Curl On Windows

curl for Windows

These are the latest and most up to date official curl binary builds
for Microsoft Windows.
curl version: 7. 79. 1
Build: 7. 1
Date: 2021-09-22
Changes: 7. 1 changelog
Packages
curl for 64 bit
Size: 5. 6 MB
sha256: ca67484fc85277ec91123bd190f57c9343ca1baad89ca92d33dad811e581f43a
curl for 32 bit
Size: 4. 9 MB
sha256: 80fdaebf11969dfc6c62494da2db8b6c691dafb8f8c8cd7694997fa208d2186d
Specifications
curl 7. 1 was built and statically linked with
OpenSSL 3. 0. 0 [64bit/32bit]
brotli 1. 9 [64bit/32bit]
libgsasl 1. 10. 0 [64bit/32bit]
libidn2 2. 3. 2 [64bit/32bit]
libssh2 1. 0 [64bit/32bit]
ng2 1. 45. 1 [64bit/32bit]
zlib 1. 2. 11 [64bit/32bit]
zstd 1. 5. 0 [64bit/32bit]
The following tools/compilers were used in the build process:
binutils-mingw-w64-i686 2. 35. 2binutils-mingw-w64-x86_64 2. 2clang 11. 1gcc-mingw-w64-i686 10-win32gcc-mingw-w64-x86_64 10-win32
The log from the build.
Get further details about these curl builds in
the curl-for-win github
repo
How do I install and use cURL on Windows? - Stack Overflow

How do I install and use cURL on Windows? – Stack Overflow

Thought I’d write exactly what I did (Windows 10, 64-bit):
From the download page choose the download wizard
Choose curl executable.
Choose Win64.
Choose generic.
Choose any.
Choose x86_64.
Choose the first recommended option. For me this was:
curl version: 7. 53. 1 – SSL enabled SSH enabled. Provided by: Viktor Szakáts. This package is type curl executable You will get a pre-built ‘curl’ binary from this link (or in some cases, by using the information that is provided at the page this link takes you). You may or may not get ‘libcurl’ installed as a shared library/DLL.
The file is packaged using 7zip. 7zip is a file archiving format.
Click download.
You should have the file curl-7. 1-win64-mingw. 7z in your downloads folder.
Install 7-Zip if you don’t have it.
Right-click, 7-Zip, Extract Here. Copy and paste the extracted file somewhere like Z:\Tools\
If you look in the bin folder you’ll see If you double-click it a window will quickly flash up and vanish. To run it you need to use the Command Prompt. Navigate to the bin folder and type curl followed by your parameters to make a request. You must use double-quotes. Single quotes won’t work with curl on Windows.
Now you’ll want to add curl to a user’s Path variable so you don’t have to navigate to the right folder to run the program. Go to This PC, Computer, System Properties, Advanced system settings, authenticate as an administrator (you’re not running as admin, right? Right? ) Environment Variables, System variables, look at the list and select Path, then Edit, then New, then, e. g.
Z:\Tools\curl-7. 1-win64-mingw\bin
You can add a trailing backslash if you like, I don’t think it matters. Click move up until it’s at the top of the list, then you can see it easily from the previous screen. Click OK, OK, OK, then crack open a Command Prompt and you can run curl by typing curl from any folder, as any user. Don’t forget your double-quotes.
This is the answer I wish I’d had.
Installing and using cURL | Zendesk Developer Docs

Installing and using cURL | Zendesk Developer Docs

All the examples in the Zendesk REST API docs use cURL, a lightweight, command-line tool for making HTTP requests without a web browser. cURL lets you try out various API requests in a command-line interface such as the command prompt in Windows or Terminal in macOS. You don’t need to build a working web application just to try out the APIs.
cURL makes HTTP requests just like a web browser. To request a web page from the command line, type curl followed by the site’s URL:
The web server’s response is displayed directly in your command-line interface. If you requested an HTML page, you get the page source — which is what a browser normally sees.
Related topic
cURL documentation
Disclaimer: Zendesk can’t provide support for third-party technologies such as cURL or Windows. Please post any issues in the comments section or search for solutions online.
Using cURL
You can use cURL to inspect and test different Zendesk API requests without having to build a functioning web application. For example, the following cURL statement makes an HTTP request to the List Groups endpoint in the Zendesk API:
curl \ -v -u [email protected]:mypassword
The API returns a JSON object that lists the groups in your Zendesk Support instance:
{ “groups”: [ { “name”: “DJs”, “created_at”: “2009-05-13T00:07:08Z”, “updated_at”: “2011-07-22T00:11:12Z”, “id”: 211}, { “name”: “MCs”, “created_at”: “2009-08-26T00:07:08Z”, “updated_at”: “2010-05-13T00:07:08Z”, “id”: 122}]}
JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) is a lightweight data-interchange format. It’s designed to be easy for humans to read and write, and for machines to parse and generate. To learn more, see Working with JSON.
Using cURL in Windows
You can use the Windows command prompt to run the cURL examples. To start the command prompt, open the Start menu, type cmd in the search box, and press Enter.
Note: Windows 10 users can install and use a Bash shell, a Unix command-line interface that’s the same as the one in macOS. See Setting up a Bash shell in Windows 10 in this Help Center. If you use this option, ignore all the instructions for Windows users in this article.
cURL isn’t installed in Windows by default. See Installing cURL below to install it on your system.
The examples in the docs have to be modified slightly to work correctly in Windows. First, replace any line-ending backslash (\) character with the caret (^) character. Second, if an example contains JSON data, move the data to a file before running the example. The following sections give more details.
Replace line-ending backslashes
The cURL examples often have a backslash (\) at the end of lines to break up a long statement into easier-to-read lines. The backslash is a line continuation character in UNIX but not in Windows. In Windows, replace any backslash at the end of lines with the caret (^) character, which is an escape character in Windows. Don’t leave any space after any ^ character or it won’t work. The caret will escape the space instead of the new line.
Example:
curl ^ -v -u [email protected]:mypassword
You can paste a multiline statement at the command prompt by clicking the icon in the upper-left corner and selecting Edit > Paste. If you prefer using the keyboard, press Alt+spacebar to open the menu, then press E and P.
Move JSON data to a file
The Windows command prompt doesn’t support single quotes. It’s a problem because cURL statements use single quotes to specify JSON data. Example:
curl {subdomain}. ^ -d ‘{“group”: {“name”: “My Group”}}’ ^ -H “Content-Type: application/json” ^ -v -u {email_address}:{password} -X POST
The statement specifies JSON data for creating a group (the -d flag stands for data). Because the JSON is enclosed in single quotes, the statement won’t work on the command line.
To fix the problem, save the JSON in a separate file and import it into the cURL statement. To modify the example above, create a file named containing the following text:
{“group”: {“name”: “My Group”}}
Next, change the cURL statement to import the JSON data with the @filename syntax:
curl {subdomain}. ^ -d ^ -H “Content-Type: application/json” ^ -v -u {email_address}:{password} -X POST
Before running the statement, use the cd command (for change directory) to navigate to the folder that contains the file. Example:
C:\> cd json_files
Then paste the cURL statement at the command prompt:
An alternative to moving the JSON to a separate file is to use double quotes around the JSON data in the cURL statement and escape the inner ones with backslashes:
-d “{\”group\””: {\””name\””: \””My Group\””}}”” \

Frequently Asked Questions about curl on windows

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