--- c: Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, , et al. SPDX-License-Identifier: curl Long: form Short: F Arg: Help: Specify multipart MIME data Protocols: HTTP SMTP IMAP Mutexed: data head upload-file Category: http upload Added: 5.0 Multi: append See-also: - data - form-string - form-escape Example: - --form "name=curl" --form "file=@loadthis" $URL --- # `--form` For the HTTP protocol family, emulate a filled-in form in which a user has pressed the submit button. This makes curl POST data using the Content-Type multipart/form-data according to RFC 2388. For SMTP and IMAP protocols, this composes a multipart mail message to transmit. This enables uploading of binary files etc. To force the 'content' part to be a file, prefix the filename with an @ sign. To just get the content part from a file, prefix the filename with the symbol \<. The difference between @ and \< is then that @ makes a file get attached in the post as a file upload, while the \< makes a text field and just get the contents for that text field from a file. Read content from stdin instead of a file by using a single "-" as filename. This goes for both @ and \< constructs. When stdin is used, the contents is buffered in memory first by curl to determine its size and allow a possible resend. Defining a part's data from a named non-regular file (such as a named pipe or similar) is not subject to buffering and is instead read at transmission time; since the full size is unknown before the transfer starts, such data is sent as chunks by HTTP and rejected by IMAP. Example: send an image to an HTTP server, where 'profile' is the name of the form-field to which the file **portrait.jpg** is the input: curl -F profile=@portrait.jpg https://example.com/upload.cgi Example: send your name and shoe size in two text fields to the server: curl -F name=John -F shoesize=11 https://example.com/ Example: send your essay in a text field to the server. Send it as a plain text field, but get the contents for it from a local file: curl -F "story=HTML message;type=text/html' \ -F '=)' -F '=@textfile.txt' ... smtp://example.com Data can be encoded for transfer using encoder=. Available encodings are *binary* and *8bit* that do nothing else than adding the corresponding Content-Transfer-Encoding header, *7bit* that only rejects 8-bit characters with a transfer error, *quoted-printable* and *base64* that encodes data according to the corresponding schemes, limiting lines length to 76 characters. Example: send multipart mail with a quoted-printable text message and a base64 attached file: curl -F '=text message;encoder=quoted-printable' \ -F '=@localfile;encoder=base64' ... smtp://example.com See further examples and details in the MANUAL.