--- c: Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, , et al. SPDX-License-Identifier: curl Title: CURLOPT_NOBODY Section: 3 Source: libcurl See-also: - CURLOPT_HTTPGET (3) - CURLOPT_MIMEPOST (3) - CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS (3) - CURLOPT_REQUEST_TARGET (3) - CURLOPT_UPLOAD (3) Protocol: - All Added-in: 7.1 --- # NAME CURLOPT_NOBODY - do the download request without getting the body # SYNOPSIS ~~~c #include CURLcode curl_easy_setopt(CURL *handle, CURLOPT_NOBODY, long opt); ~~~ # DESCRIPTION A long parameter set to 1 tells libcurl to not include the body-part in the output when doing what would otherwise be a download. For HTTP(S), this makes libcurl do a HEAD request. For most other protocols it means just not asking to transfer the body data. For HTTP operations when CURLOPT_NOBODY(3) has been set, disabling this option (with 0) makes it a GET again - only if the method is still set to be HEAD. The proper way to get back to a GET request is to set CURLOPT_HTTPGET(3) and for other methods, use the POST or UPLOAD options. Enabling CURLOPT_NOBODY(3) means asking for a download without a body. If you do a transfer with HTTP that involves a method other than HEAD, you get a body (unless the resource and server sends a zero byte body for the specific URL you request). # DEFAULT 0, the body is transferred # %PROTOCOLS% # EXAMPLE ~~~c int main(void) { CURL *curl = curl_easy_init(); if(curl) { curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_URL, "https://example.com"); /* get us the resource without a body - use HEAD */ curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_NOBODY, 1L); /* Perform the request */ curl_easy_perform(curl); } } ~~~ # %AVAILABILITY% # RETURN VALUE Returns CURLE_OK