When I echo I get this, which runs when I enter it into the terminal

curl -i \
-H "Accept: application/json" \
-H "Content-Type:application/json" \
-X POST --data '{"account":{"email":"akdgdtk@test.com","screenName":"akdgdtk","type":"NIKE","passwordSettings":{"password":"Starwars1","passwordConfirm":"Starwars1"}},"firstName":"Test","lastName":"User","middleName":"ObiWan","locale":"en_US","registrationSiteId":"520","receiveEmail":"false","dateOfBirth":"1984-12-25","mobileNumber":"9175555555","gender":"male","fuelActivationDate":"2010-10-22","postalCode":"10022","country":"US","city":"Beverton","state":"OR","bio":"This is a test user","jpFirstNameKana":"unsure","jpLastNameKana":"ofthis","height":"80","weight":"175","distanceUnit":"MILES","weightUnit":"POUNDS","heightUnit":"FT/INCHES"}' https://xxx:xxxxx@xxxx-www.xxxxx.com/xxxxx/xxxx/xxxx

But when run in the bash script file, I get this error

curl: (6) Could not resolve host: application; nodename nor servname provided, or not known
curl: (6) Could not resolve host: is; nodename nor servname provided, or not known
curl: (6) Could not resolve host: a; nodename nor servname provided, or not known
curl: (6) Could not resolve host: test; nodename nor servname provided, or not known
curl: (3) [globbing] unmatched close brace/bracket at pos 158

this is the code in the file

curl -i \
-H '"'Accept: application/json'"' \
-H '"'Content-Type:application/json'"' \
-X POST --data "'"'{"account":{"email":"'$email'","screenName":"'$screenName'","type":"'$theType'","passwordSettings":{"password":"'$password'","passwordConfirm":"'$password'"}},"firstName":"'$firstName'","lastName":"'$lastName'","middleName":"'$middleName'","locale":"'$locale'","registrationSiteId":"'$registrationSiteId'","receiveEmail":"'$receiveEmail'","dateOfBirth":"'$dob'","mobileNumber":"'$mobileNumber'","gender":"'$gender'","fuelActivationDate":"'$fuelActivationDate'","postalCode":"'$postalCode'","country":"'$country'","city":"'$city'","state":"'$state'","bio":"'$bio'","jpFirstNameKana":"'$jpFirstNameKana'","jpLastNameKana":"'$jpLastNameKana'","height":"'$height'","weight":"'$weight'","distanceUnit":"MILES","weightUnit":"POUNDS","heightUnit":"FT/INCHES"}'"'" "https://xxx:xxxxx@xxxx-www.xxxxx.com/xxxxx/xxxx/xxxx"

I assume there's an issue with my quotation marks, but I've played with them a lot and I've gotten similar errors. All the variables are defined with different functions in the actual script

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up vote 152 down vote accepted

You don't need to pass the quotes enclosing the custom headers to curl. Also, your variables in the middle of the data argument should be quoted.

First, write a function that generates the post data of your script. This saves you from all sort of headaches concerning shell quoting and makes it easier to read an maintain the script than feeding the post data on curl's invocation line as in your attempt:

generate_post_data()
{
  cat <<EOF
{
  "account": {
    "email": "$email",
    "screenName": "$screenName",
    "type": "$theType",
    "passwordSettings": {
      "password": "$password",
      "passwordConfirm": "$password"
    }
  },
  "firstName": "$firstName",
  "lastName": "$lastName",
  "middleName": "$middleName",
  "locale": "$locale",
  "registrationSiteId": "$registrationSiteId",
  "receiveEmail": "$receiveEmail",
  "dateOfBirth": "$dob",
  "mobileNumber": "$mobileNumber",
  "gender": "$gender",
  "fuelActivationDate": "$fuelActivationDate",
  "postalCode": "$postalCode",
  "country": "$country",
  "city": "$city",
  "state": "$state",
  "bio": "$bio",
  "jpFirstNameKana": "$jpFirstNameKana",
  "jpLastNameKana": "$jpLastNameKana",
  "height": "$height",
  "weight": "$weight",
  "distanceUnit": "MILES",
  "weightUnit": "POUNDS",
  "heightUnit": "FT/INCHES"
}
EOF 
}

It is then easy to use that function in the invocation of curl:

curl -i \
-H "Accept: application/json" \
-H "Content-Type:application/json" \
-X POST --data "$(generate_post_data)" "https://xxx:xxxxx@xxxx-www.xxxxx.com/xxxxx/xxxx/xxxx"

This said, here are a few clarifications about shell quoting rules:

The double quotes in the -H arguments (as in -H "foo bar") tell bash to keep what's inside as a single argument (even if it contains spaces).

The single quotes in the --data argument (as in --data 'foo bar') do the same, except they pass all text verbatim (including double quote characters and the dollar sign).

To insert a variable in the middle of a single quoted text, you have to end the single quote, then concatenate with the double quoted variable, and re-open the single quote to continue the text: 'foo bar'"$variable"'more foo'.

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4  
"'"$<variable name>"'" solved my problem where I needed quotes to be not omitted. Thanks. – baltoro May 5 '15 at 0:52
    
you saved my script.. thanks. :) – Éderson T. Szlachta Sep 21 '15 at 20:03
1  
This solution works but I think you can emit the extra double quotes surrounding the variable. So instead of this: --data '{"account": {"email": "'"$email"'"} }' you can do this: --data '{"account": {"email": "'$email'"} }' – twistedstream Sep 9 '16 at 15:40
    
@twistedstream for properly formatted e-mail addresses, yes. If your variable contains anything naughty though (e.g. spaces), omitting the extra quotes will break your script. – Sir Athos Feb 14 '17 at 17:04
    
how to do the same on Windows? – dKab Mar 13 '17 at 16:19

Solution tested with https://httpbin.org/ and inline bash script
1. For variables without spaces in it i.e. 1:
Simply add ' before and after $variable when replacing desired string

for i in {1..3}; do \
  curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d \
    '{"number":"'$i'"}' "https://httpbin.org/post"; \
done

2. For input with spaces:
Wrap variable with additional " i.e. "el a":

declare -a arr=("el a" "el b" "el c"); for i in "${arr[@]}"; do \
  curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d \
    '{"elem":"'"$i"'"}' "https://httpbin.org/post"; \
done

Wow works :)

share|improve this answer
    
Does not work for when when $i contains spaces. :( – Vasyl Boroviak Apr 3 '17 at 9:15
    
Can you post an example? – abrasadera Apr 3 '17 at 9:18
    
Sure. i="a b" instead of for-loop – Vasyl Boroviak Apr 3 '17 at 9:25
1  
Check updated answer – abrasadera Apr 3 '17 at 9:26
2  
I found that the accepted and the second voted answer does not work in /bin/sh. However, this answer did the trick. And it's much simpler than the other answers. Thank you so much! I've edited your answer with some nicer line wrapping formatting. Otherwise, it's hard to spot the brilliance. Cheers mate – Vasyl Boroviak Apr 4 '17 at 0:36

Curl can post binary data from a file so I have been using process substitution and taking advantage of file descriptors whenever I need to post something nasty with curl and still want access to the vars in the current shell. Something like:

curl "http://localhost:8080" \
-H "Accept: application/json" \
-H "Content-Type:application/json" \
--data @<(cat <<EOF
{
  "me": "$USER",
  "something": $(date +%s)
  }
EOF
)

This winds up looking like --data @/dev/fd/<some number> which just gets processed like a normal file. Anyway if you wanna see it work locally just run nc -l 8080 first and in a different shell fire off the above command. You will see something like:

POST / HTTP/1.1
Host: localhost:8080
User-Agent: curl/7.43.0
Accept: application/json
Content-Type:application/json
Content-Length: 43

{  "me": "username",  "something": 1465057519  }

As you can see you can call subshells and whatnot as well as reference vars in the heredoc. Happy hacking hope this helps with the '"'"'""""'''""''.

share|improve this answer
    
The other answer didn't work for me as I was trying to invoke it in an alert from Zabbix. This one solves it perfectly and is more clean. – 0rkan Nov 22 '16 at 14:54
    
But what if you put the code in a bash function : myFunction () { .... } ? – Hanynowsky Dec 8 '16 at 8:43
    
it's worth to note that this recipe works only if the script is copied verbatim (i.e. no reformatting EOF, braces etc.) – Vader B Nov 26 '17 at 6:17
  • the info from Sir Athos worked perfectly !!

Here's how I had to use it in my curl script for couchDB. It really helped out a lot. Thanks!

bin/curl -X PUT "db_domain_name_:5984/_config/vhosts/$1.couchdb" -d '"/'"$1"'/"' --user "admin:*****"
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