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Before you post this as a duplicate; I've tried many of the suggestions I found around SO.

So far I've been using postman to post data to a Java web service. That works great as follows:

enter image description here

I now want to do the same using curl, so I tried it using the following ways:

$ curl -X POST --data "this is raw data" http://78.41.xx.xx:7778/
$ curl -X POST --data-binary "this is raw data" http://78.41.xx.xx:7778/
$ curl -X POST --data "@/home/kramer65/afile.txt" http://78.41.xx.xx:7778/
$ curl -X POST --data-binary "@/home/kramer65/afile.txt" http://78.41.xx.xx:7778/

Unfortunately, all of those show an empty raw body on the receiving side.

Does anybody know what I'm doing wrong here? How is my curl request different from my postman request? All tips are welcome!

1 Answer 1

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curl's --data will by default send Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded in the request header. However, when using Postman's raw body mode, Postman sends Content-Type: text/plain in the request header.

So to achieve the same thing as Postman, specify -H "Content-Type: text/plain" for curl:

curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: text/plain" --data "this is raw data" http://78.41.xx.xx:7778/

Note that if you want to watch the full request sent by Postman, you can enable debugging for packed app. Check this link for all instructions. Then you can inspect the app (right-click in Postman) and view all requests sent from Postman in the network tab :

enter image description here

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    It should be noted though that the body part is sent exactly the same. This just changes a header. Mar 28, 2017 at 5:58
  • I found myself here merely looking for a shorter curl command line. I'm quite pleased that curl is savvy enough that I can omit the '-X POST' part, but somewhat chagrined that needing to add that rather lengthy header puts me back in the woods. Shorter is better -- when it's possible.
    – BillDMoose
    Sep 11 at 17:00

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