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I have a text document that contains a bunch of URLs in this format:

URL = "sitehere.com"

What I'm looking to do is to run curl -K myfile.txt, and get the output of the response cURL returns, into a file.

How can I do this?

1

11 Answers 11

948
curl -K myconfig.txt -o output.txt 

Writes the first output received in the file you specify (overwrites if an old one exists).

curl -K myconfig.txt >> output.txt

Appends all output you receive to the specified file.

Note: The -K is optional.

7
  • 1
    Sorry maybe I need to clarify - the doc with all my URL's in the format about is called myfile.txt so I do curl -K myfile.txt and it runs though each one but I don't get the output into any file.
    – Tony
    Dec 6, 2012 at 0:48
  • 43
    I use the redirect for my command lines: curl url > destfile.x
    – kodybrown
    Apr 20, 2016 at 13:42
  • 7
    When I do either of these the output still displays in the terminal, not in the file
    – kris
    Nov 26, 2017 at 6:01
  • 20
    @kris you probably have an ampersand in the url. put the url in double quotes and then try
    – jglouie
    Apr 13, 2018 at 20:11
  • It works without the -K. With it, I get "No URL specified." Nov 1, 2018 at 18:47
276

For a single file you can use -O instead of -o filename to use the last segment of the URL path as the filename. Example:

curl http://example.com/folder/big-file.iso -O

will save the results to a new file named big-file.iso in the current folder. In this way it works similar to wget but allows you to specify other curl options that are not available when using wget.

5
  • 7
    for multiple files use --remote-name-all unix.stackexchange.com/a/265819/171025
    – qwr
    Aug 11, 2019 at 18:44
  • 1
    To follow redirect, add -L option.
    – lk_vc
    Jan 30, 2022 at 13:28
  • 1
    Another addition for qwr's comment: the argument need to be put before the URLs like curl --remote-name-all https://example.tld/resource{1,2,3}. See: curl.se/docs/manpage.html#--remote-name-all Jun 13, 2022 at 3:37
  • Exactly what I was looking for, this nice and useful-O option. Thanks!
    – BiBi
    Dec 5, 2022 at 14:33
  • 1
    -O - that's a "letter Oooh" as in "Output" (not a zero)
    – Abdull
    Jul 21 at 14:13
76

There are several options to make curl output to a file

 # saves it to myfile.txt
curl http://www.example.com/data.txt -o myfile.txt

# The #1 will get substituted with the url, so the filename contains the url
curl http://www.example.com/data.txt -o "file_#1.txt" 

# saves to data.txt, the filename extracted from the URL
curl http://www.example.com/data.txt -O 

# saves to filename determined by the Content-Disposition header sent by the server.
curl http://www.example.com/data.txt -O -J 
19

Either curl or wget can be used in this case. All 3 of these commands do the same thing, downloading the file at http://path/to/file.txt and saving it locally into "my_file.txt".

Note that in all commands below, I also recommend using the -L or --location option with curl in order to follow HTML 302 redirects to the new location of the file, if it has moved. wget requires no additional options to do this, as it does this automatically.

# save the file locally as my_file.txt

wget http://path/to/file.txt -O my_file.txt  # my favorite--it has a progress bar
curl -L http://path/to/file.txt -o my_file.txt
curl -L http://path/to/file.txt > my_file.txt

Alternatively, to save the file as the same name locally as it is remotely, use either wget by itself, or curl with -O or --remote-name:

# save the file locally as file.txt

wget http://path/to/file.txt
curl -LO http://path/to/file.txt
curl -L --remote-name http://path/to/file.txt

Notice that the -O in all of the commands above is the capital letter "O".

The nice thing about the wget command is it shows a nice progress bar.

You can prove the files downloaded by each of the sets of 3 techniques above are exactly identical by comparing their sha512 hashes. Running sha512sum my_file.txt after running each of the commands above, and comparing the results, reveals all 3 files to have the exact same sha hashes (sha sums), meaning the files are exactly identical, byte-for-byte.

References

  1. I learned about the -L option with curl here: Is there a way to follow redirects with command line cURL?

See also: wget command to download a file and save as a different filename

7

For those of you want to copy the cURL output in the clipboard instead of outputting to a file, you can use pbcopy by using the pipe | after the cURL command.

Example: curl https://www.google.com/robots.txt | pbcopy. This will copy all the content from the given URL to your clipboard.

Linux version: curl https://www.google.com/robots.txt | xclip

Windows version: curl https://www.google.com/robots.txt | clip

2
  • pbcopy is only available on MacOS. However xclip can be used in it's place for Linux see this question. However I would in most cases prefer curl http://example.com -o example_com.html & cat example_com.html | pbcopy So you wouldn't need to curl again if you accidently clear your clipboard. Dec 4, 2019 at 10:38
  • Also this should be used with caution if you're unsure of the size of the payload. For example you probably wouldn't want to paste this into a text editor, but opening it in vim no problem. curl http://www.textfiles.com/etext/FICTION/fielding-history-243.txt | pbcopy maybe don't try this! Dec 4, 2019 at 10:51
6

You need to add quotation marks between "URL" -o "file_output" otherwise, curl doesn't recognize the URL or the text file name.

Format

curl "url" -o filename

Example

curl "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quotation_mark" -o output_file.txt

Example_2

curl "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quotation_mark" > output_file.txt  

Just make sure to add quotation marks.

1
  • 1
    Thank you. I was looking around for a while before I found your comment. Now I don't have to watch 59Mb of text scroll up the screen to nowhere any more :-) Sep 27, 2022 at 11:55
4

Use --trace-ascii output.txt to output the curl details to the file output.txt.

1
  • Thanks, the man page mentions that this also outputs the "descriptive information" that -vv displays (SSL info, HTTP verb, headers, ...), which I wanted to store. None of the other answers write that to a file.
    – Thor Galle
    May 13, 2022 at 18:12
3

If you want to store your output into your desktop, follow the below command using post command in git bash.It worked for me.

curl https://localhost:8080
    --request POST 
    --header "Content-Type: application/json" 
    -o "C:\Desktop\test.json"
0
1

A tad bit late, but I think the OP was looking for something like:

curl -K myfile.txt --trace-ascii output.txt
0
0

My favorite is lwp-download, which can be found here: https://metacpan.org/dist/libwww-perl/view/bin/lwp-download

You can use it like this:

lwp-download http://www.perl.com/CPAN/src/latest.tar.gz

This will store the file as "latest.tar.gz" in your current directory, so no further option is needed.

-2

Writes the first output received in the file you specify (overwrites if an old one exists).

curl -K myconfig.txt >> output.txt
1
  • The >> appends, it does not overwrite. If you would like to overwrite, use a single >
    – wybe
    Jul 5, 2022 at 15:46

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