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Every developer needs to know a bunch of tools to be effective. cURL in one such tool đ
In this article I will explain how curl can be used to make HTTP requests.
What is cURL
cURL is basically used to transfer data using Internet Protocols for the given URL.
Curl is a Client side program. In the name cURL, c stands for Client and URL indicates curl works with URLâs.
The curl project has a curl command line and also a libcurl library. In this article we will be focussing on the curl command line.
Curl deals with a bunch of Internet Protocols like HTTP, FTP, SMTP, TELNET and so on.
In this article we will deal only with making HTTP requests from Curl.
Pre-requisite
You can check if you have Curl Installed in your System using the command.
curl --version
If Curl is not there in your system you can install it from this URL https://curl.haxx.se/dlwiz/.
How to Use Curl for HTTPÂ Requests
I have built 2 REST API Endpoints using NodeJS. One endpoint supports GET request and the other endpoint supports POSTÂ request.
In this article, we will be calling the GET and POST endpoints using Curl.
Please clone the NodeJS code into your local from this github repo
The repo has instructions on how to clone and run the NodeJSÂ code.
After cloning the code, go into the project folder and start the application using the following command.
node server.js
The application runs on localhost port 3000.
GET Request with cURL
The application has a GET endpoint /sample. This endpoint accepts a query parameter called name.
Letâs call this API endpoint using curl.
Go to a new command prompt and type the following command
curl http://localhost:3000/sample?name=aditya
This will give the following output
{"text":"Hello aditya"}
You can also get a verbose result using Curl. Run the following command
curl -v http://localhost:3000/sample?name=aditya
-v is used to get verbose output.
This will give the following output.
* Trying ::1...* TCP_NODELAY set* Trying 127.0.0.1...* TCP_NODELAY set* Connected to localhost (127.0.0.1) port 3000 (#0)> GET /sample?name=aditya HTTP/1.1> Host: localhost:3000> User-Agent: curl/7.55.1> Accept: */*>< HTTP/1.1 200 OK< Content-Type: application/json< Date: Thu, 15 Nov 2018 12:36:21 GMT< Connection: keep-alive< Content-Length: 23<{"text":"Hello aditya"}* Connection #0 to host localhost left intact
The verbose result has details like status code, Content Type, Content Length and so on. It can be used to get a better idea of what happened during the HTTPÂ request.
The status code is 200 which indicates the HTTP request was successful.
The Content-type of the response is JSON.
The Content-Length indicates the size of the response. Here the response size is 23Â bytes.
POST request with cURL
The application has a POST endpoint /test. This endpoint accepts a post body of the following format.
{ "value":"nodejs"}
In order to make the POST call, type the following command.
curl --header "Content-Type: application/json" -d "{\"value\":\"node JS\"}" http://localhost:3000/test
âheader indicates the content type of the post body. Here it is JSON.
-d is used to send the post body content.
The output of this command is shown below.
{"text":"Post Request Value is node JS"}
To get Verbose result use the following command
curl -v --header "Content-Type: application/json" -d "{\"value\":\"node JS\"}" http://localhost:3000/test
The output is shown below.
* Trying ::1...* TCP_NODELAY set* Trying 127.0.0.1...* TCP_NODELAY set* Connected to localhost (127.0.0.1) port 3000 (#0)> POST /test HTTP/1.1> Host: localhost:3000> User-Agent: curl/7.55.1> Accept: */*> Content-Type: application/json> Content-Length: 19>* upload completely sent off: 19 out of 19 bytes< HTTP/1.1 200 OK< Content-Type: application/json< Date: Thu, 15 Nov 2018 13:03:37 GMT< Connection: keep-alive< Content-Length: 41
Additional Options provided by command line
The existing headers can be modified using -HÂ option.
Run the following Command to modify the User-Agent header to Dummy Agent
curl -v -H "User-Agent:Dummy Agent" http://localhost:3000/sample?name=adi
The output for the above command is shown below
* Trying ::1...* TCP_NODELAY set* Trying 127.0.0.1...* TCP_NODELAY set* Connected to localhost (127.0.0.1) port 3000 (#0)> GET /sample?name=adi HTTP/1.1> Host: localhost:3000> Accept: */*> User-Agent:Dummy Agent>< HTTP/1.1 200 OK< Content-Type: application/json< Date: Thu, 15 Nov 2018 13:33:27 GMT< Connection: keep-alive< Content-Length: 20<{"text":"Hello adi"}* Connection #0 to host localhost left intact
In the above output it can be seen that User-Agent has become Dummy Agent.
Now Letâs say you want to remove the Host Header. This can be done by running the following command.
curl -v -H "Host:" http://localhost:3000/sample?name=adi
The output for the above command is given below and it can be seen that Host is not there anymore
* Trying ::1...* TCP_NODELAY set* connect to ::1 port 3000 failed: Connection refused* Trying 127.0.0.1...* TCP_NODELAY set* Connected to localhost (127.0.0.1) port 3000 (#0)> GET /sample?name=adi HTTP/1.1> User-Agent: curl/7.55.1> Accept: */*>< HTTP/1.1 200 OK< Content-Type: application/json< Date: Thu, 15 Nov 2018 13:38:37 GMT< Connection: keep-alive< Content-Length: 20<{"text":"Hello adi"}* Connection #0 to host localhost left intact
-H can be used to add new headers as well. This can be done using the syntax curl -v -H "newheader: headervalue"
References
cURLâs Documenation: https://ec.haxx.se/
More Info on Using Curl for HTTP requests https://ec.haxx.se/http.html
Congrats đ
You now know how to use cURL for basic HTTP requests. This article covers a very small portion of what curl can actually do.
To know more about curl you can check the documentation links I have provided above.
About the author
I love technology and follow the advancements in the field.
Feel free to connect with me on my LinkedIn account https://www.linkedin.com/in/aditya1811/
You can also follow me on twitter https://twitter.com/adityasridhar18
My Website: https://adityasridhar.com/
Originally published at adityasridhar.com.
How to Easily use cURL for HTTP Requests was originally published in Hacker Noon on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.
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