CURLOPT_HSTSREADFUNCTION(3)
read callback for HSTS hosts
Description
CURLOPT_HSTSREADFUNCTION
NAME
CURLOPT_HSTSREADFUNCTION - read callback for HSTS hosts
SYNOPSIS
#include <curl/curl.h>
struct
curl_hstsentry {
char *name;
size_t namelen;
unsigned int includeSubDomains:1;
char expire[18]; /* YYYYMMDD HH:MM:SS [null-terminated] */
};
CURLSTScode hstsread(CURL *easy, struct curl_hstsentry *sts, void *clientp);
CURLcode curl_easy_setopt(CURL *handle, CURLOPT_HSTSREADFUNCTION, hstsread);
DESCRIPTION
Pass a pointer to your callback function, as the prototype shows above.
This callback function gets called by libcurl repeatedly when it populates the in-memory HSTS cache.
Set the clientp argument with the CURLOPT_HSTSREADDATA(3) option or it will be NULL.
When this callback is invoked, the sts pointer points to a populated struct: Copy the host name to name (no longer than namelen bytes). Make it null-terminated. Set includeSubDomains to TRUE or FALSE. Set expire to a date stamp or a zero length string for *forever* (wrong date stamp format might cause the name to not get accepted)
The callback should return CURLSTS_OK if it returns a name and is prepared to be called again (for another host) or CURLSTS_DONE if it has no entry to return. It can also return CURLSTS_FAIL to signal error. Returning CURLSTS_FAIL will stop the transfer from being performed and make CURLE_ABORTED_BY_CALLBACK get returned.
This option does not enable HSTS, you need to use CURLOPT_HSTS_CTRL(3) to do that.
DEFAULT
NULL - no callback.
PROTOCOLS
This feature is only used for HTTP(S) transfer.
EXAMPLE
{
/* set HSTS read callback */
curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_HSTSREADFUNCTION,
hstsread);
/* pass in
suitable argument to the callback */
curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_HSTSREADDATA,
&hstspreload[0]);
result =
curl_easy_perform(curl);
}
AVAILABILITY
Added in 7.74.0
RETURN VALUE
This will return CURLE_OK.
SEE ALSO
CURLOPT_HSTSREADDATA(3), CURLOPT_HSTSWRITEFUNCTION(3), CURLOPT_HSTS(3), CURLOPT_HSTS_CTRL(3),