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How do I POST JSON data with cURL?

I use Ubuntu and installed cURL on it. I want to test my Spring REST application with cURL. I wrote my POST code at the Java side. However, I want to test it with cURL. I am trying to post a JSON data. Example data is like this:

{"value":"30","type":"Tip 3","targetModule":"Target 3","configurationGroup":null,"name":"Configuration Deneme 3","description":null,"identity":"Configuration Deneme 3","version":0,"systemId":3,"active":true}

I use this command:

curl -i \
    -H "Accept: application/json" \
    -H "X-HTTP-Method-Override: PUT" \
    -X POST -d "value":"30","type":"Tip 3","targetModule":"Target 3","configurationGroup":null,"name":"Configuration Deneme 3","description":null,"identity":"Configuration Deneme 3","version":0,"systemId":3,"active":true \
    http://localhost:8080/xx/xxx/xxxx

It returns this error:

HTTP/1.1 415 Unsupported Media Type
Server: Apache-Coyote/1.1
Content-Type: text/html;charset=utf-8
Content-Length: 1051
Date: Wed, 24 Aug 2011 08:50:17 GMT

The error description is this:

The server refused this request because the request entity is in a format not supported by the requested resource for the requested method ().

Tomcat log: "POST /ui/webapp/conf/clear HTTP/1.1" 415 1051

What is the right format of the cURL command?

This is my Java side PUT code (I have tested GET and DELETE and they work):

@RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.PUT)
public Configuration updateConfiguration(HttpServletResponse response, @RequestBody Configuration configuration) { //consider @Valid tag
    configuration.setName("PUT worked");
    //todo If error occurs response.sendError(HttpServletResponse.SC_NOT_FOUND);
    return configuration;
}
checkout the link for spring 3.2.0 post requests.
There is a nice post Using Curl For Ad Hoc Testing Of RESTful Microservices which covers this with multiple examples.

G
Gray

You need to set your content-type to application/json. But -d (or --data) sends the Content-Type application/x-www-form-urlencoded, which is not accepted on Spring's side.

Looking at the curl man page, I think you can use -H (or --header):

-H "Content-Type: application/json"

Full example:

curl --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
  --request POST \
  --data '{"username":"xyz","password":"xyz"}' \
  http://localhost:3000/api/login

(-H is short for --header, -d for --data)

Note that -request POST is optional if you use -d, as the -d flag implies a POST request.

On Windows, things are slightly different. See the comment thread.


For windows, single quotes around json did not work and I ended up escaping double quotes. curl -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d "{ \"key1\": \"value1\" }" http://localhost:3000/api/method
For me under Windows I needed to escape quotes using quotes in this format "{ """key1""": """value1""" }". Also this answer: stackoverflow.com/questions/18314796/…
I've had issues with POST requests but solved it by capitalized "Application/json" so if you get a 415 error, check the capitalization.
@Adam Tuttle Why does your comment have so many upvotes? With curl on ubuntu 14.04, you need "Content-Type: application/json", not just "application/json". This wasted a lot of my time...
@ostrokach sorry it wasted your time. syntax worked fine for me on OSX when I posted it (haven't retried). Guess it is/was just a platform difference. I imagine the upvotes are from people that it helped.
T
Typisch

Try to put your data in a file, say body.json and then use

curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" --data @body.json http://localhost:8080/ui/webapp/conf

You probably should use the --data-binary option instead of --data. One would expect that the client sends the data as-is, but --data strips CR und LF from the input.
Using cUrl with inline json Strings seems to be a nightmare. There's the need to scape the double quote character. Going with a file like this is nicer.
It's important to add an @ character before the name of the file, otherwise it won't work. I just spent 20 minutes banging my head at this crap...
This way you can also run a JSON lint on the file to see if there's an error in parsing the JSON.
On Windows, you need double quotes around the filename "@body.json"
P
Peter Mortensen

For Windows, having a single quote for the -d value did not work for me, but it did work after changing to double quote. Also I needed to escape double quotes inside curly brackets.

That is, the following did not work:

curl -i -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"key":"val"}' http://localhost:8080/appname/path

But the following worked:

curl -i -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d "{\"key\":\"val\"}" http://localhost:8080/appname/path

FYI - looks like you're missing a closing double quote around the json body
For me on Windows, the " around the data does not work, no quotes works instead
If you're using PowerShell, see this answer.
For improved quote-handling, and many other reasons, stop using the ancient/weak cmd.exe and try one of the improved shells like Git-Bash from gitforwindows.org site. (Highly recommended, even if you don't use Git.)
m
mo-seph

You might find resty useful: https://github.com/micha/resty

It's a wrapper round CURL which simplifies command line REST requests. You point it to your API endpoint, and it gives you PUT and POST commands. (Examples adapted from the homepage)

$ resty http://127.0.0.1:8080/data #Sets up resty to point at your endpoing
$ GET /blogs.json                  #Gets http://127.0.0.1:8080/data/blogs.json
                                   #Put JSON
$ PUT /blogs/2.json '{"id" : 2, "title" : "updated post", "body" : "This is the new."}'
                                   # POST JSON from a file
$ POST /blogs/5.json < /tmp/blog.json

Also, it's often still necessary to add the Content Type headers. You can do this once, though, to set a default, of add config files per-method per-site: Setting default RESTY options


P
Peter Mortensen

It worked for me using:

curl -H "Accept: application/json" -H "Content-type: application/json" -X POST -d '{"id":100}' http://localhost/api/postJsonReader.do

It was happily mapped to the Spring controller:

@RequestMapping(value = "/postJsonReader", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public @ResponseBody String processPostJsonData(@RequestBody IdOnly idOnly) throws Exception {
        logger.debug("JsonReaderController hit! Reading JSON data!"+idOnly.getId());
        return "JSON Received";
}

IdOnly is a simple POJO with an id property.


A
Amit Meena

https://i.stack.imgur.com/g8F0j.png

https://i.stack.imgur.com/fD0dp.png

Note:

The latest Postman version has some UI upgrades and now the code link is available in the sidebar.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/7vOBG.png


The best answer, saved a lot of time, thanks :)
S
Software Engineer

As an example, create a JSON file, params.json, and add this content to it:

[
    {
        "environment": "Devel",
        "description": "Machine for test, please do not delete!"
    }
]

Then you run this command:

curl -v -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST --data @params.json -u your_username:your_password http://localhost:8000/env/add_server

Pro tip: add this line to your ~/.curlrc file: --header Content-Type:Application/JSON
S
Steffen Roller

I just run into the same problem. I could solve it by specifying

-H "Content-Type: application/json; charset=UTF-8"

F
Felipe Pereira

This worked well for me.

curl -X POST --data @json_out.txt http://localhost:8080/

Where,

-X Means the http verb.

--data Means the data you want to send.


The -X POST is redundant in this example
@SoftwareEngineer but at least it's instructive for begginers.
Better have transparent but redundant code, rather than non-transparent code. I also prefer --data instead of -d. It depends on how good the team is with Bash overall, but definitely easier for Bash beginners, and people who don't use it on a daily basis.
k
kiltek

You can use Postman with its intuitive GUI to assemble your cURL command.

Install and Start Postman Type in your URL, Post Body, Request Headers etc. pp. Click on Code Select cURL from the drop-down list copy & paste your cURL command

Note: There are several options for automated request generation in the drop-down list, which is why I thought my post was neccessary in the first place.


Didn't realize that feature was included in Postman. Thanks for pointing it out!
M
Mark Stosberg

HTTPie is a recommended alternative to curl because you can do just

$ http POST http://example.com/some/endpoint name=value name1=value1

It speaks JSON by default and will handle both setting the necessary header for you as well encoding data as valid JSON. There is also:

Some-Header:value

for headers, and

name==value

for query string parameters. If you have a large chunk of data, you can also read it from a file have it be JSON encoded:

 field=@file.txt

I pray for this to be a standard - at least in terms of being available / preinstalled on each server.
Also, it would be great if httpie supported spilling out the curl formatted command, for the situation when httpie is not available on a specific host.
N
NorthCat

Using CURL Windows, try this:

curl -X POST -H "Content-Type:application/json" -d "{\"firstName\": \"blablabla\",\"lastName\": \"dummy\",\"id\": \"123456\"}" http-host/_ah/api/employeeendpoint/v1/employee

t
törzsmókus

If you're testing a lot of JSON send/responses against a RESTful interface, you may want to check out the Postman plug-in for Chrome (which allows you to manually define web service tests) and its Node.js-based Newman command-line companion (which allows you to automate tests against "collections" of Postman tests.) Both free and open!


P
Peter Mortensen

This worked well for me, additionally using BASIC authentication:

curl -v --proxy '' --basic -u Administrator:password -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json"
        --data-binary '{"value":"30","type":"Tip 3","targetModule":"Target 3","configurationGroup":null,"name":"Configuration Deneme 3","description":null,"identity":"Configuration Deneme 3","version":0,"systemId":3,"active":true}'
        http://httpbin.org/post

Of course, you should never use BASIC authentication without SSL and a checked certificate.

I ran into this again today, using Cygwin's cURL 7.49.1 for Windows... And when using --data or --data-binary with a JSON argument, cURL got confused and would interpret the {} in the JSON as a URL template. Adding a -g argument to turn off cURL globbing fixed that.

See also Passing a URL with brackets to curl.


P
Paul Tobias

You could also put your JSON content in a file and pass it to curl using the --upload-file option via standard input, like this:

 echo 'my.awesome.json.function({"do" : "whatever"})' | curl -X POST "http://url" -T -

B
Benjamin W.

Use -d option to add payload

curl -X POST \
http://<host>:<port>/<path> \
-H 'Accept: application/json' \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-d '{
"foo": "bar",
"lorem": "ipsum"
}'

In addition:

use -X POST to use POST method

use -H 'Accept: application/json' to add accept type header

use -H 'Content-Type: application/json' to add content type header


I tried to use it but getting {"errors":["no data provided"]} error.
@Suresh try curl's -v switch to get more details. The service you are hitting may be only handling certain content-type values.
t
tutuDajuju

TL;DR:

Use the holy trinity, jo + curl + jq (or fx):

jo value=30 type="Tip 3" targetModule="Target 3" configurationGroup=null name="Configuration Deneme 3" description=null identity="Configuration Deneme 3" | \
curl --json @- \
    -X POST \
    http://localhost:8080/xx/xxx/xxxx | \
jq

This will cover necessary headers that were missing: no need to explicitly define the Content-Type and Accept headers.

The new curl way with --json

Early March 2022, curl released a new command line parameter --json with version 7.82.0. This allows for a shortcut to send through JSON and eliminating the need to define the Content-Type that you had missing and Accept headers as these are automatically assumed, hence reducing risk of mistakes:

curl --json '{"tool": "curl"}' https://example.com/

But wait... there is more. Instead of defining the json parameter as a string to the curl command line, use the nifty jo CLI tool to define JSON as series of key value pairs and pipe the output through curl. Using jo only to define your JSON, it works this way:

 > jo -p value=30 type="Tip 3" targetModule="Target 3" configurationGroup=null name="Configuration Deneme 3" description=null identity="Configuration Deneme 3" 
version=0 systemId=3 active=true
{
   "value": 30,
   "type": "Tip 3",
   "targetModule": "Target 3",
   "configurationGroup": null,
   "name": "Configuration Deneme 3",
   "description": null,
   "identity": "Configuration Deneme 3",
   "version": 0,
   "systemId": 3,
   "active": true
}

Let's showcase this now with a similar curl command of yours but without extra headers and using jo + jq for nice output:

jo value=30 type="Tip 3" targetModule="Target 3" configurationGroup=null name="Configuration Deneme 3" description=null identity="Configuration Deneme 3" | \
curl --json @- \
    -X POST \
    http://localhost:8080/xx/xxx/xxxx | \
jq

Example with a free API

Using a free (but limited) API for demonstration:

> jo name=Grogu gender=male email=frog.menace@jedi.edu status=active | \ 
curl --json @- \ 
    -H $env:GOREST_TOKEN \
    -XPATCH "https://gorest.co.in/public/v2/users/1138" | \
jq

The output has a pretty format thanks to jq:

{
  "email": "frog.menace@jedi.edu",
  "name": "Grogu",
  "gender": "male",
  "status": "active",
  "id": 1138
}

If you installed curl via brew, you can also brew upgrade curl to get 7.82.0
M
Misa Lazovic

This worked for me:

curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d @./my_json_body.txt http://192.168.1.1/json

I
Indrajeet Gour

I know, a lot has been answered to this question but wanted to share where I had the issue of:

curl -X POST http://your-server-end-point -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d @path-of-your-json-file.json

See, I did everything right, Only one thing - "@" I missed before the JSON file path.

I found one relevant go-to document on internet - https://gist.github.com/subfuzion/08c5d85437d5d4f00e58

Hope that might help the few. thanks


A
Anand Rockzz

Here is another way to do it, if you have dynamic data to be included.

#!/bin/bash

version=$1
text=$2
branch=$(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD)
repo_full_name=$(git config --get remote.origin.url | sed 's/.*:\/\/github.com\///;s/.git$//')
token=$(git config --global github.token)

generate_post_data()
{
  cat <<EOF
{
  "tag_name": "$version",
  "target_commitish": "$branch",
  "name": "$version",
  "body": "$text",
  "draft": false,
  "prerelease": false
}
EOF
}

echo "Create release $version for repo: $repo_full_name branch: $branch"
curl --data "$(generate_post_data)" "https://api.github.com/repos/$repo_full_name/releases?access_token=$token"

P
Peter Mortensen

I am using the below format to test with a web server.

use -F 'json data'

Let's assume this JSON dict format:

{
    'comment': {
        'who':'some_one',
        'desc' : 'get it'
    }
}

Full example

curl -XPOST your_address/api -F comment='{"who":"some_one", "desc":"get it"}'

I can't see how this could possibly be a general-purpose answer. Your server may be configured to handle this strange format, but YMMV.
C
Cindy Meister

This worked for me for on Windows10

curl -d "{"""owner""":"""sasdasdasdasd"""}" -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X  PUT http://localhost:8080/api/changeowner/CAR4

P
Pranay Kumar

I made a tool called fetcher for this. It can send requests and format curl snippets:

Here's an example:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/pYTNO.png

Example output:

curl -XGET -H "Accept: application/json" -d "{\"value\":\"30\",\"type\":\"Tip 3\",\"targetModule\":\"Target 3\",\"configurationGroup\":null,\"name\":\"Configuration Deneme 3\",\"description\":null,\"identity\":\"Configuration Deneme 3\",\"version\":0,\"systemId\":3,\"active\":true}" "http://localhost:8080/xx/xxx/xxxx"

Request/tip: URL links should be clearly spelled out. (Not just mysterious "click here.") Especially for self-promotion of your homemade tool.
m
meJustAndrew

For PowerShell I've used:

curl.exe -H "Content-Type: application/json" --data "@content.json" http://localhost:8080/appname/path

Where content.json was the name of the json file on my local containing the request, and curl.exe instead of just curl not to use the alias for Invoke-WebRequest.

Or if you want to specify directly the JSON:

curl.exe -H "Content-Type: application/json" --data '{\"username\":\"xyz\",\"password\":\"xyz\"}' http://localhost:8080/appname/path

o
omar ahmed

-H to send something like content-type or auth token in header

-d here put your data

finally add site link

Note don't forget to add auth token (if you have) for authentication credentials

curl -X POST -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -H 'Authorization: Token 2de403987713595a7955a9b4655b9e206d4294b3' -d '{"title":"Post test with curl", "body": "test body"}' http://127.0.0.1:8000/api/v1/feeds/


a
ajay_full_stack

ISSUE is HERE

HTTP/1.1 415 Unsupported Media Type

Server Login can't interpret the Media Type of this request, so it is parsing it as text/html

The media type of any resource is declared in the Content-Type property of the request header

"accept" ... header will fail this request, so the following is required for any JSON request to be sent i.e. content-type

-H 'content-type: application/json'

Suppose data and URL are something like this

{"email": "admin@admin.com","password": "123456"}

http://localhost:5000/api/login

then in LINUX

curl  http://localhost:5000/api/login  -H 'content-type: application/json'  -d '{"email": "user@admin.com", "password": "123456"}'

in WINDOWS (single quotes around params will not work)

curl  http://localhost:5000/api/login  -H "content-type: application/json"  -d "{\"email\": \"user@admin.com\", \"password\": \"123456\"}"

-X POST key is not required when -d {.....} is present in command

For Put request

-X PUT 

V
Vadorequest

Based on https://stackoverflow.com/a/57369772/2391795 answer, here is what I did to this on GitHub Actions. It was a bit tricky due to the EOF tag.

My goal was to send an HTTP call once a Vercel deployment was finished (similar to a webhook).

Hoping this real-world example might help other people.

  send-webhook-callback-once-deployment-ready:
    name: Invoke webhook callback url defined by the customer (Ubuntu 18.04)
    runs-on: ubuntu-18.04
    needs: await-for-vercel-deployment
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v1 # Get last commit pushed - See https://github.com/actions/checkout
      - name: Expose GitHub slug/short variables # See https://github.com/rlespinasse/github-slug-action#exposed-github-environment-variables
        uses: rlespinasse/github-slug-action@v3.x # See https://github.com/rlespinasse/github-slug-action
      - name: Expose git environment variables and call webhook (if provided)
        # Workflow overview:
        #  - Resolves webhook url from customer config file
        #  - If a webhook url was defined, send a
        run: |
          MANUAL_TRIGGER_CUSTOMER="${{ github.event.inputs.customer}}"
          CUSTOMER_REF_TO_DEPLOY="${MANUAL_TRIGGER_CUSTOMER:-$(cat vercel.json | jq --raw-output '.build.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_CUSTOMER_REF')}"

          VERCEL_DEPLOYMENT_COMPLETED_WEBHOOK=$(cat vercel.$CUSTOMER_REF_TO_DEPLOY.staging.json | jq --raw-output '.build.env.VERCEL_DEPLOYMENT_COMPLETED_WEBHOOK')

          # Checking if a webhook url is defined
          if [ -n "$VERCEL_DEPLOYMENT_COMPLETED_WEBHOOK" ]; then
            # Run script that populates git-related variables as ENV variables
            echo "Running script populate-git-env.sh"
            . ./scripts/populate-git-env.sh

            echo "Resolved git variables:"
            echo "'GIT_COMMIT_SHA': $GIT_COMMIT_SHA"
            echo "'GIT_COMMIT_REF': $GIT_COMMIT_REF"
            echo "'GIT_COMMIT_TAGS': $GIT_COMMIT_TAGS"

            # Generates JSON using a bash function - See https://stackoverflow.com/a/57369772/2391795
            # "End Of File" must be at the beginning of the line with no space/tab before or after - See https://stackoverflow.com/a/12909284/2391795
            # But, when executed by GitHub Action, it must be inside the "run" section instead
            generate_post_data() {
              cat <<EOF
            {
              "MANUAL_TRIGGER_CUSTOMER": "${MANUAL_TRIGGER_CUSTOMER}",
              "CUSTOMER_REF": "${CUSTOMER_REF_TO_DEPLOY}",
              "STAGE": "staging",
              "GIT_COMMIT_SHA": "${GIT_COMMIT_SHA}",
              "GIT_COMMIT_REF": "${GIT_COMMIT_REF}",
              "GIT_COMMIT_TAGS": "${GIT_COMMIT_TAGS}",
              "GITHUB_REF_SLUG": "${GITHUB_REF_SLUG}",
              "GITHUB_HEAD_REF_SLUG": "${GITHUB_HEAD_REF_SLUG}",
              "GITHUB_BASE_REF_SLUG": "${GITHUB_BASE_REF_SLUG}",
              "GITHUB_EVENT_REF_SLUG": "${GITHUB_EVENT_REF_SLUG}",
              "GITHUB_REPOSITORY_SLUG": "${GITHUB_REPOSITORY_SLUG}",
              "GITHUB_REF_SLUG_URL": "${GITHUB_REF_SLUG_URL}",
              "GITHUB_HEAD_REF_SLUG_URL": "${GITHUB_HEAD_REF_SLUG_URL}",
              "GITHUB_BASE_REF_SLUG_URL": "${GITHUB_BASE_REF_SLUG_URL}",
              "GITHUB_EVENT_REF_SLUG_URL": "${GITHUB_EVENT_REF_SLUG_URL}",
              "GITHUB_REPOSITORY_SLUG_URL": "${GITHUB_REPOSITORY_SLUG_URL}",
              "GITHUB_SHA_SHORT": "${GITHUB_SHA_SHORT}"
            }
          EOF
            }

            echo "Print generate_post_data():"
            echo "$(generate_post_data)"

            echo "Calling webhook at '$VERCEL_DEPLOYMENT_COMPLETED_WEBHOOK'"
            echo "Sending HTTP request (curl):"
            curl POST \
              "$VERCEL_DEPLOYMENT_COMPLETED_WEBHOOK" \
              -vs \
              --header "Accept: application/json" \
              --header "Content-type: application/json" \
              --data "$(generate_post_data)" \
              2>&1 | sed '/^* /d; /bytes data]$/d; s/> //; s/< //'

            # XXX See https://stackoverflow.com/a/54225157/2391795
            # -vs - add headers (-v) but remove progress bar (-s)
            # 2>&1 - combine stdout and stderr into single stdout
            # sed - edit response produced by curl using the commands below
            #   /^* /d - remove lines starting with '* ' (technical info)
            #   /bytes data]$/d - remove lines ending with 'bytes data]' (technical info)
            #   s/> // - remove '> ' prefix
            #   s/< // - remove '< ' prefix

          else
            echo "No webhook url defined in 'vercel.$CUSTOMER_REF_TO_DEPLOY.staging.json:.build.env.VERCEL_DEPLOYMENT_COMPLETED_WEBHOOK' (found '$VERCEL_DEPLOYMENT_COMPLETED_WEBHOOK')"
          fi

A
Andrew

You can cat the contents of a json file to curl via the --data-raw parameter

curl 'https://api.com/route' -H 'Content-Type: application/json' --data-raw "$(cat ~/.json/payload-2022-03-03.json | grep -v '^\s*//')"

Note: comments in the json file are filtered out via grep -v '^\s*//'

You can also pass the data to curl via stdin using grep or cat

grep -v '^\s*//' ~/.json/payload-2022-03-03.json | curl 'https://api.com/route' -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d @-

cat ~/.json/payload-2022-03-03.json | grep -v '^\s*//' | curl 'https://api.com/route' -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d @-