Annotation of embedaddon/curl/docs/cmdline-opts/upload-file.d, revision 1.1.1.1
1.1 misho 1: Long: upload-file
2: Short: T
3: Arg: <file>
4: Help: Transfer local FILE to destination
5: ---
6: This transfers the specified local file to the remote URL. If there is no file
7: part in the specified URL, curl will append the local file name. NOTE that you
8: must use a trailing / on the last directory to really prove to Curl that there
9: is no file name or curl will think that your last directory name is the remote
10: file name to use. That will most likely cause the upload operation to fail. If
11: this is used on an HTTP(S) server, the PUT command will be used.
12:
13: Use the file name "-" (a single dash) to use stdin instead of a given file.
14: Alternately, the file name "." (a single period) may be specified instead
15: of "-" to use stdin in non-blocking mode to allow reading server output
16: while stdin is being uploaded.
17:
18: You can specify one --upload-file for each URL on the command line. Each
19: --upload-file + URL pair specifies what to upload and to where. curl also
20: supports "globbing" of the --upload-file argument, meaning that you can upload
21: multiple files to a single URL by using the same URL globbing style supported
22: in the URL, like this:
23:
24: curl --upload-file "{file1,file2}" http://www.example.com
25:
26: or even
27:
28: curl -T "img[1-1000].png" ftp://ftp.example.com/upload/
29:
30: When uploading to an SMTP server: the uploaded data is assumed to be RFC 5322
31: formatted. It has to feature the necessary set of headers and mail body
32: formatted correctly by the user as curl will not transcode nor encode it
33: further in any way.
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