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I am using cURL command line utility to send HTTP POST to a web service. I want to include a file's contents as the body entity of the POST. I have tried using -d </path/to/filename> as well as other variants with type info like --data </path/to/filename> --data-urlencode </path/to/filename> etc... the file is always attached. I need it as the body entity.

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4 Answers 4

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I believe you're looking for the @filename syntax, e.g.:

strip new lines

curl --data "@/path/to/filename" http://...

keep new lines

curl --data-binary "@/path/to/filename" http://...

curl will strip all newlines from the file. If you want to send the file with newlines intact, use --data-binary in place of --data

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    If you want to be real fancy you can do: cat file.txt | curl --data "@-" `(< url.txt )` @- tells curl to read from stdin. You could also just use the redirect (< x.txt ) to put in whatever you want. If you're using bash.
    – Breedly
    Apr 29, 2015 at 21:44
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    curl will strip all newlines from the file. If you want to send the file with newlines intact, use --data-binary in place of --data.
    – Chris
    May 14, 2015 at 23:27
  • now how would one add login credentials to authorize this request? Jul 20, 2017 at 21:14
  • @anon58192932 - That depends upon the security protocol of the server. If you are using name:value pairs, like a username and password, then add the necessary headers that match what the service is expecting: --header: "<header_name>:<header_value>" as a single string. Jul 27, 2017 at 18:36
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I know the question has been answered, but in my case I was trying to send the content of a text file to the Slack Webhook api and for some reason the above answer did not work. Anywho, this is what finally did the trick for me:

curl -X POST -H --silent --data-urlencode "payload={\"text\": \"$(cat file.txt | sed "s/\"/'/g")\"}" https://hooks.slack.com/services/XXX
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  • This one does not convert dots to underscores (. -> _) and keeps newlines. Thanks! Oct 18, 2018 at 13:49
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    It's cool, but it doesn't answer the question since the file is exploded on the command line instead of being specified for curl. I'm also wondering if all of the shell's special characters need to be escaped -- but I don't know enough about that ;) Jun 10, 2019 at 14:59
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    For a huge content file, above curl won't work, curl: argument list too long in that case accepted answer is life saver curl --data "@/path/to/filename" http://... Jun 26, 2020 at 2:51
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In my case, @ caused some sort of encoding problem, I still prefer my old way:

curl -d "$(cat /path/to/file)" https://example.com
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    This will cause the "argument list too long" error with large files
    – Sigmatics
    Jul 21, 2020 at 15:56
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curl https://upload.box.com/api/2.0/files/3300/content -H "Authorization: Bearer $access_token" -F file=@"C:\Crystal Reports\Crystal Reports\mysales.pdf"

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