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Section 3 manual page or howto for 'curl_easy_setopt'  

curl_easy_setopt(3)		libcurl Manual		   curl_easy_setopt(3)



NAME
       curl_easy_setopt - set options for a curl easy handle

SYNOPSIS
       #include <curl/curl.h>

       CURLcode curl_easy_setopt(CURL *handle, CURLoption option, parameter);

DESCRIPTION
       curl_easy_setopt()  is used to tell libcurl how to behave. By using the
       appropriate options  to	curl_easy_setopt,  you	can  change  libcurl's
       behavior.  All options are set with the option followed by a parameter.
       That parameter can be a long, a function pointer, an object pointer  or
       a  curl_off_t, depending on what the specific option expects. Read this
       manual carefully as bad input values may cause libcurl to behave badly!
       You  can  only set one option in each function call. A typical applica-
       tion uses many curl_easy_setopt() calls in the setup phase.

       Options set with this function  call  are  valid  for  all  forthcoming
       transfers  performed using this handle.	The options are not in any way
       reset between transfers, so if you want subsequent transfers with  dif-
       ferent  options,  you  must  change them between the transfers. You can
       optionally  reset  all  options	 back	to   internal	default   with
       curl_easy_reset(3).

       Strings	passed	to  libcurl  as  'char *' arguments, are copied by the
       library; thus the string storage associated to the pointer argument may
       be  overwritten	after  curl_easy_setopt()  returns. Exceptions to this
       rule are described in the option details below.

       NOTE: before 7.17.0 strings were  not  copied.  Instead	the  user  was
       forced keep them available until libcurl no longer needed them.

       The   handle   is   the	 return   code	from  a  curl_easy_init(3)  or
       curl_easy_duphandle(3) call.

BEHAVIOR OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_VERBOSE
	      Set the parameter to 1 to get the library to display  a  lot  of
	      verbose  information  about  its	operations.  Very  useful  for
	      libcurl and/or protocol debugging and understanding. The verbose
	      information  will be sent to stderr, or the stream set with CUR-
	      LOPT_STDERR.

	      You hardly ever want this set in production use, you will almost
	      always  want  this  when you debug/report problems. Another neat
	      option for debugging is the CURLOPT_DEBUGFUNCTION.

       CURLOPT_HEADER
	      A parameter set to 1 tells the library to include the header  in
	      the  body output. This is only relevant for protocols that actu-
	      ally have headers preceding the data (like HTTP).

       CURLOPT_NOPROGRESS
	      A parameter set to 1 tells the library to shut off the  built-in
	      progress meter completely.

	      Future  versions	of libcurl are likely to not have any built-in
	      progress meter at all.

       CURLOPT_NOSIGNAL
	      Pass a long. If it is 1, libcurl will not use any functions that
	      install  signal  handlers or any functions that cause signals to
	      be sent to the process. This option  is  mainly  here  to  allow
	      multi-threaded  unix  applications  to still set/use all timeout
	      options etc, without risking getting signals.  (Added in 7.10)

	      If this option is set and libcurl has been built with the  stan-
	      dard  name  resolver,  timeouts  will  not  occur while the name
	      resolve takes place.  Consider building libcurl with c-ares sup-
	      port  to	enable	asynchronous  DNS  lookups, which enables nice
	      timeouts for name resolves without signals.


CALLBACK OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION
	      Function pointer that  should  match  the  following  prototype:
	      size_t  function(  void  *ptr,  size_t  size, size_t nmemb, void
	      *stream); This function gets called by libcurl as soon as  there
	      is  data	received  that needs to be saved. The size of the data
	      pointed to by ptr is size multiplied with nmemb, it will not  be
	      zero  terminated. Return the number of bytes actually taken care
	      of. If that amount differs from the amount passed to your  func-
	      tion, it'll signal an error to the library and it will abort the
	      transfer and return CURLE_WRITE_ERROR.

	      From 7.18.0, the function can return CURL_WRITEFUNC_PAUSE  which
	      then will cause writing to this connection to become paused. See
	      curl_easy_pause(3) for further details.

	      This function may be called with zero bytes data if  the	trans-
	      ferred file is empty.

	      Set  this  option  to NULL to get the internal default function.
	      The internal default function will write the data to the FILE  *
	      given with CURLOPT_WRITEDATA.

	      Set the stream argument with the CURLOPT_WRITEDATA option.

	      The callback function will be passed as much data as possible in
	      all invokes, but you cannot possibly make  any  assumptions.  It
	      may be one byte, it may be thousands. The maximum amount of data
	      that can be passed to the  write	callback  is  defined  in  the
	      curl.h header file: CURL_MAX_WRITE_SIZE.

       CURLOPT_WRITEDATA
	      Data  pointer to pass to the file write function. If you use the
	      CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION option, this is the pointer you'll get  as
	      input.  If you don't use a callback, you must pass a 'FILE *' as
	      libcurl will pass this to fwrite() when writing data.

	      The internal CURLOPT_WRITEFUNCTION will write the  data  to  the
	      FILE  *  given  with  this  option,  or to stdout if this option
	      hasn't been set.

	      If you're using libcurl as a win32 DLL, you MUST	use  the  CUR-
	      LOPT_WRITEFUNCTION if you set this option or you will experience
	      crashes.

	      This option is also known with the older name CURLOPT_FILE,  the
	      name CURLOPT_WRITEDATA was introduced in 7.9.7.

       CURLOPT_READFUNCTION
	      Function	pointer  that  should  match  the following prototype:
	      size_t function( void *ptr,  size_t  size,  size_t  nmemb,  void
	      *stream);  This  function  gets  called by libcurl as soon as it
	      needs to read data in order to send it to  the  peer.  The  data
	      area  pointed  at  by the pointer ptr may be filled with at most
	      size multiplied with nmemb number of bytes. Your	function  must
	      return the actual number of bytes that you stored in that memory
	      area. Returning 0 will signal end-of-file  to  the  library  and
	      cause it to stop the current transfer.

	      If  you  stop the current transfer by returning 0 "pre-maturely"
	      (i.e before the server expected it, like when  you've  said  you
	      will  upload  N bytes and you upload less than N bytes), you may
	      experience that the server "hangs" waiting for the rest  of  the
	      data that won't come.

	      The  read  callback  may	return CURL_READFUNC_ABORT to stop the
	      current	 operation     immediately,	resulting     in     a
	      CURLE_ABORTED_BY_CALLBACK error code from the transfer (Added in
	      7.12.1)

	      From 7.18.0, the function can return  CURL_READFUNC_PAUSE  which
	      then  will  cause reading from this connection to become paused.
	      See curl_easy_pause(3) for further details.

	      If you set the callback pointer to NULL, or don't set it at all,
	      the  default  internal  read function will be used. It is simply
	      doing an fread() on the FILE * stream set with CURLOPT_READDATA.

       CURLOPT_READDATA
	      Data  pointer  to pass to the file read function. If you use the
	      CURLOPT_READFUNCTION option, this is the pointer you'll  get  as
	      input.  If you don't specify a read callback but instead rely on
	      the default internal read function, this data must  be  a  valid
	      readable FILE *.

	      If  you're  using  libcurl  as  a win32 DLL, you MUST use a CUR-
	      LOPT_READFUNCTION if you set this option.

	      This option was also known by the older name CURLOPT_INFILE, the
	      name CURLOPT_READDATA was introduced in 7.9.7.

       CURLOPT_IOCTLFUNCTION
	      Function	pointer that should match the curl_ioctl_callback pro-
	      totype found in <curl/curl.h>.  This  function  gets  called  by
	      libcurl when something special I/O-related needs to be done that
	      the library can't do by itself. For now, rewinding the read data
	      stream  is  the only action it can request. The rewinding of the
	      read data stream may be necessary when doing a HTTP PUT or  POST
	      with  a  multi-pass  authentication  method.   (Option  added in
	      7.12.3).

	      Use CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION instead to provide seeking!

       CURLOPT_IOCTLDATA
	      Pass a pointer that will be untouched by libcurl and  passed  as
	      the  3rd	argument in the ioctl callback set with CURLOPT_IOCTL-
	      FUNCTION.  (Option added in 7.12.3)

       CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION
	      Function pointer that should match the following prototype:  int
	      function(void  *instream,  curl_off_t  offset, int origin); This
	      function gets called by libcurl to seek to a certain position in
	      the  input  stream  and  can be used to fast forward a file in a
	      resumed upload (instead of reading all uploaded bytes  with  the
	      normal  read  function/callback).  It is also called to rewind a
	      stream when doing a HTTP PUT or POST with a multi-pass authenti-
	      cation  method.  The function shall work like "fseek" or "lseek"
	      and accepted SEEK_SET, SEEK_CUR and  SEEK_END  as  argument  for
	      origin,  although  (in 7.18.0) libcurl only passes SEEK_SET. The
	      callback	must  return  0  (CURL_SEEKFUNC_OK)  on   success,   1
	      (CURL_SEEKFUNC_FAIL)  to cause the upload operation to fail or 2
	      (CURL_SEEKFUNC_CANTSEEK) to indicate that while the seek failed,
	      libcurl is free to work around the problem if possible. The lat-
	      ter can sometimes be done by instead reading from the  input  or
	      similar.

	      If  you  forward	the  input  arguments  directly  to "fseek" or
	      "lseek", note that the data type for offset is not the  same  as
	      defined for curl_off_t on many systems! (Option added in 7.18.0)

       CURLOPT_SEEKDATA
	      Data pointer to pass to the file read function. If you  use  the
	      CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION  option,  this is the pointer you'll get as
	      input. If you don't specify a seek  callback,  NULL  is  passed.
	      (Option added in 7.18.0)

       CURLOPT_SOCKOPTFUNCTION
	      Function	pointer  that  should  match the curl_sockopt_callback
	      prototype found in <curl/curl.h>. This function gets  called  by
	      libcurl  after  the socket() call but before the connect() call.
	      The callback's purpose argument identifies the exact purpose for
	      this  particular	socket,  and  currently only one value is sup-
	      ported: CURLSOCKTYPE_IPCXN for the primary  connection  (meaning
	      the  control  connection	in  the  FTP case). Future versions of
	      libcurl may support more purposes. It passes the	newly  created
	      socket  descriptor  so additional setsockopt() calls can be done
	      at the user's discretion.  Return 0 (zero) from the callback  on
	      success.	Return 1 from the callback function to signal an unre-
	      coverable error to the library and it will close the socket  and
	      return CURLE_COULDNT_CONNECT.  (Option added in 7.15.6.)

       CURLOPT_SOCKOPTDATA
	      Pass  a  pointer that will be untouched by libcurl and passed as
	      the first  argument  in  the  sockopt  callback  set  with  CUR-
	      LOPT_SOCKOPTFUNCTION.  (Option added in 7.15.6.)

       CURLOPT_OPENSOCKETFUNCTION
	      Function	pointer that should match the curl_opensocket_callback
	      prototype found in <curl/curl.h>. This function gets  called  by
	      libcurl  instead	of  the socket(2) call. The callback's purpose
	      argument	identifies  the  exact	purpose  for  this  particular
	      socket,  and  currently  only  one value is supported: CURLSOCK-
	      TYPE_IPCXN for the primary connection (meaning the control  con-
	      nection in the FTP case). Future versions of libcurl may support
	      more purposes. It passes the resolved peer address as a  address
	      argument	so  the  callback  can modify the address or refuse to
	      connect at all. The callback function should return  the	socket
	      or  CURL_SOCKET_BAD  in case no connection should be established
	      or any error detected. Any additional setsockopt(2) calls can be
	      done  on	the  socket at the user's discretion.  CURL_SOCKET_BAD
	      return value from the callback function will signal an  unrecov-
	      erable	error	 to   the   library   and   it	 will	return
	      CURLE_COULDNT_CONNECT.  This return code	can  be  used  for  IP
	      address blacklisting.  The default behavior is:

		 return socket(addr->family, addr->socktype, addr->protocol);
	      (Option added in 7.17.1.)

       CURLOPT_OPENSOCKETDATA
	      Pass  a  pointer that will be untouched by libcurl and passed as
	      the first argument in the  opensocket  callback  set  with  CUR-
	      LOPT_OPENSOCKETFUNCTION.	(Option added in 7.17.1.)

       CURLOPT_PROGRESSFUNCTION
	      Function	pointer  that  should match the curl_progress_callback
	      prototype found in <curl/curl.h>. This function gets  called  by
	      libcurl  instead	of  its  internal  equivalent  with a frequent
	      interval during operation (roughly once per second) no matter if
	      data is being transfered or not.	Unknown/unused argument values
	      passed to the callback will be set to zero  (like  if  you  only
	      download	data, the upload size will remain 0). Returning a non-
	      zero value from this callback will cause libcurl	to  abort  the
	      transfer and return CURLE_ABORTED_BY_CALLBACK.

	      If  you  transfer  data  with the multi interface, this function
	      will not be called during periods of idleness  unless  you  call
	      the appropriate libcurl function that performs transfers.

	      CURLOPT_NOPROGRESS  must be set to 0 to make this function actu-
	      ally get called.

       CURLOPT_PROGRESSDATA
	      Pass a pointer that will be untouched by libcurl and  passed  as
	      the  first  argument  in	the  progress  callback  set with CUR-
	      LOPT_PROGRESSFUNCTION.

       CURLOPT_HEADERFUNCTION
	      Function pointer that  should  match  the  following  prototype:
	      size_t  function(  void  *ptr,  size_t  size, size_t nmemb, void
	      *stream);. This function gets called by libcurl as  soon	as  it
	      has  received  header  data.  The header callback will be called
	      once for each header and only complete header lines  are	passed
	      on  to the callback. Parsing headers should be easy enough using
	      this. The size of the data pointed to by ptr is size  multiplied
	      with  nmemb.  Do	not assume that the header line is zero termi-
	      nated! The pointer named stream is the one you set with the CUR-
	      LOPT_WRITEHEADER	option.  The callback function must return the
	      number of bytes actually taken care of, or return -1  to	signal
	      error  to  the  library  (it will cause it to abort the transfer
	      with a CURLE_WRITE_ERROR return code).

	      If this option is not set, or if it is set  to  NULL,  but  CUR-
	      LOPT_HEADERDATA  (CURLOPT_WRITEHEADER)  is  set  to anything but
	      NULL, the function used to accept response  data	will  be  used
	      instead.	That  is,  it will be the function specified with CUR-
	      LOPT_WRITEFUNCTION, or if it is not  specified  or  NULL	-  the
	      default, stream-writing function.

	      It's important to note that the callback will be invoked for the
	      headers of all responses received after initiating a request and
	      not  just  the final response. This includes all responses which
	      occur during authentication negotiation. If you need to  operate
	      on  only	the  headers from the final response, you will need to
	      collect headers in the callback yourself	and  use  HTTP	status
	      lines, for example, to delimit response boundaries.

	      Since 7.14.1: When a server sends a chunked encoded transfer, it
	      may contain a trailer. That  trailer  is	identical  to  a  HTTP
	      header  and  if  such  a trailer is received it is passed to the
	      application using this callback as well. There are several  ways
	      to  detect  it being a trailer and not an ordinary header: 1) it
	      comes after the response-body.  2)  it  comes  after  the  final
	      header  line  (CR  LF)  3) a Trailer: header among the response-
	      headers mention what header to expect in the trailer.

       CURLOPT_WRITEHEADER
	      (This option is also known as CURLOPT_HEADERDATA) Pass a pointer
	      to  be used to write the header part of the received data to. If
	      you don't use your own callback to take  care  of  the  writing,
	      this must be a valid FILE *. See also the CURLOPT_HEADERFUNCTION
	      option above on how to set a custom get-all-headers callback.

       CURLOPT_DEBUGFUNCTION
	      Function pointer that should match the following prototype:  int
	      curl_debug_callback (CURL *, curl_infotype, char *, size_t, void
	      *); CURLOPT_DEBUGFUNCTION replaces the standard  debug  function
	      used  when CURLOPT_VERBOSE  is in effect. This callback receives
	      debug information, as specified with the curl_infotype argument.
	      This  function must return 0.  The data pointed to by the char *
	      passed to this function WILL NOT be zero terminated, but will be
	      exactly of the size as told by the size_t argument.

	      Available curl_infotype values:

	      CURLINFO_TEXT
		     The data is informational text.

	      CURLINFO_HEADER_IN
		     The  data	is  header (or header-like) data received from
		     the peer.

	      CURLINFO_HEADER_OUT
		     The data is header (or  header-like)  data  sent  to  the
		     peer.

	      CURLINFO_DATA_IN
		     The data is protocol data received from the peer.

	      CURLINFO_DATA_OUT
		     The data is protocol data sent to the peer.

       CURLOPT_DEBUGDATA
	      Pass  a  pointer	to  whatever  you  want passed in to your CUR-
	      LOPT_DEBUGFUNCTION in the last void * argument. This pointer  is
	      not used by libcurl, it is only passed to the callback.

       CURLOPT_SSL_CTX_FUNCTION
	      This  option  does only function for libcurl powered by OpenSSL.
	      If libcurl was built against another SSL library, this function-
	      ality is absent.

	      Function	pointer  that  should  match  the following prototype:
	      CURLcode sslctxfun(CURL *curl, void *sslctx, void  *parm);  This
	      function	gets  called by libcurl just before the initialization
	      of an SSL  connection  after  having  processed  all  other  SSL
	      related  options to give a last chance to an application to mod-
	      ify the behaviour of openssl's ssl  initialization.  The	sslctx
	      parameter  is  actually  a  pointer to an openssl SSL_CTX. If an
	      error is returned no attempt to establish a connection  is  made
	      and  the	perform operation will return the error code from this
	      callback	function.   Set  the  parm  argument  with  the   CUR-
	      LOPT_SSL_CTX_DATA  option. This option was introduced in 7.11.0.

	      This function will get called on all new connections made  to  a
	      server,  during the SSL negotiation. The SSL_CTX pointer will be
	      a new one every time.

	      To use this properly, a non-trivial amount of knowledge  of  the
	      openssl libraries is necessary. For example, using this function
	      allows you to use openssl callbacks to add additional validation
	      code  for  certificates, and even to change the actual URI of an
	      HTTPS request (example used in the lib509 test case).  See  also
	      the  example  section  for a replacement of the key, certificate
	      and trust file settings.

       CURLOPT_SSL_CTX_DATA
	      Data pointer to pass to the ssl  context	callback  set  by  the
	      option  CURLOPT_SSL_CTX_FUNCTION, this is the pointer you'll get
	      as third parameter, otherwise NULL. (Added in 7.11.0)

       CURLOPT_CONV_TO_NETWORK_FUNCTION

       CURLOPT_CONV_FROM_NETWORK_FUNCTION

       CURLOPT_CONV_FROM_UTF8_FUNCTION
	      Function pointers that should  match  the  following  prototype:
	      CURLcode function(char *ptr, size_t length);

	      These three options apply to non-ASCII platforms only.  They are
	      available only if CURL_DOES_CONVERSIONS was defined when libcurl
	      was  built.  When  this  is  the case, curl_version_info(3) will
	      return the CURL_VERSION_CONV feature bit set.

	      The data to be converted is in a buffer pointed to  by  the  ptr
	      parameter.   The	amount	of data to convert is indicated by the
	      length parameter.  The converted data overlays the input data in
	      the  buffer pointed to by the ptr parameter.  CURLE_OK should be
	      returned upon successful conversion.  A  CURLcode  return  value
	      defined by curl.h, such as CURLE_CONV_FAILED, should be returned
	      if an error was encountered.

	      CURLOPT_CONV_TO_NETWORK_FUNCTION	 and	CURLOPT_CONV_FROM_NET-
	      WORK_FUNCTION  convert between the host encoding and the network
	      encoding.  They  are  used  when	commands  or  ASCII  data  are
	      sent/received over the network.

	      CURLOPT_CONV_FROM_UTF8_FUNCTION  is  called to convert from UTF8
	      into the host encoding.  It is required only for SSL processing.

	      If  you  set a callback pointer to NULL, or don't set it at all,
	      the  built-in  libcurl  iconv  functions	will  be   used.    If
	      HAVE_ICONV  was not defined when libcurl was built, and no call-
	      back  has  been  established,   conversion   will   return   the
	      CURLE_CONV_REQD error code.

	      If  HAVE_ICONV  is defined, CURL_ICONV_CODESET_OF_HOST must also
	      be defined.  For example:

	       #define CURL_ICONV_CODESET_OF_HOST "IBM-1047"

	      The iconv code in libcurl will  default  the  network  and  UTF8
	      codeset names as follows:

	       #define CURL_ICONV_CODESET_OF_NETWORK "ISO8859-1"

	       #define CURL_ICONV_CODESET_FOR_UTF8   "UTF-8"

	      You  will need to override these definitions if they are differ-
	      ent on your system.

ERROR OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_ERRORBUFFER
	      Pass a char * to a buffer that the libcurl may store human read-
	      able  error  messages in. This may be more helpful than just the
	      return code from curl_easy_perform. The buffer must be at  least
	      CURL_ERROR_SIZE  big.   Although this argument is a 'char *', it
	      does not describe an  input  string.   Therefore	the  (probably
	      undefined)  contents of the buffer is NOT copied by the library.
	      You should keep the associated storage available	until  libcurl
	      no  longer needs it. Failing to do so will cause very odd behav-
	      ior or even  crashes.  libcurl  will  need  it  until  you  call
	      curl_easy_cleanup(3)  or	you set the same option again to use a
	      different pointer.

	      Use  CURLOPT_VERBOSE   and   CURLOPT_DEBUGFUNCTION   to	better
	      debug/trace why errors happen.

	      If the library does not return an error, the buffer may not have
	      been touched. Do not rely on the contents in those cases.


       CURLOPT_STDERR
	      Pass a FILE * as parameter. Tell	libcurl  to  use  this	stream
	      instead of stderr when showing the progress meter and displaying
	      CURLOPT_VERBOSE data.

       CURLOPT_FAILONERROR
	      A parameter set to 1 tells the library to fail silently  if  the
	      HTTP  code  returned is equal to or larger than 400. The default
	      action would be to return the page normally, ignoring that code.

	      This  method is not fail-safe and there are occasions where non-
	      successful response codes will  slip  through,  especially  when
	      authentication is involved (response codes 401 and 407).

	      You  might  get  some amounts of headers transferred before this
	      situation is detected, like when a "100-continue" is received as
	      a  response  to  a POST/PUT and a 401 or 407 is received immedi-
	      ately afterwards.

NETWORK OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_URL
	      The actual URL to deal with. The parameter should be a char * to
	      a zero terminated string.

	      If  the given URL lacks the protocol part ("http://" or "ftp://"
	      etc), it will attempt to guess which protocol to	use  based  on
	      the given host name. If the given protocol of the set URL is not
	      supported, libcurl will return on error  (CURLE_UNSUPPORTED_PRO-
	      TOCOL)  when  you  call  curl_easy_perform(3) or curl_multi_per-
	      form(3). Use curl_version_info(3) for  detailed  info  on  which
	      protocols are supported.

	      The  string  given to CURLOPT_URL must be url-encoded and follow
	      RFC 2396 (http://curl.haxx.se/rfc/rfc2396.txt).

	      CURLOPT_URL  is  the  only  option  that	must  be  set	before
	      curl_easy_perform(3) is called.

	      CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS  can  be  used to limit what protocols libcurl
	      will use for this transfer, independent of what libcurl has been
	      compiled	to  support.  That may be useful if you accept the URL
	      from an external source and want to limit the accessibility.

       CURLOPT_PROTOCOLS
	      Pass a long that holds a	bitmask  of  CURLPROTO_*  defines.  If
	      used,  this bitmask limits what protocols libcurl may use in the
	      transfer. This allows you to have a libcurl built to  support  a
	      wide  range  of  protocols but still limit specific transfers to
	      only be allowed to use a subset of them. By default libcurl will
	      accept  all protocols it supports. See also CURLOPT_REDIR_PROTO-
	      COLS. (Added in 7.19.4)

       CURLOPT_REDIR_PROTOCOLS
	      Pass a long that holds a	bitmask  of  CURLPROTO_*  defines.  If
	      used,  this  bitmask  limits what protocols libcurl may use in a
	      transfer that it follows to in a redirect when CURLOPT_FOLLOWLO-
	      CATION  is  enabled. This allows you to limit specific transfers
	      to only be allowed to use a subset of protocols in redirections.
	      By  default libcurl will allow all protocols except for FILE and
	      SCP. This is a difference compared to pre-7.19.4 versions  which
	      unconditionally  would follow to all protocols supported. (Added
	      in 7.19.4)

       CURLOPT_PROXY
	      Set HTTP proxy to use. The parameter should be a	char  *  to  a
	      zero  terminated	string	holding  the  host  name  or dotted IP
	      address. To specify port number in this string,  append  :[port]
	      to  the  end  of the host name. The proxy string may be prefixed
	      with [protocol]:// since any such prefix will  be  ignored.  The
	      proxy's  port  number may optionally be specified with the sepa-
	      rate option. If not specified, libcurl  will  default  to  using
	      port 1080 for proxies.  CURLOPT_PROXYPORT.

	      When  you  tell  the  library to use an HTTP proxy, libcurl will
	      transparently convert operations to HTTP even if you specify  an
	      FTP  URL	etc. This may have an impact on what other features of
	      the library you can use, such as CURLOPT_QUOTE and  similar  FTP
	      specifics  that  don't  work  unless you tunnel through the HTTP
	      proxy. Such tunneling is activated with CURLOPT_HTTPPROXYTUNNEL.

	      libcurl	respects   the	 environment   variables   http_proxy,
	      ftp_proxy, all_proxy etc, if any of  those  are  set.  The  CUR-
	      LOPT_PROXY  option  does however override any possibly set envi-
	      ronment variables.

	      Setting the proxy string to "" (an empty string) will explicitly
	      disable  the  use  of  a	proxy, even if there is an environment
	      variable set for it.

	      Since 7.14.1, the proxy host string given in  environment  vari-
	      ables  can  be  specified the exact same way as the proxy can be
	      set with CURLOPT_PROXY, include protocol	prefix	(http://)  and
	      embedded user + password.

       CURLOPT_PROXYPORT
	      Pass a long with this option to set the proxy port to connect to
	      unless it is specified in the proxy string CURLOPT_PROXY.

       CURLOPT_PROXYTYPE
	      Pass a long with this option to set type of the proxy. Available
	      options  for  this are CURLPROXY_HTTP, CURLPROXY_HTTP_1_0 (added
	      in  7.19.4),   CURLPROXY_SOCKS4	(added	 in   7.15.2),	 CURL-
	      PROXY_SOCKS5,  CURLPROXY_SOCKS4A	(added	in  7.18.0)  and CURL-
	      PROXY_SOCKS5_HOSTNAME  (added  in  7.18.0).  The	HTTP  type  is
	      default. (Added in 7.10)

       CURLOPT_NOPROXY
	      Pass  a  pointer	to  a  zero terminated string. The should be a
	      comma- separated list of hosts which do not use a proxy, if  one
	      is  specified.  The only wildcard is a single * character, which
	      matches all hosts, and effectively disables the proxy. Each name
	      in  this	list  is matched as either a domain which contains the
	      hostname, or the hostname itself. For example,  local.com  would
	      match   local.com,  local.com:80,  and  www.local.com,  but  not
	      www.notlocal.com.  (Added in 7.19.4)

       CURLOPT_HTTPPROXYTUNNEL
	      Set the parameter to 1 to make the library tunnel all operations
	      through  a  given  HTTP proxy. There is a big difference between
	      using a proxy and to tunnel through it. If you don't  know  what
	      this means, you probably don't want this tunneling option.

       CURLOPT_SOCKS5_GSSAPI_SERVICE
	      Pass  a  char * as parameter to a string holding the name of the
	      service. The  default  service  name  for  a  SOCKS5  server  is
	      rcmd/server-fqdn. This option allows you to change it. (Added in
	      7.19.4)

       CURLOPT_SOCKS5_GSSAPI_NEC
	      Pass a long set to 1 to enable or 0 to disable. As part  of  the
	      gssapi  negotiation a protection mode is negotiated. The rfc1961
	      says in section 4.3/4.4 it should be protected, but the NEC ref-
	      erence  implementation does not.	If enabled, this option allows
	      the unprotected exchange of  the	protection  mode  negotiation.
	      (Added in 7.19.4).

       CURLOPT_INTERFACE
	      Pass  a char * as parameter. This sets the interface name to use
	      as outgoing network interface. The  name	can  be  an  interface
	      name, an IP address, or a host name.

       CURLOPT_LOCALPORT
	      Pass  a long. This sets the local port number of the socket used
	      for connection. This  can  be  used  in  combination  with  CUR-
	      LOPT_INTERFACE  and you are recommended to use CURLOPT_LOCALPOR-
	      TRANGE as well when this is set. Note that the only  valid  port
	      numbers are 1 - 65535. (Added in 7.15.2)

       CURLOPT_LOCALPORTRANGE
	      Pass  a long. This is the number of attempts libcurl should make
	      to find a working local port number. It starts  with  the  given
	      CURLOPT_LOCALPORT  and  adds  one  to the number for each retry.
	      Setting this to 1 or below will make libcurl do only one try for
	      the  exact  port	number.  Note  that port numbers by nature are
	      scarce resources that will be busy  at  times  so  setting  this
	      value  to  something  too low might cause unnecessary connection
	      setup failures. (Added in 7.15.2)

       CURLOPT_DNS_CACHE_TIMEOUT
	      Pass a long, this sets the timeout  in  seconds.	Name  resolves
	      will  be	kept in memory for this number of seconds. Set to zero
	      to completely disable caching, or set to -1 to make  the	cached
	      entries remain forever. By default, libcurl caches this info for
	      60 seconds.

	      NOTE: the name resolve functions of various libc implementations
	      don't  re-read name server information unless explicitly told so
	      (for example, by calling res_init(3)). This may cause libcurl to
	      keep  using the older server even if DHCP has updated the server
	      info, and this may look like a DNS cache	issue  to  the	casual
	      libcurl-app user.

       CURLOPT_DNS_USE_GLOBAL_CACHE
	      Pass  a  long.  If the value is 1, it tells curl to use a global
	      DNS cache that will survive between easy	handle	creations  and
	      deletions.  This	is  not thread-safe and this will use a global
	      variable.

	      WARNING: this option is  considered  obsolete.  Stop  using  it.
	      Switch  over  to	using  the  share  interface instead! See CUR-
	      LOPT_SHARE and curl_share_init(3).

       CURLOPT_BUFFERSIZE
	      Pass a long specifying your preferred size (in  bytes)  for  the
	      receive buffer in libcurl.  The main point of this would be that
	      the write callback gets  called  more  often  and  with  smaller
	      chunks.  This  is  just  treated as a request, not an order. You
	      cannot be guaranteed to actually get the given size.  (Added  in
	      7.10)

	      This   size   is	 by   default	set   as   big	 as   possible
	      (CURL_MAX_WRITE_SIZE), so it only makes sense to use this option
	      if you want it smaller.

       CURLOPT_PORT
	      Pass  a  long  specifying what remote port number to connect to,
	      instead of the one specified in the URL or the default port  for
	      the used protocol.

       CURLOPT_TCP_NODELAY
	      Pass  a long specifying whether the TCP_NODELAY option should be
	      set or cleared (1 = set, 0 = clear). The option  is  cleared  by
	      default.	This will have no effect after the connection has been
	      established.

	      Setting this option will disable TCP's Nagle algorithm. The pur-
	      pose of this algorithm is to try to minimize the number of small
	      packets on the network (where "small packets" means TCP segments
	      less than the Maximum Segment Size (MSS) for the network).

	      Maximizing  the  amount  of  data  sent  per TCP segment is good
	      because it amortizes the overhead of the send. However, in  some
	      cases (most notably telnet or rlogin) small segments may need to
	      be sent without delay.  This  is	less  efficient  than  sending
	      larger  amounts of data at a time, and can contribute to conges-
	      tion on the network if overdone.

       CURLOPT_ADDRESS_SCOPE
	      Pass a long specifying the scope_id value to use when connecting
	      to IPv6 link-local or site-local addresses. (Added in 7.19.0)

NAMES and PASSWORDS OPTIONS (Authentication)
       CURLOPT_NETRC
	      This  parameter controls the preference of libcurl between using
	      user names and passwords from your ~/.netrc  file,  relative  to
	      user names and passwords in the URL supplied with CURLOPT_URL.

	      libcurl  uses  a	user  name (and supplied or prompted password)
	      supplied with  CURLOPT_USERPWD  in  preference  to  any  of  the
	      options controlled by this parameter.

	      Pass a long, set to one of the values described below.

	      CURL_NETRC_OPTIONAL
		     The  use  of your ~/.netrc file is optional, and informa-
		     tion in the URL is to be preferred.   The	file  will  be
		     scanned  for the host and user name (to find the password
		     only) or for the host only, to find the first  user  name
		     and  password  after that machine, which ever information
		     is not specified in the URL.

		     Undefined values of the option will have this effect.

	      CURL_NETRC_IGNORED
		     The library will ignore the file and use only the	infor-
		     mation in the URL.

		     This is the default.

	      CURL_NETRC_REQUIRED
		     This  value  tells  the  library  that use of the file is
		     required, to ignore the information in the  URL,  and  to
		     search the file for the host only.
       Only  machine name, user name and password are taken into account (init
       macros and similar things aren't supported).

       libcurl does not verify that the file has the  correct  properties  set
       (as  the  standard Unix ftp client does). It should only be readable by
       user.

       CURLOPT_NETRC_FILE
	      Pass a char * as parameter, pointing to a zero terminated string
	      containing  the  full  path name to the file you want libcurl to
	      use as .netrc file. If this option is omitted, and CURLOPT_NETRC
	      is  set,	libcurl will attempt to find a .netrc file in the cur-
	      rent user's home directory. (Added in 7.10.9)

       CURLOPT_USERPWD
	      Pass a char * as parameter, which should be  [user  name]:[pass-
	      word]  to use for the connection. Use CURLOPT_HTTPAUTH to decide
	      the authentication method.

	      When using NTLM, you can set the domain by prepending it to  the
	      user  name and separating the domain and name with a forward (/)
	      or backward slash  (\).  Like  this:  "domain/user:password"  or
	      "domain\user:password".  Some  HTTP servers (on Windows) support
	      this style even for Basic authentication.

	      When using HTTP and CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION, libcurl  might  per-
	      form  several requests to possibly different hosts. libcurl will
	      only send this user and password information to hosts using  the
	      initial  host name (unless CURLOPT_UNRESTRICTED_AUTH is set), so
	      if libcurl follows locations to other hosts it will not send the
	      user and password to those. This is enforced to prevent acciden-
	      tal information leakage.

       CURLOPT_PROXYUSERPWD
	      Pass a char * as parameter, which should be  [user  name]:[pass-
	      word]  to  use  for  the connection to the HTTP proxy.  Use CUR-
	      LOPT_PROXYAUTH to decide the authentication method.

       CURLOPT_USERNAME
	      Pass a char * as parameter, which should be pointing to the zero
	      terminated user name to use for the transfer.

	      CURLOPT_USERNAME	sets  the  user  name  to  be used in protocol
	      authentication. You should not use this option together with the
	      (older) CURLOPT_USERPWD option.

	      In  order to specify the password to be used in conjunction with
	      the user	name  use  the	CURLOPT_PASSWORD  option.   (Added  in
	      7.19.1)

       CURLOPT_PASSWORD
	      Pass a char * as parameter, which should be pointing to the zero
	      terminated password to use for the transfer.

	      The CURLOPT_PASSWORD option should be used in  conjunction  with
	      the CURLOPT_USERNAME option. (Added in 7.19.1)

       CURLOPT_PROXYUSERNAME
	      Pass a char * as parameter, which should be pointing to the zero
	      terminated user name to use for the transfer while connecting to
	      Proxy.

	      The  CURLOPT_PROXYUSERNAME  option should be used in same way as
	      the  CURLOPT_PROXYUSERPWD  is  used.   In  comparison  to   CUR-
	      LOPT_PROXYUSERPWD  the CURLOPT_PROXYUSERNAME allows the username
	      to  contain  a   colon,	like   in   the   following   example:
	      "sip:user@example.com".	Note  the CURLOPT_PROXYUSERNAME option
	      is an alternative way to set the user name while	connecting  to
	      Proxy.   There  is  no  meaning to use it together with the CUR-
	      LOPT_PROXYUSERPWD option.

	      In order to specify the password to be used in conjunction  with
	      the  user  name use the CURLOPT_PROXYPASSWORD option.  (Added in
	      7.19.1)

       CURLOPT_PROXYPASSWORD
	      Pass a char * as parameter, which should be pointing to the zero
	      terminated  password to use for the transfer while connecting to
	      Proxy.

	      The CURLOPT_PROXYPASSWORD option should be used  in  conjunction
	      with the CURLOPT_PROXYUSERNAME option. (Added in 7.19.1)

       CURLOPT_HTTPAUTH
	      Pass  a  long  as  parameter, which is set to a bitmask, to tell
	      libcurl which authentication method(s) you want it to  use.  The
	      available  bits  are  listed below. If more than one bit is set,
	      libcurl will first query the site to  see  which	authentication
	      methods  it  supports and then pick the best one you allow it to
	      use. For some methods, this will induce an extra network	round-
	      trip.  Set the actual name and password with the CURLOPT_USERPWD
	      option or with the CURLOPT_USERNAME and the CURLOPT_USERPASSWORD
	      options.	(Added in 7.10.6)

	      CURLAUTH_BASIC
		     HTTP  Basic  authentication.  This is the default choice,
		     and the only method that is in wide-spread use  and  sup-
		     ported virtually everywhere. This sends the user name and
		     password over the network in plain text, easily  captured
		     by others.

	      CURLAUTH_DIGEST
		     HTTP  Digest  authentication.   Digest  authentication is
		     defined in RFC2617 and is a more secure way to do authen-
		     tication  over public networks than the regular old-fash-
		     ioned Basic method.

	      CURLAUTH_DIGEST_IE
		     HTTP Digest authentication with  an  IE  flavor.	Digest
		     authentication is defined in RFC2617 and is a more secure
		     way to do authentication over public  networks  than  the
		     regular old-fashioned Basic method. The IE flavor is sim-
		     ply that libcurl will use a special "quirk"  that	IE  is
		     known to have used before version 7 and that some servers
		     require the client to use.  (This	define	was  added  in
		     7.19.3)

	      CURLAUTH_GSSNEGOTIATE
		     HTTP   GSS-Negotiate  authentication.  The  GSS-Negotiate
		     (also known as plain "Negotiate") method was designed  by
		     Microsoft	and  is  used in their web applications. It is
		     primarily meant as a support for Kerberos5 authentication
		     but  may  also  be  used  along with other authentication
		     methods. For  more  information  see  IETF  draft	draft-
		     brezak-spnego-http-04.txt.

		     You need to build libcurl with a suitable GSS-API library
		     for this to work.

	      CURLAUTH_NTLM
		     HTTP NTLM authentication. A proprietary protocol invented
		     and  used	by Microsoft. It uses a challenge-response and
		     hash concept similar to Digest, to prevent  the  password
		     from being eavesdropped.

		     You  need	to build libcurl with OpenSSL support for this
		     option to work, or build libcurl on Windows.

	      CURLAUTH_ANY
		     This is a convenience macro that sets all bits  and  thus
		     makes  libcurl  pick  any it finds suitable. libcurl will
		     automatically select the one it finds most secure.

	      CURLAUTH_ANYSAFE
		     This is a convenience macro that  sets  all  bits	except
		     Basic  and thus makes libcurl pick any it finds suitable.
		     libcurl will automatically select the one it  finds  most
		     secure.

       CURLOPT_PROXYAUTH
	      Pass  a  long  as  parameter, which is set to a bitmask, to tell
	      libcurl which authentication method(s) you want it  to  use  for
	      your proxy authentication.  If more than one bit is set, libcurl
	      will first query the site to see what authentication methods  it
	      supports	and  then  pick  the best one you allow it to use. For
	      some methods, this will induce an extra network round-trip.  Set
	      the  actual  name  and  password	with  the CURLOPT_PROXYUSERPWD
	      option. The bitmask can be constructed by  or'ing  together  the
	      bits  listed  above  for the CURLOPT_HTTPAUTH option. As of this
	      writing, only Basic, Digest and NTLM work. (Added in 7.10.7)

HTTP OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_AUTOREFERER
	      Pass a parameter set to 1 to enable this. When enabled,  libcurl
	      will  automatically  set the Referer: field in requests where it
	      follows a Location: redirect.

       CURLOPT_ENCODING
	      Sets the contents of the Accept-Encoding: header sent in an HTTP
	      request,	and  enables  decoding	of  a response when a Content-
	      Encoding: header is received.  Three  encodings  are  supported:
	      identity,  which does nothing, deflate which requests the server
	      to compress its response using  the  zlib  algorithm,  and  gzip
	      which  requests  the gzip algorithm.  If a zero-length string is
	      set, then an Accept-Encoding: header  containing	all  supported
	      encodings is sent.

	      This  is	a  request, not an order; the server may or may not do
	      it.  This option must be set (to any non-NULL value) or else any
	      unsolicited encoding done by the server is ignored. See the spe-
	      cial file lib/README.encoding for details.

       CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION
	      A parameter set to 1 tells the library to follow	any  Location:
	      header that the server sends as part of an HTTP header.

	      This means that the library will re-send the same request on the
	      new location and follow new Location: headers all the way  until
	      no more such headers are returned. CURLOPT_MAXREDIRS can be used
	      to limit the number of redirects libcurl will follow.

	      NOTE: since 7.19.4, libcurl can limit to what protocols it  will
	      automatically  follow.  The accepted protocols are set with CUR-
	      LOPT_REDIR_PROTOCOLS  and  it  excludes  the  FILE  protocol  by
	      default.

       CURLOPT_UNRESTRICTED_AUTH
	      A  parameter  set to 1 tells the library it can continue to send
	      authentication (user+password) when  following  locations,  even
	      when  hostname changed. This option is meaningful only when set-
	      ting CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION.

       CURLOPT_MAXREDIRS
	      Pass a long. The set number will be the  redirection  limit.  If
	      that  many  redirections	have  been followed, the next redirect
	      will cause an error (CURLE_TOO_MANY_REDIRECTS). This option only
	      makes  sense  if	the CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION is used at the same
	      time. Added in 7.15.1: Setting the limit to 0 will make  libcurl
	      refuse  any  redirect.  Set  it  to -1 for an infinite number of
	      redirects (which is the default)

       CURLOPT_POSTREDIR
	      Pass a bitmask to control how libcurl acts  on  redirects  after
	      POSTs that get a 301 or 302 response back.  A parameter with bit
	      0 set (value CURL_REDIR_POST_301) tells the library  to  respect
	      RFC  2616/10.3.2 and not convert POST requests into GET requests
	      when  following  a  301  redirection.  Setting  bit   1	(value
	      CURL_REDIR_POST_302)  makes  libcurl maintain the request method
	      after a  302  redirect.  CURL_REDIR_POST_ALL  is	a  convenience
	      define that sets both bits.

	      The  non-RFC  behaviour  is  ubiquitous  in web browsers, so the
	      library does the conversion by default to maintain  consistency.
	      However, a server may require a POST to remain a POST after such
	      a redirection. This option is meaningful only when setting  CUR-
	      LOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION.   (Added  in 7.17.1) (This option was known
	      as CURLOPT_POST301 up to 7.19.0 as it only supported the 301 way
	      before then)

       CURLOPT_PUT
	      A parameter set to 1 tells the library to use HTTP PUT to trans-
	      fer data. The data should be set with CURLOPT_READDATA and  CUR-
	      LOPT_INFILESIZE.

	      This  option  is deprecated and starting with version 7.12.1 you
	      should instead use CURLOPT_UPLOAD.

       CURLOPT_POST
	      A parameter set to 1 tells the library  to  do  a  regular  HTTP
	      post.  This  will  also  make  the  library use a "Content-Type:
	      application/x-www-form-urlencoded" header. (This is by  far  the
	      most commonly used POST method).

	      Use  one of CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS or CURLOPT_COPYPOSTFIELDS options
	      to specify what data to post and CURLOPT_POSTFIELDSIZE  or  CUR-
	      LOPT_POSTFIELDSIZE_LARGE to set the data size.

	      Optionally, you can provide data to POST using the CURLOPT_READ-
	      FUNCTION and CURLOPT_READDATA options but  then  you  must  make
	      sure  to	not  set CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS to anything but NULL. When
	      providing data with a callback, you must transmit it using chun-
	      ked  transfer-encoding or you must set the size of the data with
	      the CURLOPT_POSTFIELDSIZE or CURLOPT_POSTFIELDSIZE_LARGE option.
	      To  enable  chunked encoding, you simply pass in the appropriate
	      Transfer-Encoding header, see the post-callback.c example.

	      You can override the default POST Content-Type: header  by  set-
	      ting your own with CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER.

	      Using  POST with HTTP 1.1 implies the use of a "Expect: 100-con-
	      tinue" header.  You can disable this header  with  CURLOPT_HTTP-
	      HEADER as usual.

	      If  you use POST to a HTTP 1.1 server, you can send data without
	      knowing the size before starting the POST  if  you  use  chunked
	      encoding.  You  enable  this  by adding a header like "Transfer-
	      Encoding: chunked" with CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER.  With  HTTP  1.0  or
	      without  chunked	transfer,  you	must  specify  the size in the
	      request.

	      When setting CURLOPT_POST to 1, it will automatically  set  CUR-
	      LOPT_NOBODY to 0 (since 7.14.1).

	      If  you issue a POST request and then want to make a HEAD or GET
	      using the same re-used handle, you must explicitly set  the  new
	      request type using CURLOPT_NOBODY or CURLOPT_HTTPGET or similar.

       CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS
	      Pass a void * as parameter, which should be  the	full  data  to
	      post in an HTTP POST operation. You must make sure that the data
	      is formatted the way you want the server to receive it.  libcurl
	      will  not  convert  or  encode it for you. Most web servers will
	      assume this data to be url-encoded. Take note.

	      The pointed data are NOT copied by  the  library:  as  a	conse-
	      quence,  they must be preserved by the calling application until
	      the transfer finishes.

	      This POST is  a  normal  application/x-www-form-urlencoded  kind
	      (and  libcurl  will  set	that Content-Type by default when this
	      option is used), which is the most commonly  used  one  by  HTML
	      forms.  See  also  the  CURLOPT_POST.  Using  CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS
	      implies CURLOPT_POST.

	      If you want to do  a  zero-byte  POST,  you  need  to  set  CUR-
	      LOPT_POSTFIELDSIZE  explicitly  to  zero, as simply setting CUR-
	      LOPT_POSTFIELDS to NULL or  ""  just  effectively  disables  the
	      sending  of  the	specified  string. libcurl will instead assume
	      that you'll send the POST data using the read callback!

	      Using POST with HTTP 1.1 implies the use of a "Expect:  100-con-
	      tinue"  header.	You can disable this header with CURLOPT_HTTP-
	      HEADER as usual.

	      To make multipart/formdata posts (aka RFC2388-posts), check  out
	      the CURLOPT_HTTPPOST option.

       CURLOPT_POSTFIELDSIZE
	      If  you  want to post data to the server without letting libcurl
	      do a strlen() to measure the data  size,	this  option  must  be
	      used.  When  this option is used you can post fully binary data,
	      which otherwise is likely to fail. If this size is  set  to  -1,
	      the library will use strlen() to get the size.

       CURLOPT_POSTFIELDSIZE_LARGE
	      Pass  a curl_off_t as parameter. Use this to set the size of the
	      CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS data to prevent libcurl from  doing  strlen()
	      on  the data to figure out the size. This is the large file ver-
	      sion of the CURLOPT_POSTFIELDSIZE option. (Added in 7.11.1)

       CURLOPT_COPYPOSTFIELDS
	      Pass a char * as parameter, which should be  the	full  data  to
	      post  in an HTTP POST operation. It behaves as the CURLOPT_POST-
	      FIELDS option, but the original data are copied by the  library,
	      allowing	the  application  to overwrite the original data after
	      setting this option.

	      Because data are copied, care must  be  taken  when  using  this
	      option   in   conjunction  with  CURLOPT_POSTFIELDSIZE  or  CUR-
	      LOPT_POSTFIELDSIZE_LARGE: If the size has not been set prior  to
	      CURLOPT_COPYPOSTFIELDS,  the data are assumed to be a NUL-termi-
	      nated string; else the stored size informs the library about the
	      data  byte  count  to  copy.  In	any case, the size must not be
	      changed  after  CURLOPT_COPYPOSTFIELDS,  unless	another   CUR-
	      LOPT_POSTFIELDS  or  CURLOPT_COPYPOSTFIELDS  option  is  issued.
	      (Added in 7.17.1)

       CURLOPT_HTTPPOST
	      Tells libcurl you want a multipart/formdata HTTP POST to be made
	      and  you	instruct  what	data to pass on to the server.	Pass a
	      pointer to a linked list of curl_httppost structs as  parameter.
	      The easiest way to create such a list, is to use curl_formadd(3)
	      as documented. The data in this list must  remain  intact  until
	      you close this curl handle again with curl_easy_cleanup(3).

	      Using  POST with HTTP 1.1 implies the use of a "Expect: 100-con-
	      tinue" header.  You can disable this header  with  CURLOPT_HTTP-
	      HEADER as usual.

	      When  setting  CURLOPT_HTTPPOST,	it will automatically set CUR-
	      LOPT_NOBODY to 0 (since 7.14.1).

       CURLOPT_REFERER
	      Pass a pointer to a zero terminated string as parameter. It will
	      be  used	to set the Referer: header in the http request sent to
	      the remote server. This can be used to fool servers or  scripts.
	      You can also set any custom header with CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER.

       CURLOPT_USERAGENT
	      Pass a pointer to a zero terminated string as parameter. It will
	      be used to set the User-Agent: header in the http  request  sent
	      to  the  remote  server.	This  can  be  used to fool servers or
	      scripts. You can also set any custom header  with  CURLOPT_HTTP-
	      HEADER.

       CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER
	      Pass  a  pointer to a linked list of HTTP headers to pass to the
	      server in your HTTP request. The linked list should be  a  fully
	      valid  list of struct curl_slist structs properly filled in. Use
	      curl_slist_append(3)     to     create	 the	 list	   and
	      curl_slist_free_all(3)  to clean up an entire list. If you add a
	      header that is otherwise generated and used  by  libcurl	inter-
	      nally,  your added one will be used instead. If you add a header
	      with no content as in 'Accept:' (no data on the  right  side  of
	      the  colon), the internally used header will get disabled. Thus,
	      using this option you can  add  new  headers,  replace  internal
	      headers  and  remove  internal  headers. To add a header with no
	      content, make  the  content  be  two  quotes:  "".  The  headers
	      included in the linked list must not be CRLF-terminated, because
	      curl adds CRLF after each header item. Failure  to  comply  with
	      this  will  result  in strange bugs because the server will most
	      likely ignore part of the headers you specified.

	      The first line in a request (containing the  method,  usually  a
	      GET  or  POST) is not a header and cannot be replaced using this
	      option. Only the lines following the request-line  are  headers.
	      Adding  this method line in this list of headers will only cause
	      your request to send an invalid header.

	      Pass a NULL to this to reset back to no custom headers.

	      The most commonly  replaced  headers  have  "shortcuts"  in  the
	      options CURLOPT_COOKIE, CURLOPT_USERAGENT and CURLOPT_REFERER.

       CURLOPT_HTTP200ALIASES
	      Pass  a  pointer	to  a  linked list of aliases to be treated as
	      valid HTTP 200 responses.  Some servers respond  with  a	custom
	      header response line.  For example, IceCast servers respond with
	      "ICY 200 OK".  By including this string in your list of aliases,
	      the response will be treated as a valid HTTP header line such as
	      "HTTP/1.0 200 OK". (Added in 7.10.3)

	      The  linked  list  should  be  a	fully  valid  list  of	struct
	      curl_slist   structs,   and   be	 properly   filled   in.   Use
	      curl_slist_append(3)     to     create	 the	 list	   and
	      curl_slist_free_all(3) to clean up an entire list.

	      The  alias  itself is not parsed for any version strings. Before
	      libcurl 7.16.3, Libcurl  used  the  value  set  by  option  CUR-
	      LOPT_HTTP_VERSION,  but  starting  with  7.16.3  the protocol is
	      assumed to match HTTP 1.0 when an alias matched.

       CURLOPT_COOKIE
	      Pass a pointer to a zero terminated string as parameter. It will
	      be  used	to set a cookie in the http request. The format of the
	      string should be NAME=CONTENTS, where NAME is  the  cookie  name
	      and CONTENTS is what the cookie should contain.

	      If  you  need  to set multiple cookies, you need to set them all
	      using a single option and thus you need to concatenate them  all
	      in  one  single  string. Set multiple cookies in one string like
	      this: "name1=content1; name2=content2;" etc.

	      Note that this option sets the cookie header  explictly  in  the
	      outgoing	request(s).  If  multiple  requests  are  done	due to
	      authentication, followed redirections or similar, they will  all
	      get this cookie passed on.

	      Using  this  option  multiple  times  will  only make the latest
	      string override the previous ones.

       CURLOPT_COOKIEFILE
	      Pass a pointer to a zero	terminated  string  as	parameter.  It
	      should  contain  the  name  of  your file holding cookie data to
	      read. The cookie data may be in Netscape / Mozilla  cookie  data
	      format or just regular HTTP-style headers dumped to a file.

	      Given  an  empty	or  non-existing  file or by passing the empty
	      string (""), this option will enable cookies for this curl  han-
	      dle,  making  it	understand and parse received cookies and then
	      use matching cookies in future requests.

	      If you use this option multiple times, you just add  more  files
	      to read.	Subsequent files will add more cookies.

       CURLOPT_COOKIEJAR
	      Pass  a  file  name  as  char *, zero terminated. This will make
	      libcurl write all internally known cookies to the specified file
	      when curl_easy_cleanup(3) is called. If no cookies are known, no
	      file will be created. Specify "-" to instead  have  the  cookies
	      written  to  stdout.  Using this option also enables cookies for
	      this session, so if you for example follow a  location  it  will
	      make matching cookies get sent accordingly.

	      If  the cookie jar file can't be created or written to (when the
	      curl_easy_cleanup(3) is called), libcurl	will  not  and	cannot
	      report   an  error  for  this.  Using  CURLOPT_VERBOSE  or  CUR-
	      LOPT_DEBUGFUNCTION will get a warning to display,  but  that  is
	      the  only  visible  feedback  you get about this possibly lethal
	      situation.

       CURLOPT_COOKIESESSION
	      Pass a long set to 1 to mark this as a new cookie "session".  It
	      will  force  libcurl  to	ignore all cookies it is about to load
	      that  are  "session  cookies"  from  the	previous  session.  By
	      default,	libcurl  always stores and loads all cookies, indepen-
	      dent if they are session cookies or  not.  Session  cookies  are
	      cookies  without	expiry date and they are meant to be alive and
	      existing for this "session" only.

       CURLOPT_COOKIELIST
	      Pass a char * to a  cookie  string.  Cookie  can	be  either  in
	      Netscape	/  Mozilla  format  or	just regular HTTP-style header
	      (Set-Cookie: ...) format. If cURL cookie engine was not  enabled
	      it  will enable its cookie engine.  Passing a magic string "ALL"
	      will erase all cookies known by cURL. (Added in 7.14.1)  Passing
	      the  special  string  "SESS" will only erase all session cookies
	      known by cURL. (Added in	7.15.4)  Passing  the  special	string
	      "FLUSH"  will write all cookies known by cURL to the file speci-
	      fied by CURLOPT_COOKIEJAR.  (Added in 7.17.1)

       CURLOPT_HTTPGET
	      Pass a long. If the long is 1, this forces the HTTP  request  to
	      get  back  to  GET.  Usable  if  a  POST, HEAD, PUT, or a custom
	      request has been used previously using the same curl handle.

	      When setting CURLOPT_HTTPGET to 1,  it  will  automatically  set
	      CURLOPT_NOBODY to 0 (since 7.14.1).

       CURLOPT_HTTP_VERSION
	      Pass  a  long,  set  to  one of the values described below. They
	      force libcurl to use the specific HTTP  versions.  This  is  not
	      sensible to do unless you have a good reason.

	      CURL_HTTP_VERSION_NONE
		     We  don't	care  about  what  version  the  library uses.
		     libcurl will use whatever it thinks fit.

	      CURL_HTTP_VERSION_1_0
		     Enforce HTTP 1.0 requests.

	      CURL_HTTP_VERSION_1_1
		     Enforce HTTP 1.1 requests.

       CURLOPT_IGNORE_CONTENT_LENGTH
	      Ignore the Content-Length header. This is useful for Apache  1.x
	      (and similar servers) which will report incorrect content length
	      for files over 2 gigabytes. If this option is  used,  curl  will
	      not  be able to accurately report progress, and will simply stop
	      the download when the server  ends  the  connection.  (added  in
	      7.14.1)

       CURLOPT_HTTP_CONTENT_DECODING
	      Pass  a  long to tell libcurl how to act on content decoding. If
	      set to zero, content decoding will be disabled. If set to  1  it
	      is  enabled.  Note  however  that libcurl has no default content
	      decoding but requires you  to  use  CURLOPT_ENCODING  for  that.
	      (added in 7.16.2)

       CURLOPT_HTTP_TRANSFER_DECODING
	      Pass  a long to tell libcurl how to act on transfer decoding. If
	      set to zero, transfer decoding will be disabled, if set to 1  it
	      is  enabled (default). libcurl does chunked transfer decoding by
	      default unless this option is set to zero. (added in 7.16.2)

TFTP OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_TFTPBLKSIZE
	      Specify block size to use  for  TFTP  data  transmission.  Valid
	      range as per RFC 2348 is 8-65464 bytes. The default of 512 bytes
	      will be used if this option  is  not  specified.	The  specified
	      block  size  will  only  be  used  pending support by the remote
	      server. If the server does not return an option  acknowledgement
	      or  returns  an  option  acknowledgement	with  no  blksize, the
	      default of 512 bytes will be used. (added in 7.19.4)

FTP OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_FTPPORT
	      Pass a pointer to a zero terminated string as parameter. It will
	      be  used	to get the IP address to use for the FTP PORT instruc-
	      tion. The PORT instruction tells the remote server to connect to
	      our  specified IP address. The string may be a plain IP address,
	      a host name, a network interface name (under Unix) or just a '-'
	      symbol  to let the library use your system's default IP address.
	      Default FTP operations are passive, and thus won't use PORT.

	      The address can be followed by a ':' to specify a port,  option-
	      ally  followed  by  a  '-' to specify a port range.  If the port
	      specified is 0, the operating system will pick a free port.   If
	      a  range	is  provided and all ports in the range are not avail-
	      able, libcurl will report CURLE_FTP_PORT_FAILED for the  handle.
	      Invalid  port/range  settings  are ignored.  IPv6 addresses fol-
	      lowed by a port or portrange  have  to  be  in  brackets.   IPv6
	      addresses  without  port/range  specifier  can  be  in brackets.
	      (added in 7.19.5)

	      Examples with specified ports:

		eth0:0
		192.168.1.2:32000-33000
		curl.se:32123
		[::1]:1234-4567

	      You disable PORT again and go back to using the passive  version
	      by setting this option to NULL.

       CURLOPT_QUOTE
	      Pass  a pointer to a linked list of FTP or SFTP commands to pass
	      to the server prior to your  FTP	request.  This	will  be  done
	      before  any  other commands are issued (even before the CWD com-
	      mand for FTP). The linked list should be a fully valid  list  of
	      'struct	curl_slist'  structs  properly	filled	in  with  text
	      strings. Use curl_slist_append(3) to append  strings  (commands)
	      to   the	list,  and  clear  the	entire	list  afterwards  with
	      curl_slist_free_all(3). Disable this operation again by  setting
	      a NULL to this option.  The set of valid FTP commands depends on
	      the server (see RFC959 for a list of mandatory  commands).   The
	      valid  SFTP  commands  are: chgrp, chmod, chown, ln, mkdir, pwd,
	      rename, rm, rmdir, symlink (see curl(1)) (SFTP support added  in
	      7.16.3)

       CURLOPT_POSTQUOTE
	      Pass  a pointer to a linked list of FTP or SFTP commands to pass
	      to the server after your FTP transfer request. The commands will
	      only  be	run  if no error occurred. The linked list should be a
	      fully valid list of struct curl_slist structs properly filled in
	      as  described for CURLOPT_QUOTE. Disable this operation again by
	      setting a NULL to this option.

       CURLOPT_PREQUOTE
	      Pass a pointer to a linked list of FTP commands to pass  to  the
	      server after the transfer type is set. The linked list should be
	      a fully valid list of struct curl_slist structs properly	filled
	      in  as described for CURLOPT_QUOTE. Disable this operation again
	      by setting a NULL to this option. Before version 7.15.6, if  you
	      also set CURLOPT_NOBODY to 1, this option didn't work.

       CURLOPT_DIRLISTONLY
	      A parameter set to 1 tells the library to just list the names of
	      files in a directory, instead of doing a full directory  listing
	      that would include file sizes, dates etc. This works for FTP and
	      SFTP URLs.

	      This causes an FTP NLST command to be sent  on  an  FTP  server.
	      Beware  that  some FTP servers list only files in their response
	      to NLST; they might  not	include  subdirectories  and  symbolic
	      links.

	      (This option was known as CURLOPT_FTPLISTONLY up to 7.16.4)

       CURLOPT_APPEND
	      A  parameter  set to 1 tells the library to append to the remote
	      file instead of overwrite it. This is only useful when uploading
	      to an FTP site.

	      (This option was known as CURLOPT_FTPAPPEND up to 7.16.4)

       CURLOPT_FTP_USE_EPRT
	      Pass  a  long.  If the value is 1, it tells curl to use the EPRT
	      (and LPRT) command when doing active  FTP  downloads  (which  is
	      enabled by CURLOPT_FTPPORT). Using EPRT means that it will first
	      attempt to use EPRT and then LPRT before using PORT, but if  you
	      pass  zero  to  this option, it will not try using EPRT or LPRT,
	      only plain PORT. (Added in 7.10.5)

	      If the server is an IPv6 host, this option will have  no	effect
	      as of 7.12.3.

       CURLOPT_FTP_USE_EPSV
	      Pass  a  long.  If the value is 1, it tells curl to use the EPSV
	      command when doing passive FTP downloads (which it  always  does
	      by  default). Using EPSV means that it will first attempt to use
	      EPSV before using PASV, but if you pass zero to this option,  it
	      will not try using EPSV, only plain PASV.

	      If  the  server is an IPv6 host, this option will have no effect
	      as of 7.12.3.

       CURLOPT_FTP_CREATE_MISSING_DIRS
	      Pass a long. If the value is 1, curl will attempt to create  any
	      remote  directory  that it fails to CWD into. CWD is the command
	      that changes working directory. (Added in 7.10.7)

	      This setting also applies to SFTP-connections. curl will attempt
	      to  create  the  remote directory if it can't obtain a handle to
	      the target-location. The creation will fail if  a  file  of  the
	      same  name  as the directory to create already exists or lack of
	      permissions prevents creation. (Added in 7.16.3)

	      Starting with 7.19.4, you can also set this value  to  2,  which
	      will  make libcurl retry the CWD command again if the subsequent
	      MKD command fails. This is especially  useful  if  you're  doing
	      many  simultanoes  connections  against the same server and they
	      all have this option enabled, as then CWD  may  first  fail  but
	      then another connection does MKD before this connection and thus
	      MKD fails but trying  CWD  works!  7.19.4  also  introduced  the
	      CURLFTP_CREATE_DIR  and  CURLFTP_CREATE_DIR_RETRY enum names for
	      these arguments.

	      Before version 7.19.4, libcurl will simply ignore arguments  set
	      to 2 and act as if 1 was selected.

       CURLOPT_FTP_RESPONSE_TIMEOUT
	      Pass  a  long.  Causes curl to set a timeout period (in seconds)
	      on the amount of time that the server  is  allowed  to  take  in
	      order  to  generate  a response message for a command before the
	      session is  considered  hung.   While  curl  is  waiting	for  a
	      response,  this  value  overrides  CURLOPT_TIMEOUT. It is recom-
	      mended that if used in conjunction with CURLOPT_TIMEOUT, you set
	      CURLOPT_FTP_RESPONSE_TIMEOUT   to  a  value  smaller  than  CUR-
	      LOPT_TIMEOUT.  (Added in 7.10.8)

       CURLOPT_FTP_ALTERNATIVE_TO_USER
	      Pass a char * as parameter, pointing to a string which  will  be
	      used  to	authenticate  if  the  usual FTP "USER user" and "PASS
	      password" negotiation fails. This is currently only known to  be
	      required	when  connecting to Tumbleweed's Secure Transport FTPS
	      server using client certificates for authentication.  (Added  in
	      7.15.5)

       CURLOPT_FTP_SKIP_PASV_IP
	      Pass a long. If set to 1, it instructs libcurl to not use the IP
	      address the server suggests in  its  227-response  to  libcurl's
	      PASV  command when libcurl connects the data connection. Instead
	      libcurl will re-use the same IP address it already uses for  the
	      control  connection.  But  it  will use the port number from the
	      227-response. (Added in 7.14.2)

	      This option has no effect if PORT, EPRT or EPSV is used  instead
	      of PASV.

       CURLOPT_USE_SSL
	      Pass  a long using one of the values from below, to make libcurl
	      use your desired level of SSL for the FTP  transfer.  (Added  in
	      7.11.0)

	      (This  option was known as CURLOPT_FTP_SSL up to 7.16.4, and the
	      constants were known as CURLFTPSSL_*)

	      CURLUSESSL_NONE
		     Don't attempt to use SSL.

	      CURLUSESSL_TRY
		     Try using SSL, proceed as normal otherwise.

	      CURLUSESSL_CONTROL
		     Require SSL for  the  control  connection	or  fail  with
		     CURLE_USE_SSL_FAILED.

	      CURLUSESSL_ALL
		     Require   SSL   for   all	 communication	or  fail  with
		     CURLE_USE_SSL_FAILED.

       CURLOPT_FTPSSLAUTH
	      Pass a long using one of the values from	below,	to  alter  how
	      libcurl  issues  "AUTH  TLS"  or "AUTH SSL" when FTP over SSL is
	      activated (see CURLOPT_USE_SSL). (Added in 7.12.2)

	      CURLFTPAUTH_DEFAULT
		     Allow libcurl to decide.

	      CURLFTPAUTH_SSL
		     Try "AUTH SSL" first, and only if that  fails  try  "AUTH
		     TLS".

	      CURLFTPAUTH_TLS
		     Try  "AUTH  TLS"  first, and only if that fails try "AUTH
		     SSL".

       CURLOPT_FTP_SSL_CCC
	      If enabled, this option makes libcurl  use  CCC  (Clear  Command
	      Channel).  It shuts down the SSL/TLS layer after authenticating.
	      The rest of the control  channel	communication  will  be  unen-
	      crypted.	This allows NAT routers to follow the FTP transaction.
	      Pass a long using one of the values below.  (Added in 7.16.1)

	      CURLFTPSSL_CCC_NONE
		     Don't attempt to use CCC.

	      CURLFTPSSL_CCC_PASSIVE
		     Do not initiate the shutdown, but wait for the server  to
		     do it. Do not send a reply.

	      CURLFTPSSL_CCC_ACTIVE
		     Initiate the shutdown and wait for a reply.

       CURLOPT_FTP_ACCOUNT
	      Pass a pointer to a zero-terminated string (or NULL to disable).
	      When an FTP server asks for "account data" after user  name  and
	      password has been provided, this data is sent off using the ACCT
	      command. (Added in 7.13.0)

       CURLOPT_FTP_FILEMETHOD
	      Pass a long that should have one of the following  values.  This
	      option  controls	what method libcurl should use to reach a file
	      on a FTP(S) server. The argument should be one of the  following
	      alternatives:

	      CURLFTPMETHOD_MULTICWD
		     libcurl does a single CWD operation for each path part in
		     the given URL. For deep hierarchies this means many  com-
		     mands.  This  is how RFC1738 says it should be done. This
		     is the default but the slowest behavior.

	      CURLFTPMETHOD_NOCWD
		     libcurl does no CWD at all. libcurl will do  SIZE,  RETR,
		     STOR etc and give a full path to the server for all these
		     commands. This is the fastest behavior.

	      CURLFTPMETHOD_SINGLECWD
		     libcurl does one CWD with the full target	directory  and
		     then  operates on the file "normally" (like in the multi-
		     cwd case). This is somewhat more standards compliant than
		     'nocwd' but without the full penalty of 'multicwd'.
       (Added in 7.15.1)

PROTOCOL OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_TRANSFERTEXT
	      A parameter set to 1 tells the library to use ASCII mode for FTP
	      transfers, instead of the default  binary  transfer.  For  win32
	      systems  it  does not set the stdout to binary mode. This option
	      can be usable when transferring text data between  systems  with
	      different views on certain characters, such as newlines or simi-
	      lar.

	      libcurl does not do a complete ASCII conversion when doing ASCII
	      transfers  over FTP. This is a known limitation/flaw that nobody
	      has rectified. libcurl simply sets the mode to  ASCII  and  per-
	      forms a standard transfer.

       CURLOPT_PROXY_TRANSFER_MODE
	      Pass a long. If the value is set to 1 (one), it tells libcurl to
	      set the transfer mode (binary or ASCII) for FTP  transfers  done
	      via  an  HTTP proxy, by appending ;type=a or ;type=i to the URL.
	      Without this setting, or it being set to 0 (zero, the  default),
	      CURLOPT_TRANSFERTEXT  has  no effect when doing FTP via a proxy.
	      Beware that not all proxies support  this  feature.   (Added  in
	      7.18.0)

       CURLOPT_CRLF
	      Convert Unix newlines to CRLF newlines on transfers.

       CURLOPT_RANGE
	      Pass  a  char * as parameter, which should contain the specified
	      range you want. It should be in the format "X-Y", where X  or  Y
	      may  be left out. HTTP transfers also support several intervals,
	      separated with commas as in "X-Y,N-M". Using this kind of multi-
	      ple  intervals  will  cause the HTTP server to send the response
	      document in pieces (using standard MIME separation  techniques).
	      Pass a NULL to this option to disable the use of ranges.

	      Ranges work on HTTP, FTP and FILE (since 7.18.0) transfers only.

       CURLOPT_RESUME_FROM
	      Pass a long as parameter. It contains the offset	in  number  of
	      bytes  that you want the transfer to start from. Set this option
	      to 0 to make the transfer start from the beginning  (effectively
	      disabling  resume).  For	FTP, set this option to -1 to make the
	      transfer start from the end of the target file (useful  to  con-
	      tinue an interrupted upload).

       CURLOPT_RESUME_FROM_LARGE
	      Pass a curl_off_t as parameter. It contains the offset in number
	      of bytes that you want the transfer to  start  from.  (Added  in
	      7.11.0)

       CURLOPT_CUSTOMREQUEST
	      Pass a pointer to a zero terminated string as parameter. It will
	      be used instead of GET or HEAD when doing an  HTTP  request,  or
	      instead of LIST or NLST when doing a FTP directory listing. This
	      is useful for doing DELETE or other more or  less  obscure  HTTP
	      requests.  Don't do this at will, make sure your server supports
	      the command first.

	      When you change the request method by setting  CURLOPT_CUSTOMRE-
	      QUEST  to  something,  you  don't  actually  change  how libcurl
	      behaves or acts in regards to the particular request method,  it
	      will only change the actual string sent in the request.

	      For  example: if you tell libcurl to do a HEAD request, but then
	      change the request to a "GET" with CURLOPT_CUSTOMREQUEST	you'll
	      still  see  libcurl  act	as if it sent a HEAD even when it does
	      send a GET.

	      To switch to a proper HEAD, use CURLOPT_NOBODY, to switch  to  a
	      proper POST, use CURLOPT_POST or CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS and so on.

	      Restore to the internal default by setting this to NULL.

	      Many  people have wrongly used this option to replace the entire
	      request with their own, including multiple headers and POST con-
	      tents.  While  that  might  work	in  many  cases, it will cause
	      libcurl to send invalid requests and it could  possibly  confuse
	      the remote server badly. Use CURLOPT_POST and CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS
	      to set POST data. Use CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER to  replace  or	extend
	      the  set of headers sent by libcurl. Use CURLOPT_HTTP_VERSION to
	      change HTTP version.

       CURLOPT_FILETIME
	      Pass a long. If it is 1, libcurl will attempt to get the modifi-
	      cation  date  of	the  remote  document  in this operation. This
	      requires that the remote server sends the time or replies  to  a
	      time  querying  command.	The curl_easy_getinfo(3) function with
	      the CURLINFO_FILETIME argument can be used after a  transfer  to
	      extract the received time (if any).

       CURLOPT_NOBODY
	      A  parameter set to 1 tells the library to not include the body-
	      part in the output. This is only	relevant  for  protocols  that
	      have  separate  header  and body parts. On HTTP(S) servers, this
	      will make libcurl do a HEAD request.

	      To change request to GET, you should use CURLOPT_HTTPGET. Change
	      request to POST with CURLOPT_POST etc.

       CURLOPT_INFILESIZE
	      When  uploading  a  file to a remote site, this option should be
	      used to tell libcurl what the expected size of  the  infile  is.
	      This  value should be passed as a long. See also CURLOPT_INFILE-
	      SIZE_LARGE.

	      For uploading using SCP, this option or CURLOPT_INFILESIZE_LARGE
	      is mandatory.

	      Note  that this option does not limit how much data libcurl will
	      actually send, as that is controlled entirely by what  the  read
	      callback returns.

       CURLOPT_INFILESIZE_LARGE
	      When  uploading  a  file to a remote site, this option should be
	      used to tell libcurl what the expected size of  the  infile  is.
	      This value should be passed as a curl_off_t. (Added in 7.11.0)

	      For  uploading  using  SCP, this option or CURLOPT_INFILESIZE is
	      mandatory.

	      Note that this option does not limit how much data libcurl  will
	      actually	send,  as that is controlled entirely by what the read
	      callback returns.

       CURLOPT_UPLOAD
	      A parameter set to 1 tells the library to prepare for an upload.
	      The  CURLOPT_READDATA  and CURLOPT_INFILESIZE or CURLOPT_INFILE-
	      SIZE_LARGE options are also interesting for uploads. If the pro-
	      tocol  is HTTP, uploading means using the PUT request unless you
	      tell libcurl otherwise.

	      Using PUT with HTTP 1.1 implies the use of a  "Expect:  100-con-
	      tinue"  header.	You can disable this header with CURLOPT_HTTP-
	      HEADER as usual.

	      If you use PUT to a HTTP 1.1 server, you can upload data without
	      knowing the size before starting the transfer if you use chunked
	      encoding. You enable this by adding  a  header  like  "Transfer-
	      Encoding:  chunked"  with  CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER.  With HTTP 1.0 or
	      without chunked transfer, you must specify the size.

       CURLOPT_MAXFILESIZE
	      Pass a long as parameter. This allows you to specify the maximum
	      size  (in bytes) of a file to download. If the file requested is
	      larger  than  this  value,  the  transfer  will  not  start  and
	      CURLE_FILESIZE_EXCEEDED will be returned.

	      The  file  size  is  not always known prior to download, and for
	      such files this option has no effect even if the	file  transfer
	      ends  up	being larger than this given limit. This concerns both
	      FTP and HTTP transfers.

       CURLOPT_MAXFILESIZE_LARGE
	      Pass a curl_off_t as parameter. This allows you to  specify  the
	      maximum  size  (in  bytes)  of  a  file to download. If the file
	      requested is larger than this value, the transfer will not start
	      and CURLE_FILESIZE_EXCEEDED will be returned. (Added in 7.11.0)

	      The  file  size  is  not always known prior to download, and for
	      such files this option has no effect even if the	file  transfer
	      ends  up	being larger than this given limit. This concerns both
	      FTP and HTTP transfers.

       CURLOPT_TIMECONDITION
	      Pass a long as parameter. This defines how the CURLOPT_TIMEVALUE
	      time  value is treated. You can set this parameter to CURL_TIME-
	      COND_IFMODSINCE  or  CURL_TIMECOND_IFUNMODSINCE.	This   feature
	      applies to HTTP and FTP.

	      The  last modification time of a file is not always known and in
	      such instances this feature will have  no  effect  even  if  the
	      given  time  condition  would  not have been met. curl_easy_get-
	      info(3) with the CURLINFO_CONDITION_UNMET  option  can  be  used
	      after  a	transfer to learn if a zero-byte successful "transfer"
	      was due to this condition not matching.

       CURLOPT_TIMEVALUE
	      Pass a long as parameter. This should be	the  time  in  seconds
	      since  1	Jan  1970, and the time will be used in a condition as
	      specified with CURLOPT_TIMECONDITION.

CONNECTION OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_TIMEOUT
	      Pass a long as parameter containing the maximum time in  seconds
	      that you allow the libcurl transfer operation to take. Normally,
	      name lookups can take a considerable time  and  limiting	opera-
	      tions  to less than a few minutes risk aborting perfectly normal
	      operations. This option will cause curl to use  the  SIGALRM  to
	      enable time-outing system calls.

	      In unix-like systems, this might cause signals to be used unless
	      CURLOPT_NOSIGNAL is set.

       CURLOPT_TIMEOUT_MS
	      Like CURLOPT_TIMEOUT but takes number of	milliseconds  instead.
	      If  libcurl  is  built to use the standard system name resolver,
	      that portion of the transfer will still use full-second  resolu-
	      tion  for timeouts with a minimum timeout allowed of one second.
	      (Added in 7.16.2)

       CURLOPT_LOW_SPEED_LIMIT
	      Pass a long as parameter. It  contains  the  transfer  speed  in
	      bytes  per  second that the transfer should be below during CUR-
	      LOPT_LOW_SPEED_TIME seconds for the library to consider  it  too
	      slow and abort.

       CURLOPT_LOW_SPEED_TIME
	      Pass  a  long as parameter. It contains the time in seconds that
	      the transfer should be below the CURLOPT_LOW_SPEED_LIMIT for the
	      library to consider it too slow and abort.

       CURLOPT_MAX_SEND_SPEED_LARGE
	      Pass a curl_off_t as parameter.  If an upload exceeds this speed
	      (counted in bytes per second) on cumulative average  during  the
	      transfer,  the transfer will pause to keep the average rate less
	      than or equal to the parameter  value.   Defaults  to  unlimited
	      speed. (Added in 7.15.5)

       CURLOPT_MAX_RECV_SPEED_LARGE
	      Pass  a  curl_off_t  as  parameter.   If a download exceeds this
	      speed (counted in bytes per second) on cumulative average during
	      the  transfer,  the transfer will pause to keep the average rate
	      less than or equal to the parameter value. Defaults to unlimited
	      speed. (Added in 7.15.5)

       CURLOPT_MAXCONNECTS
	      Pass  a  long.  The set number will be the persistent connection
	      cache size. The set amount will be the maximum amount of	simul-
	      taneously  open  connections that libcurl may cache in this easy
	      handle. Default is 5, and there isn't  much  point  in  changing
	      this  value unless you are perfectly aware of how this works and
	      changes libcurl's behaviour. This concerns connections using any
	      of the protocols that support persistent connections.

	      When  reaching  the maximum limit, curl closes the oldest one in
	      the cache to prevent increasing the number of open  connections.

	      If  you  already have performed transfers with this curl handle,
	      setting a smaller MAXCONNECTS than before may cause open connec-
	      tions to get closed unnecessarily.

	      Note  that  if  you add this easy handle to a multi handle, this
	      setting  is  not	acknowledged,  and  you   must	 instead   use
	      curl_multi_setopt(3) and the CURLMOPT_MAXCONNECTS option.

       CURLOPT_CLOSEPOLICY
	      (Obsolete) This option does nothing.

       CURLOPT_FRESH_CONNECT
	      Pass  a  long.  Set  to  1  to  make the next transfer use a new
	      (fresh) connection by force. If the  connection  cache  is  full
	      before  this connection, one of the existing connections will be
	      closed as according to the  selected  or	default  policy.  This
	      option  should  be  used with caution and only if you understand
	      what it does. Set this to 0 to have libcurl attempt re-using  an
	      existing connection (default behavior).

       CURLOPT_FORBID_REUSE
	      Pass a long. Set to 1 to make the next transfer explicitly close
	      the connection when done. Normally, libcurl  keeps  all  connec-
	      tions alive when done with one transfer in case a succeeding one
	      follows that can re-use them.  This option should be  used  with
	      caution  and  only  if  you understand what it does. Set to 0 to
	      have libcurl keep the connection open for possible later	re-use
	      (default behavior).

       CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT
	      Pass  a long. It should contain the maximum time in seconds that
	      you allow the connection to the server to take.  This only  lim-
	      its  the connection phase, once it has connected, this option is
	      of no more use. Set to zero to disable  connection  timeout  (it
	      will  then  only timeout on the system's internal timeouts). See
	      also the CURLOPT_TIMEOUT option.

	      In unix-like systems, this might cause signals to be used unless
	      CURLOPT_NOSIGNAL is set.

       CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT_MS
	      Like CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT but takes the number of milliseconds
	      instead. If libcurl is built to use  the	standard  system  name
	      resolver, that portion of the connect will still use full-second
	      resolution for timeouts with a minimum timeout  allowed  of  one
	      second.  (Added in 7.16.2)

       CURLOPT_IPRESOLVE
	      Allows an application to select what kind of IP addresses to use
	      when resolving host names. This is only interesting  when  using
	      host names that resolve addresses using more than one version of
	      IP. The allowed values are:

	      CURL_IPRESOLVE_WHATEVER
		     Default, resolves addresses to all IP versions that  your
		     system allows.

	      CURL_IPRESOLVE_V4
		     Resolve to IPv4 addresses.

	      CURL_IPRESOLVE_V6
		     Resolve to IPv6 addresses.

       CURLOPT_CONNECT_ONLY
	      Pass  a long. If the parameter equals 1, it tells the library to
	      perform all the required	proxy  authentication  and  connection
	      setup, but no data transfer.  This option is useful only on HTTP
	      URLs.

	      This option is useful with  the  CURLINFO_LASTSOCKET  option  to
	      curl_easy_getinfo(3).  The library can set up the connection and
	      then the application can obtain the most	recently  used	socket
	      for special data transfers. (Added in 7.15.2)

SSL and SECURITY OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_SSLCERT
	      Pass  a  pointer	to  a zero terminated string as parameter. The
	      string should be the file name of your certificate. The  default
	      format is "PEM" and can be changed with CURLOPT_SSLCERTTYPE.

	      With  NSS  this  is  the nickname of the certificate you wish to
	      authenticate with.

       CURLOPT_SSLCERTTYPE
	      Pass a pointer to a zero terminated  string  as  parameter.  The
	      string  should be the format of your certificate. Supported for-
	      mats are "PEM" and "DER".  (Added in 7.9.3)

       CURLOPT_SSLKEY
	      Pass a pointer to a zero terminated  string  as  parameter.  The
	      string  should be the file name of your private key. The default
	      format is "PEM" and can be changed with CURLOPT_SSLKEYTYPE.

       CURLOPT_SSLKEYTYPE
	      Pass a pointer to a zero terminated  string  as  parameter.  The
	      string  should be the format of your private key. Supported for-
	      mats are "PEM", "DER" and "ENG".

	      The format "ENG" enables you to load  the  private  key  from  a
	      crypto engine. In this case CURLOPT_SSLKEY is used as an identi-
	      fier passed to the engine. You have to  set  the	crypto	engine
	      with  CURLOPT_SSLENGINE.	 "DER"	format key file currently does
	      not work because of a bug in OpenSSL.

       CURLOPT_KEYPASSWD
	      Pass a pointer to a zero terminated string as parameter. It will
	      be  used	as  the password required to use the CURLOPT_SSLKEY or
	      CURLOPT_SSH_PRIVATE_KEYFILE private key.	 You  never  needed  a
	      pass  phrase to load a certificate but you need one to load your
	      private key.

	      (This option was known as CURLOPT_SSLKEYPASSWD up to 7.16.4  and
	      CURLOPT_SSLCERTPASSWD up to 7.9.2)

       CURLOPT_SSLENGINE
	      Pass a pointer to a zero terminated string as parameter. It will
	      be used as the identifier for the crypto engine you want to  use
	      for your private key.

	      If the crypto device cannot be loaded, CURLE_SSL_ENGINE_NOTFOUND
	      is returned.

       CURLOPT_SSLENGINE_DEFAULT
	      Sets the actual crypto engine as the  default  for  (asymmetric)
	      crypto operations.

	      If  the  crypto device cannot be set, CURLE_SSL_ENGINE_SETFAILED
	      is returned.

	      Note that even though this option doesn't need any parameter, in
	      some configurations curl_easy_setopt might be defined as a macro
	      taking exactly three arguments. Therefore, it's  recommended  to
	      pass 1 as parameter to this option.

       CURLOPT_SSLVERSION
	      Pass  a  long as parameter to control what version of SSL/TLS to
	      attempt to use.  The available options are:

	      CURL_SSLVERSION_DEFAULT
		     The default action. This will attempt to figure  out  the
		     remote  SSL  protocol version, i.e. either SSLv3 or TLSv1
		     (but not SSLv2, which became  disabled  by  default  with
		     7.18.1).

	      CURL_SSLVERSION_TLSv1
		     Force TLSv1

	      CURL_SSLVERSION_SSLv2
		     Force SSLv2

	      CURL_SSLVERSION_SSLv3
		     Force SSLv3

       CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER
	      Pass a long as parameter.

	      This option determines whether curl verifies the authenticity of
	      the peer's certificate. A value of 1 means curl  verifies;  zero
	      means  it  doesn't.  The default is nonzero, but before 7.10, it
	      was zero.

	      When negotiating an SSL connection, the server sends a  certifi-
	      cate  indicating	its  identity.	Curl verifies whether the cer-
	      tificate is authentic, i.e. that you can trust that  the	server
	      is  who  the  certificate  says it is.  This trust is based on a
	      chain of digital signatures, rooted in  certification  authority
	      (CA)  certificates  you  supply.	 As  of  7.10, curl installs a
	      default bundle of CA certificates and you can specify  alternate
	      certificates  with the CURLOPT_CAINFO option or the CURLOPT_CAP-
	      ATH option.

	      When CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER is  nonzero,	and  the  verification
	      fails to prove that the certificate is authentic, the connection
	      fails.  When the option is zero, the connection succeeds regard-
	      less.

	      Authenticating  the  certificate	is  not by itself very useful.
	      You typically want to ensure that the server,  as  authentically
	      identified  by  its  certificate,  is  the server you mean to be
	      talking to.  Use CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYHOST to control that.

       CURLOPT_CAINFO
	      Pass a char * to a zero terminated string naming a file  holding
	      one  or  more  certificates to verify the peer with.  This makes
	      sense only when used in combination with	the  CURLOPT_SSL_VERI-
	      FYPEER   option.	  If   CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER  is  zero,  CUR-
	      LOPT_CAINFO need not even indicate an accessible file.

	      Note that option is by default set  to  the  system  path  where
	      libcurl's  cacert bundle is assumed to be stored, as established
	      at build time.

	      When built against NSS, this is the directory that the NSS  cer-
	      tificate database resides in.

       CURLOPT_ISSUERCERT
	      Pass  a char * to a zero terminated string naming a file holding
	      a CA certificate in PEM format. If the option is set,  an  addi-
	      tional check against the peer certificate is performed to verify
	      the issuer is indeed the one  associated	with  the  certificate
	      provided	by  the  option.  This	additional  check is useful in
	      multi-level PKI where one needs to enforce that  the  peer  cer-
	      tificate is from a specific branch of the tree.

	      This  option  makes sense only when used in combination with the
	      CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER option.  Otherwise,  the  result  of  the
	      check is not considered as failure.

	      A  specific  error code (CURLE_SSL_ISSUER_ERROR) is defined with
	      the option, which is returned if the setup of the  SSL/TLS  ses-
	      sion  has  failed due to a mismatch with the issuer of peer cer-
	      tificate (CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER has to be set too for the check
	      to fail). (Added in 7.19.0)

       CURLOPT_CAPATH
	      Pass  a  char  *	to a zero terminated string naming a directory
	      holding multiple CA certificates to verify the  peer  with.  The
	      certificate   directory  must  be  prepared  using  the  openssl
	      c_rehash utility. This makes sense only when used in combination
	      with  the  CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER  option.  If CURLOPT_SSL_VERI-
	      FYPEER is zero, CURLOPT_CAPATH need not even indicate an	acces-
	      sible  path.   The  CURLOPT_CAPATH  function apparently does not
	      work in Windows due to some limitation in openssl.  This	option
	      is  OpenSSL-specific and does nothing if libcurl is built to use
	      GnuTLS.

       CURLOPT_CRLFILE
	      Pass a char * to a zero terminated string naming a file with the
	      concatenation  of  CRL (in PEM format) to use in the certificate
	      validation that occurs during the SSL exchange.

	      When curl is built to use NSS or GnuTLS,	there  is  no  way  to
	      influence  the  use  of  CRL  passed to help in the verification
	      process.	When  libcurl	is   built   with   OpenSSL   support,
	      X509_V_FLAG_CRL_CHECK  and  X509_V_FLAG_CRL_CHECK_ALL  are  both
	      set, requiring CRL check against all the elements  of  the  cer-
	      tificate chain if a CRL file is passed.

	      This  option  makes sense only when used in combination with the
	      CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER option.

	      A specific error code (CURLE_SSL_CRL_BADFILE)  is  defined  with
	      the  option.  It is returned when the SSL exchange fails because
	      the CRL file cannot be loaded.  Note that a failure in  certifi-
	      cate  verification  due to a revocation information found in the
	      CRL does not trigger this specific error. (Added in 7.19.0)

       CURLOPT_CERTINFO
	      Pass a long set to 1 to enable libcurl's certificate chain  info
	      gatherer.  With  this  enabled,  libcurl (if built with OpenSSL)
	      will extract lots of information and data about the certificates
	      in  the  certificate chain used in the SSL connection. This data
	      is  then	possible   to	extract   after   a   transfer	 using
	      curl_easy_getinfo(3) and its option CURLINFO_CERTINFO. (Added in
	      7.19.1)

       CURLOPT_RANDOM_FILE
	      Pass a char * to a zero terminated file name. The file  will  be
	      used  to	read  from to seed the random engine for SSL. The more
	      random the specified file is, the more secure the SSL connection
	      will become.

       CURLOPT_EGDSOCKET
	      Pass  a  char  * to the zero terminated path name to the Entropy
	      Gathering Daemon socket. It will be  used  to  seed  the	random
	      engine for SSL.

       CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYHOST
	      Pass a long as parameter.

	      This  option determines whether libcurl verifies that the server
	      cert is for the server it is known as.

	      When negotiating a SSL connection, the server sends  a  certifi-
	      cate indicating its identity.

	      When CURLOPT_SSL_VERIFYHOST is 2, that certificate must indicate
	      that the server is the server to which you meant to connect,  or
	      the connection fails.

	      Curl  considers the server the intended one when the Common Name
	      field or a Subject  Alternate  Name  field  in  the  certificate
	      matches  the host name in the URL to which you told Curl to con-
	      nect.

	      When the value is 1, the certificate must contain a Common  Name
	      field,  but  it  doesn't matter what name it says.  (This is not
	      ordinarily a useful setting).

	      When the value is 0, the connection succeeds regardless  of  the
	      names in the certificate.

	      The default, since 7.10, is 2.

	      This  option  controls  checking	the server's claimed identity.
	      The  server  could  be  lying.   To  control  lying,  see   CUR-
	      LOPT_SSL_VERIFYPEER.

       CURLOPT_SSL_CIPHER_LIST
	      Pass  a char *, pointing to a zero terminated string holding the
	      list of ciphers to use for the SSL connection. The list must  be
	      syntactically correct, it consists of one or more cipher strings
	      separated by colons. Commas or spaces are also acceptable  sepa-
	      rators  but  colons are normally used, !, - and + can be used as
	      operators.

	      For OpenSSL and GnuTLS valid examples of	cipher	lists  include
	      'RC4-SHA',  'SHA1+DES',  'TLSv1' and 'DEFAULT'. The default list
	      is normally set when you compile OpenSSL.

	      You'll find  more  details  about  cipher  lists	on  this  URL:
	      http://www.openssl.org/docs/apps/ciphers.html

	      For    NSS,    valid    examples	 of   cipher   lists   include
	      'rsa_rc4_128_md5', 'rsa_aes_128_sha', etc. With  NSS  you  don't
	      add/remove  ciphers.  If	one  uses  this  option then all known
	      ciphers are disabled and only those passed in are enabled.

	      You'll find more details about the NSS cipher lists on this URL:
	      http://directory.fedora.redhat.com/docs/mod_nss.html#Directives


       CURLOPT_SSL_SESSIONID_CACHE
	      Pass  a long set to 0 to disable libcurl's use of SSL session-ID
	      caching. Set this to 1 to enable it. By  default	all  transfers
	      are  done  using	the cache. Note that while nothing ever should
	      get hurt by attempting to reuse SSL session-IDs, there  seem  to
	      be  broken  SSL implementations in the wild that may require you
	      to disable this in order for you to succeed. (Added in 7.16.0)

       CURLOPT_KRBLEVEL
	      Pass a char * as parameter. Set the kerberos security level  for
	      FTP;  this  also	enables kerberos awareness.  This is a string,
	      'clear', 'safe', 'confidential' or 'private'.  If the string  is
	      set  but doesn't match one of these, 'private' will be used. Set
	      the string to NULL to disable kerberos support for FTP.

	      (This option was known as CURLOPT_KRB4LEVEL up to 7.16.3)

SSH OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_SSH_AUTH_TYPES
	      Pass a long set to a  bitmask  consisting  of  one  or  more  of
	      CURLSSH_AUTH_PUBLICKEY,			CURLSSH_AUTH_PASSWORD,
	      CURLSSH_AUTH_HOST, CURLSSH_AUTH_KEYBOARD.  Set  CURLSSH_AUTH_ANY
	      to let libcurl pick one.	(Added in 7.16.1)

       CURLOPT_SSH_HOST_PUBLIC_KEY_MD5
	      Pass  a  char  *	pointing to a string containing 32 hexadecimal
	      digits. The string should be the 128 bit	MD5  checksum  of  the
	      remote host's public key, and libcurl will reject the connection
	      to the host unless the md5sums match. This option  is  only  for
	      SCP and SFTP transfers. (Added in 7.17.1)

       CURLOPT_SSH_PUBLIC_KEYFILE
	      Pass  a  char  * pointing to a file name for your public key. If
	      not used, libcurl defaults to using  ~/.ssh/id_dsa.pub.	(Added
	      in 7.16.1)

       CURLOPT_SSH_PRIVATE_KEYFILE
	      Pass  a  char * pointing to a file name for your private key. If
	      not used, libcurl defaults to using ~/.ssh/id_dsa.  If the  file
	      is  password-protected, set the password with CURLOPT_KEYPASSWD.
	      (Added in 7.16.1)

       CURLOPT_SSH_KNOWNHOSTS
	      Pass a pointer to a zero terminated string holding the file name
	      of  the known_host file to use.  The known_hosts file should use
	      the OpenSSH file format as supported by libssh2. If this file is
	      specified,  libcurl will only accept connections with hosts that
	      are known and present in that file, with a matching public  key.
	      Use  CURLOPT_SSH_KEYFUNCTION  to	alter  the default behavior on
	      host and key (mis)matching. (Added in 7.19.6)

       CURLOPT_SSH_KEYFUNCTION
	      Pass a pointer to a curl_sshkeycallback function. It gets called
	      when  the known_host matching has been done, to allow the appli-
	      cation to act and decide for libcurl how	to  proceed.  It  gets
	      passed  the  CURL handle, the key from the known_hosts file, the
	      key from the remote site, info from libcurl on the matching sta-
	      tus and a custom pointer (set with CURLOPT_SSH_KEYDATA). It MUST
	      return one of the following return codes to tell libcurl how  to
	      act:

	      CURLKHSTAT_FINE_ADD_TO_FILE
		     The  host+key  is	accepted and libcurl will append it to
		     the known_hosts file before continuing with  the  connec-
		     tion.  This  will	also  add  the	host+key  combo to the
		     known_host pool kept  in  memory  if  it  wasn't  already
		     present  there.  Note that the adding of data to the file
		     is done by completely replacing the file with a new copy,
		     so the permissions of the file must allow this.

	      CURLKHSTAT_FINE
		     The  host+key  is accepted libcurl will continue with the
		     connection. This will also add the host+key combo to  the
		     known_host  pool  kept  in  memory  if  it wasn't already
		     present there.

	      CURLKHSTAT_REJECT
		     The host+key is rejected. libcurl will deny  the  connec-
		     tion to continue and it will be closed.

	      CURLKHSTAT_DEFER
		     The host+key is rejected, but the SSH connection is asked
		     to be kept alive.	This feature could be  used  when  the
		     app  wants to somehow return back and act on the host+key
		     situation and then retry without needing the overhead  of
		     setting it up from scratch again.

	(Added in 7.19.6)

       CURLOPT_SSH_KEYDATA
	      Pass  a  void  * as parameter. This pointer will be passed along
	      verbatim	to  the  callback  set	with  CURLOPT_SSH_KEYFUNCTION.
	      (Added in 7.19.6)

OTHER OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_PRIVATE
	      Pass  a  void  *	as  parameter, pointing to data that should be
	      associated with this curl handle.  The pointer can  subsequently
	      be  retrieved  using curl_easy_getinfo(3) with the CURLINFO_PRI-
	      VATE option. libcurl itself does nothing with this data.	(Added
	      in 7.10.3)

       CURLOPT_SHARE
	      Pass  a  share handle as a parameter. The share handle must have
	      been created by a previous call to  curl_share_init(3).  Setting
	      this  option,  will  make this curl handle use the data from the
	      shared handle instead  of  keeping  the  data  to  itself.  This
	      enables  several curl handles to share data. If the curl handles
	      are used simultaneously in multiple threads, you	MUST  use  the
	      locking  methods	in  the share handle. See curl_share_setopt(3)
	      for details.

	      If you add a share that is set to share cookies, your easy  han-
	      dle  will  use  that  cookie  cache  and	get  the cookie engine
	      enabled. If you unshare an object that  was  using  cookies  (or
	      change  to  another object that doesn't share cookies), the easy
	      handle will get its cookie engine disabled.

	      Data that the share object is not set to	share  will  be  dealt
	      with the usual way, as if no share was used.

       CURLOPT_NEW_FILE_PERMS
	      Pass  a long as a parameter, containing the value of the permis-
	      sions that will be assigned to newly created files on the remote
	      server.	The  default value is 0644, but any valid value can be
	      used.  The only protocols that can use this are sftp://, scp://,
	      and file://. (Added in 7.16.4)

       CURLOPT_NEW_DIRECTORY_PERMS
	      Pass  a long as a parameter, containing the value of the permis-
	      sions that will be assigned to newly created directories on  the
	      remote  server.	The default value is 0755, but any valid value
	      can be used.  The only protocols that can use this are  sftp://,
	      scp://, and file://.  (Added in 7.16.4)

TELNET OPTIONS
       CURLOPT_TELNETOPTIONS
	      Provide  a pointer to a curl_slist with variables to pass to the
	      telnet negotiations. The	variables  should  be  in  the	format
	      <option=value>. libcurl supports the options 'TTYPE', 'XDISPLOC'
	      and 'NEW_ENV'. See the TELNET standard for details.

RETURN VALUE
       CURLE_OK (zero) means that the option was set properly, non-zero  means
       an  error  occurred as <curl/curl.h> defines. See the libcurl-errors(3)
       man page for the full list with descriptions.

       If you try to set an option that libcurl doesn't  know  about,  perhaps
       because	the library is too old to support it or the option was removed
       in a recent version, this function will return CURLE_FAILED_INIT.

SEE ALSO
       curl_easy_init(3), curl_easy_cleanup(3), curl_easy_reset(3)



libcurl 7.19.3			  11 Dec 2008		   curl_easy_setopt(3)

NAME - SYNOPSIS - DESCRIPTION - BEHAVIOR OPTIONS - CALLBACK OPTIONS - 
ERROR OPTIONS - NETWORK OPTIONS - NAMES and PASSWORDS OPTIONS (Authentication) - 
HTTP OPTIONS - TFTP OPTIONS - FTP OPTIONS - PROTOCOL OPTIONS - CONNECTION OPTIONS - 
SSL and SECURITY OPTIONS - SSH OPTIONS - OTHER OPTIONS - TELNET OPTIONS - 
RETURN VALUE - SEE ALSO -  
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