certain browsers that use IDNA 2003
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Transitional Processing. The two standards have a huge overlap but differ
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slightly, perhaps most famously in how they deal with the German "double s"
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(`ß`).
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When winidn is used, curl uses IDNA 2003 Transitional Processing, like the rest
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of Windows.
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## Port number
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If there is a colon after the hostname, that should be followed by the port
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number to use. 1 - 65535. curl also supports a blank port number field - but
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only if the URL starts with a scheme.
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If the port number is not specified in the URL, curl uses a default port
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number based on the provide scheme:
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DICT 2628, FTP 21, FTPS 990, GOPHER 70, GOPHERS 70, HTTP 80, HTTPS 443,
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IMAP 132, IMAPS 993, LDAP 369, LDAPS 636, MQTT 1883, POP3 110, POP3S 995,
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RTMP 1935, RTMPS 443, RTMPT 80, RTSP 554, SCP 22, SFTP 22, SMB 445, SMBS 445,
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SMTP 25, SMTPS 465, TELNET 23, TFTP 69
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# Scheme specific behaviors
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## FTP
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The path part of an FTP request specifies the file to retrieve and from which
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directory. If the file part is omitted then libcurl downloads the directory
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listing for the directory specified. If the directory is omitted then the
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directory listing for the root / home directory is returned.
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FTP servers typically put the user in its "home directory" after login, which
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then differs between users. To explicitly specify the root directory of an FTP
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server, start the path with double slash `//` or `/%2f` (2F is the hexadecimal
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value of the ascii code for the slash).
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## FILE
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When a `FILE://` URL is accessed on Windows systems, it can be crafted in a
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way so that Windows attempts to connect to a (remote) machine when curl wants
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to read or write such a path.
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curl only allows the hostname part of a FILE URL to be one out of these three
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alternatives: `localhost`, `127.0.0.1` or blank ("", zero characters).
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Anything else makes curl fail to parse the URL.
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### Windows-specific FILE details
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curl accepts that the FILE URL's path starts with a "drive letter". That is a
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single letter `a` to `z` followed by a colon or a pipe character (`|`).
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The Windows operating system itself converts some file accesses to perform
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network accesses over SMB/CIFS, through several different file path patterns.
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This way, a `file://` URL passed to curl *might* be converted into a network
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access inadvertently and unknowingly to curl. This is a Windows feature curl
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cannot control or disable.
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## IMAP
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The path part of an IMAP request not only specifies the mailbox to list or
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select, but can also be used to check the `UIDVALIDITY` of the mailbox, to
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specify the `UID`, `SECTION` and `PARTIAL` octets of the message to fetch and
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to specify what messages to search for.
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A top level folder list:
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imap://user:password@mail.example.com
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A folder list on the user's inbox:
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imap://user:password@mail.example.com/INBOX
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Select the user's inbox and fetch message with `uid = 1`:
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imap://user:password@mail.example.com/INBOX/;UID=1
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Select the user's inbox and fetch the first message in the mail box:
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imap://user:password@mail.example.com/INBOX/;MAILINDEX=1
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Select the user's inbox, check the `UIDVALIDITY` of the mailbox is 50 and
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fetch message 2 if it is:
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imap://user:password@mail.example.com/INBOX;UIDVALIDITY=50/;UID=2
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Select the user's inbox and fetch the text portion of message 3:
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imap://user:password@mail.example.com/INBOX/;UID=3/;SECTION=TEXT
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Select the user's inbox and fetch the first 1024 octets of message 4:
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imap://user:password@mail.example.com/INBOX/;UID=4/;PARTIAL=0.1024
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Select the user's inbox and check for NEW messages:
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imap://user:password@mail.example.com/INBOX?NEW
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Select the user's inbox and search for messages containing "shadows" in the
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subject line:
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imap://user:password@mail.example.com/INBOX?SUBJECT%20shadows
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Searching via the query part of the URL `?` is a search request for the
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results to be returned as message sequence numbers (`MAILINDEX`). It is
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possible to make a search request for results to be returned as unique ID
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numbers (`UID`) by using a custom curl request via `-X`. `UID` numbers are
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unique per session (and multiple sessions when `UIDVALIDITY` is the same). For
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example, if you are searching for `"foo bar"` in header+body (`TEXT`) and you
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want the matching `MAILINDEX` numbers returned then you could search via URL:
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imap://user:password@mail.example.com/INBOX?TEXT%20%22foo%20bar%22
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If you want matching `UID` numbers you have to use a custom request:
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imap://user:password@mail.example.com/INBOX -X "UID SEARCH TEXT \"foo bar\""
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For more information about IMAP commands please see RFC 9051. For more
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information about the individual components of an IMAP URL please see RFC 5092.
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* Note old curl versions would `FETCH` by message sequence number when `UID`
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was specified in the URL. That was a bug fixed in 7.62.0, which added
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`MAILINDEX` to `FETCH` by mail sequence number.
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## LDAP
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The path part of a LDAP request can be used to specify the: Distinguished
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Name, Attributes, Scope, Filter and Extension for a LDAP search. Each field is
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separated by a question mark and when that field is not required an empty
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string with the question mark separator should be included.
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Search for the `DN` as `My Organization`:
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ldap://ldap.example.com/o=My%20Organization
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the same search but only return `postalAddress` attributes:
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ldap://ldap.example.com/o=My%20Organization?postalAddress
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Search for an empty `DN` and request information about the
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`rootDomainNamingContext` attribute for an Active Directory server:
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ldap://ldap.example.com/?rootDomainNamingContext
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For more information about the individual components of a LDAP URL please
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see [RFC 4516](https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc4516).
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## POP3
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The path part of a POP3 request specifies the message ID to retrieve. If the
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ID is not specified then a list of waiting messages is returned instead.
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## SCP
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The path part of an SCP URL specifies the path and file to retrieve or
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upload. The file is taken as an absolute path from the root directory on the
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server.
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To specify a path relative to the user's home directory on the server, prepend
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`~/` to the path portion.
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## SFTP
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The path part of an SFTP URL specifies the file to retrieve or upload. If the
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path ends with a slash (`/`) then a directory listing is returned instead of a
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file. If the path is omitted entirely then the directory listing for the root
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/ home directory is returned.
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## SMB
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The path part of a SMB request specifies the file to retrieve and from what
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share and directory or the share to upload to and as such, may not be omitted.
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If the username is embedded in the URL then it must contain the domain name
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and as such, the backslash must be URL encoded as %2f.
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When uploading to SMB, the size of the file needs to be known ahead of time,
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meaning that you can upload a file passed to curl over a pipe like stdin.
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curl supports SMB version 1 (only)
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## SMTP
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The path part of a SMTP request specifies the hostname to present during
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communication with the mail server. If the path is omitted, then libcurl
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attempts to resolve the local computer's hostname. However, this may not
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return the fully qualified domain name that is required by some mail servers
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and specifying this path allows you to set an alternative name, such as your
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machine's fully qualified domain name, which you might have obtained from an
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external function such as gethostname or getaddrinfo.
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The default smtp port is 25. Some servers use port 587 as an alternative.
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## RTMP
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There is no official URL spec for RTMP so libcurl uses the URL syntax supported
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by the underlying librtmp library. It has a syntax where it wants a
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traditional URL, followed by a space and a series of space-separated
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`name=value` pairs.
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While space is not typically a "legal" letter, libcurl accepts them. When a
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user wants to pass in a `#` (hash) character it is treated as a fragment and
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it gets cut off by libcurl if provided literally. You have to escape it by
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providing it as backslash and its ASCII value in hexadecimal: `\23`.
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