curl/docs/FEATURES
Daniel Stenberg 67a83c1b34 David Shaw finally removed all traces of Gopher and we are now officially
not supporting it. It hasn't been functioning for years anyway, so this is
just finally stating what already was true. And a cleanup at the same time.
2006-01-16 22:14:37 +00:00

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FEATURES
curl tool
- config file support
- multiple URLs in a single command line
- range "globbing" support: [0-13], {one,two,three}
- multiple file upload on a single command line
- custom maximum transfer rate
- redirectable stderr
libcurl supports
- full URL syntax with no length limit
- custom maximum download time
- custom least download speed acceptable
- custom output result after completion
- guesses protocol from host name unless specified
- uses .netrc
- progress bar/time specs while downloading
- "standard" proxy environment variables support
- compiles on win32 (reported builds on 40+ operating systems)
- selectable network interface for outgoing traffic
- IPv6 support on unix and Windows
- persistant connections
- socks5 support
- supports user name + password in proxy environment variables
- operations through proxy "tunnel" (using CONNECT)
- supports large files (>2GB and >4GB) both upload/download
- replacable memory functions (malloc, free, realloc, etc)
- asynchronous name resolving (*6)
HTTP
- HTTP/1.1 compliant (optionally uses 1.0)
- GET
- PUT
- HEAD
- POST
- multipart formpost (RFC1867-style)
- authentication: Basic, Digest, NTLM(*1), GSS-Negotiate/Negotiate(*3) and
SPNEGO (*4) to server and proxy
- resume (both GET and PUT)
- follow redirects
- maximum amount of redirects to follow
- custom HTTP request
- cookie get/send fully parsed
- reads/writes the netscape cookie file format
- custom headers (replace/remove internally generated headers)
- custom user-agent string
- custom referer string
- range
- proxy authentication
- time conditions
- via http-proxy
- retrieve file modification date
- Content-Encoding support for deflate and gzip
- "Transfer-Encoding: chunked" support for "uploads"
HTTPS (*1)
- (all the HTTP features)
- using client certificates
- verify server certificate
- via http-proxy
- select desired encryption
- force usage of a specific SSL version (SSLv2(*7), SSLv3 or TLSv1)
FTP
- download
- authentication
- kerberos4 (*5)
- active/passive using PORT, EPRT, PASV or EPSV
- single file size information (compare to HTTP HEAD)
- 'type=' URL support
- dir listing
- dir listing names-only
- upload
- upload append
- upload via http-proxy as HTTP PUT
- download resume
- upload resume
- custom ftp commands (before and/or after the transfer)
- simple "range" support
- via http-proxy
- all operations can be tunneled through a http-proxy
- customizable to retrieve file modification date
- third party transfers
- no dir depth limit
FTPS (*1)
- explicit ftps:// support that use SSL on both connections
- implicit "AUTH TSL" and "AUTH SSL" usage to "upgrade" plain ftp://
connection to use SSL for both or one of the connections
TFTP
- download / upload
TELNET
- connection negotiation
- custom telnet options
- stdin/stdout I/O
LDAP (*2)
- full LDAP URL support
DICT
- extended DICT URL support
FILE
- URL support
- "uploads"
- resume
FOOTNOTES
=========
*1 = requires OpenSSL or GnuTLS
*2 = requires OpenLDAP
*3 = requires a GSSAPI-compliant library, such as Heimdal or similar.
*4 = requires FBopenssl
*5 = requires a krb4 library, such as the MIT one or similar.
*6 = requires c-ares
*7 = requires OpenSSL specificly, as GnuTLS only supports SSLv3 and TLSv1