68

I need a command-line utility that can do WebDAV upload (HTTP PUT).

1

10 Answers 10

108

cURL will do it for you.

curl -T filetoput.xml http://www.url.com/filetoput.xml

Working example:

curl -T pic.jpg -u [email protected]:longapppass https://webdav.cloud.server.com:443
7
  • 2
    In case of WebDAV your example will not work without a very tiny but important detail -> include name of the file you want to have on remote. So : curl -T filetoput.xml url.com/filetoput.xml
    – Cninroh
    Jun 7, 2012 at 2:33
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    @Cninroh: I don't believe that's true. According to the curl manpage: "If there is no file part in the specified URL, Curl will append the local file name. NOTE that you must use a trailing / on the last directory to really prove to Curl that there is no file name or curl will think that your last directory name is the remote file name to use."
    – Jeff Gran
    Oct 3, 2012 at 1:25
  • 13
    +1, cURL for the win. And if you need to authenticate, you can use curl -T <filename> -u <username>:<password> <url>. Jun 3, 2015 at 7:05
  • 1
    you can also use -o /dev/stdout to get a progress output
    – simao
    Oct 9, 2015 at 9:23
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    Actually, omitting the file part from the destination URL results in HTTP Error 409 CONFLICT in case the target server is an IIS server at least up to and including IIS 10. Maybe IIS is in the wrong though and it should work per the specs, just saying.
    – Jonas
    Apr 27, 2018 at 12:31
17

For unix (and Windows with Cygwin installed) you can use Cadaver

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  • 1
    You can't tell cadaver to upload a set of files from the command line; you need to type in the put commands in it's own repl ... this approach is copied from ftp tools, but makes the tool useless for composing as part of another script.
    – EoghanM
    Jan 25, 2023 at 11:54
9

The most commonly used command line HTTP utility seems to be cURL, which will do PUT with its -T option. You would need to understand quite a bit of the WebDAV protocol to do more than upload with it, though.

8

If you need to upload the entire directory instead of one file over WebDAV, you can use the following approach.

Imagine you have the following local folder you're going to upload over WebDAV.

local_folder_to_upload
│   test.txt
│   test1.txt    
│
└───nested_folder1
│   │   file1.txt
│   │   file2.txt
│   │
│   └───nested_folder2
│       │   file11.txt
│       │   file12.txt

1.First you need to create nested directories from your local folder (if you have them) on a server. Since WebDAV doesn't support recursive upload, you have to do this in separate step (if you were to use ftp - you would add --ftp-create-dirs flag to do this). To create those folders over WebDAV you need to use MKCOL method.

curl -X MKCOL 'http://your.server/uploads/nested_folder1' --user 'name:pwd'
curl -X MKCOL 'http://your.server/uploads/nested_folder1/nested_folder2' --user 'name:pwd'

Please note that you can't create them in one request according to the spec.

if a request to create collection /a/b/c/d/ is made, and /a/b/c/ does not exist, the request must fail.

2.Second you can utilize output of find shell command to upload it to your server using curl.

cd local_folder_to_upload && find . -exec curl -T {} 'http://your.server/uploads/{}' --user 'name:pwd' \;

Code above loop over all your files inside given directory (using find) and add the output (file name with relative path) to the placeholder {} in the url of your webserver. So it makes multiple requests (one per each file), and since all nested folders were created in advance - those requests shouldn't fail.

Hope it's helpful to someone.

5

Free WinSCP (for Windows) supports WebDAV (and WebDAVS).
WinSCP supports scripting/command-line operations too.

Sample WinSCP script to upload a file over WebDAV:

open https://[email protected]/
put file.txt /path/
exit

Save the script to a file (e.g. script.txt) and run like:

winscp.com /script=script.txt

You can also put everything on a single line:

winscp.com /command "open https://[email protected]/" "put file.txt /path/" "exit"

Start with introduction to scripting with WinSCP.

You can even have WinSCP GUI generate the script file for you.

(I'm the author of WinSCP)

5

Another option is "davix"

https://davix.web.cern.ch/davix/docs/devel/

It can be installed with

sudo yum install davix (redhat) or sudo apt install davix (ubuntu)

it has separated utils like davix-mkdir davix-put etc You can specify creditions in URL like

 davix-mkdir http://user:[email protected]/dir_to_create
 davix-put local_file http://user:[email protected]/dir_to_create/remote_file_name
0
4

To do WebDAV recursive upload of an arbitrary directory structure (files inside folders inside folders, etc.), the tool Rclone worked for me.

Based on this answer on SuperUser, I was able to recursively copy a directory by doing the following:

  1. Configure the connection:
     rclone config create my-remote webdav \
         url https://my-webdav-server/my-dir/ \
         vendor other \
         user 'username'
    
     rclone config password pass 'mypasswd'
    
  2. Copy:
    rclone copy /home/me/mydir my-remote:
    

Rclone offers a number of other modes of dealing with files, including sync, which brings the remote in line with the local copy by removing remote files not present locally (in addition to copying local files across that do not exist remotely). See the subcommands of Rclone for more information.

3

this overview contains a thourough list of webdav server and clients.

I'd opt for cadaver or, if my needs were very specific, a python script using the PyWebDAV library.

3

Use KIO under KDE:

kioclient cp file.txt 'webdavs://[email protected]:443/'
0

Teleric Fiddler has a "compose" tab where you can create your own customized WebDAV request. E.g. PROPFIND and OPTIONS etc.

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