Provided by: libwww-curl-perl_4.17-2build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       WWW::Curl - Perl extension interface for libcurl

SYNOPSIS

           use WWW::Curl;
           print $WWW::Curl::VERSION;

DESCRIPTION

       WWW::Curl is a Perl extension interface for libcurl.

DOCUMENTATION

       This module provides a Perl interface to libcurl. It is not intended to be a standalone
       module and because of this, the main libcurl documentation should be consulted for API
       details at <http://curl.haxx.se>. The documentation you're reading right now only contains
       the Perl specific details, some sample code and the differences between the C API and the
       Perl one.

WWW::Curl::Easy

       The name might be confusing, it originates from libcurl. This is not an ::Easy module in
       the sense normally used on CPAN.

       Here is a small snippet of making a request with WWW::Curl::Easy.

               use strict;
               use warnings;
               use WWW::Curl::Easy;

               my $curl = WWW::Curl::Easy->new;

               $curl->setopt(CURLOPT_HEADER,1);
               $curl->setopt(CURLOPT_URL, 'http://example.com');

               # A filehandle, reference to a scalar or reference to a typeglob can be used here.
               my $response_body;
               $curl->setopt(CURLOPT_WRITEDATA,\$response_body);

               # Starts the actual request
               my $retcode = $curl->perform;

               # Looking at the results...
               if ($retcode == 0) {
                       print("Transfer went ok\n");
                       my $response_code = $curl->getinfo(CURLINFO_HTTP_CODE);
                       # judge result and next action based on $response_code
                       print("Received response: $response_body\n");
               } else {
                       # Error code, type of error, error message
                       print("An error happened: $retcode ".$curl->strerror($retcode)." ".$curl->errbuf."\n");
               }

       See curl_easy_setopt(3) for details of "setopt()".

WWW::Curl::Multi

               use strict;
               use warnings;
               use WWW::Curl::Easy;
               use WWW::Curl::Multi;

               my %easy;
               my $curl = WWW::Curl::Easy->new;
               my $curl_id = '13'; # This should be a handle unique id.
               $easy{$curl_id} = $curl;
               my $active_handles = 0;

               $curl->setopt(CURLOPT_PRIVATE,$curl_id);
               # do the usual configuration on the handle
               ...

               my $curlm = WWW::Curl::Multi->new;

               # Add some easy handles
               $curlm->add_handle($curl);
               $active_handles++;

               while ($active_handles) {
                       my $active_transfers = $curlm->perform;
                       if ($active_transfers != $active_handles) {
                               while (my ($id,$return_value) = $curlm->info_read) {
                                       if ($id) {
                                               $active_handles--;
                                               my $actual_easy_handle = $easy{$id};
                                               # do the usual result/error checking routine here
                                               ...
                                               # letting the curl handle get garbage collected, or we leak memory.
                                               delete $easy{$id};
                                       }
                               }
                       }
               }

       This interface is different than what the C API does. $curlm->perform is non-blocking and
       performs requests in parallel. The method does a little work and then returns control,
       therefor it has to be called periodically to get the job done. It's return value is the
       number of unfinished requests.

       When the number of unfinished requests changes compared to the number of active handles,
       $curlm->info_read should be checked for finished requests. It returns one handle and it's
       return value at a time, or an empty list if there are no more finished requests.
       $curlm->info_read calls remove_handle on the given easy handle automatically, internally.
       The easy handle will still remain available until it goes out of scope, this action just
       detaches it from multi.

       Please make sure that the easy handle does not get garbage collected until after the multi
       handle finishes processing it, or bad things happen.

       The multi handle does not need to be cleaned up, when it goes out of scope it calls the
       required cleanup methods automatically.

       It is possible to use $curlm->add_handle to add further requests to be processed after
       $curlm->perform has been called.  WWW::Curl::Multi doesn't care about the order. It is
       possible to process all requests for a multi handle and then add a new batch of easy
       handles for processing.

WWW::Curl::Share

               use WWW::Curl::Share;
               my $curlsh = new WWW::Curl::Share;
               $curlsh->setopt(CURLSHOPT_SHARE, CURL_LOCK_DATA_COOKIE);
               $curlsh->setopt(CURLSHOPT_SHARE, CURL_LOCK_DATA_DNS);
               $curl->setopt(CURLOPT_SHARE, $curlsh);
               $curlsh->setopt(CURLSHOPT_UNSHARE, CURL_LOCK_DATA_COOKIE);
               $curlsh->setopt(CURLSHOPT_UNSHARE, CURL_LOCK_DATA_DNS);

       WWW::Curl::Share is an extension to WWW::Curl::Easy which makes it possible to use a
       single cookies/dns cache for several Easy handles.

       It's usable methods are:

               $curlsh = new WWW::Curl::Share
                       This method constructs a new WWW::Curl::Share object.

               $curlsh->setopt(CURLSHOPT_SHARE, $value );
                       Enables share for:
                               CURL_LOCK_DATA_COOKIE   use single cookies database
                               CURL_LOCK_DATA_DNS      use single DNS cache
               $curlsh->setopt(CURLSHOPT_UNSHARE, $value );
                       Disable share for given $value (see CURLSHOPT_SHARE)

               $curlsh->strerror( ErrNo )
                       This method returns a string describing the CURLSHcode error
                       code passed in the argument errornum.

       This is how you enable sharing for a specific WWW::Curl::Easy handle:

               $curl->setopt(CURLOPT_SHARE, $curlsh)
                       Attach share object to WWW::Curl::Easy instance

WWW::Curl::Form

           use WWW::Curl::Form;
           my $curlf = WWW::Curl::Form->new;
           $curlf->formaddfile($filename, 'attachment', "multipart/form-data");
           $curlf->formadd("FIELDNAME", "VALUE");

           $curl->setopt(CURLOPT_HTTPPOST, $curlf);

       Its usable methods are:

           $curlf = new WWW::Curl::Form
               This method constructs a new WWW::Curl::Form object.

           $curlf->formadd(FIELDNAME, VALUE)
               This method adds a field with a given value, to the form that is being submitted.

           $curlf->formaddfile(FILENAME, DESCRIPTION, TYPE)
               This method will add a file to the form. The description is the name of the field
               that you form expects the data to be submitted in.

COMPATIBILITY

       curl_easy_setopt
           Most of the options should work, however some might not. Please send reports, tests
           and patches to fix those.

       curl_easy_escape
           Not implemented. Since equivalent Perl code is easily produced, this method will only
           made available for interface completeness, if ever.

       curl_easy_init
           Used only internally. The standard Perl way of initializing an object should be used,
            "my $curl = WWW::Curl::Easy->new;".

       curl_easy_cleanup
           Used only internally. Curl object cleanup happens when the handle goes out of scope.

       curl_easy_duphandle
           Should be working for most cases, however do not change the value of options which
           accept a list/arrayref value on a duped handle, otherwise memory leaks or crashes will
           happen.  This behaviour will be fixed in the future.

       curl_easy_pause
           Not implemented.

       curl_easy_reset
           Not implemented.

       curl_easy_unescape
           Not implemented. Trivial Perl replacements are available.

       curl_escape
           Not implemented and won't be as this method is considered deprecated.

       curl_formadd
           Seems to be working.

       curl_formaddfile
           Seems to be working.

       curl_formfree
           Used internally. Not exposed through the public API, as this call has no relevance to
           Perl code.

       curl_free
           Used internally. Not exposed through the public API, as this call has no relevance to
           Perl code.

       curl_getdate
           Not implemented. This function is easily replaced by Perl code and as such, most
           likely it won't be implemented.

       curl_global_cleanup
           Only used internally, not exposed through the public API.

       curl_global_init
           Only used internally, not exposed through the public API.

       curl_global_init_mem
           Not implemented.

       curl_global_cleanup
           Only used internally and called automatically upon exit.

       curl_slist_append
           Only used internally, not exposed through the public API.

       curl_slist_free_all
           Only used internally, not exposed through the public API.

       curl_unescape
           Not implemented and won't be, as this method is considered deprecated.

       curl_version
           Seems to work.

       curl_version_info
           Not yet implemented.

       curl_multi_*
           Most methods are either not exposed through the WWW::Curl::Multi API or they behave
           differently than it's C counterpart. Please see the section about WWW::Curl::Multi
           above.

       curl_multi_fdset
           This method returns three arrayrefs: the read, write and exception fds libcurl knows
           about.  In the case of no file descriptors in the given set, an empty array is
           returned.

NUANCES

   Header output for redirects
       It might be surprising that if "CURLOPT_FOLLOWLOCATION" is set and header output was
       enabled, headers show up for all http responses.  The reasoning behind that and possible
       code adjustments are outlined here: <https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=61569>.

   CURLOPT_PRIVATE
       Despite what the libcurl manual says, in Perl land, only string values are suitable for
       this option.

ADDITIONAL METHODS

   On WWW::Curl::Easy objects
       pushopt
           Like "setopt" but instead of overriding any previously set values it adds it to the
           end. Can be used with "CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER", "CURLOPT_QUOTE" and "CURLOPT_POSTQUOTE".

USAGE CASES

       WWW::Curl is a thin binding on top of libcurl, to make using libcurl possible from Perl
       land.  Because of this, the module is less like Perl and more like C in coding style.

       There is a new module, <http://search.cpan.org/perldoc?WWW::Curl::Simple>, which wraps
       this module into a more Perlish and userfriendly package.

       The standard Perl WWW module, LWP should probably be used in most cases to work with HTTP
       or FTP from Perl.  However, there are some cases where LWP doesn't perform well. One is
       speed and the other is parallelism.  WWW::Curl is much faster, uses much less CPU cycles
       and it's capable of non-blocking parallel requests.

       In some cases, for example when building a web crawler, cpu usage and parallel downloads
       are important considerations. It can be desirable to use WWW::Curl to do the heavy-lifting
       of a large number of downloads and wrap the resulting data into a Perl-friendly structure
       by HTTP::Response or use WWW::Curl::Simple to do that for you.

CHANGES

       Version 4.01 - 4.07 adds several bugfixes and extends functionality coverage. See Changes
       file.

       Version 4.00 added new documentation, the build system changed to Module::Install, the
       test suite was rewritten to use Test::More, a new calling syntax for WWW::Curl::Multi was
       added, memory leak and other bugfixes added, Perl 5.6 and libcurl 7.10.8 as minimum
       requirements for this module were set.

       Version 3.12 is a bugfix for a missing Share.pm.in file in the release.

       Version 3.11 added WWW::Curl::Share.

       Version 3.10 adds the WWW::Curl::Share interface by Anton Federov and large file options
       after a contribution from Mark Hindley.

       Version 3.02 adds some backwards compatibility for scripts still using 'WWW::Curl::easy'
       names.

       Version 3.01 added some support for pre-multi versions of libcurl.

       Version 3.00 adds WWW::Curl::Multi interface, and new module names following perl
       conventions (WWW::Curl::Easy rather than WWW::Curl::easy), by Sebastian Riedel <sri at
       cpan.org>.

       Version 2.00 of WWW::Curl::easy is a renaming of the previous version (named Curl::easy),
       to follow CPAN naming guidelines, by Cris Bailiff.

       Versions 1.30, a (hopefully) threadable, object-oriented, multiple-callback compatible
       version of Curl::easy was substantially reworked from the previous Curl::easy release
       (1.21) by Cris Bailiff.

AUTHORS

       Currently maintained by Cris Bailiff <c.bailiff+curl at devsecure.com> and Balint
       Szilakszi <szbalint at cpan.org>.

       Original Author Georg Horn <horn@koblenz-net.de>, with additional callback, pod and test
       work by Cris Bailiff <c.bailiff+curl@devsecure.com> and Forrest Cahoon
       <forrest.cahoon@merrillcorp.com>. Sebastian Riedel added ::Multi and Anton Fedorov
       (datacompboy <at> mail.ru) added ::Share. Balint Szilakszi repackaged the module into a
       more modern form.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2000-2005,2008-2014 Daniel Stenberg, Cris Bailiff, Sebastian Riedel, Balint
       Szilakszi et al.

       You may opt to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute and/or sell copies of the
       Software, and permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, under the terms
       of the MIT license.

SEE ALSO

       <http://curl.haxx.se>

       <http://search.cpan.org/perldoc?WWW::Curl::Simple>

       libcurl(3)

       The development source code is also available:
       <http://github.com/szbalint/WWW--Curl/tree/master>