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cookies.md

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Cookies

By default and by design, libcurl makes transfers as basic as possible and features need to be enabled to get used. One such feature is HTTP cookies, more known as just plain and simply cookies.

Cookies are name/value pairs sent by the server (using a Set-Cookie: header) to be stored in the client, and are then supposed to get sent back again in requests that matches the host and path requirements that were specified along with the cookie when it came from the server (using the Cookie: header). On the modern web of today, sites are known to sometimes use large numbers of cookies.

Cookie engine

When you enable the cookie engine for a specific easy handle, it means that it records incoming cookies, stores them in the in-memory cookie store that is associated with the easy handle and subsequently sends the proper ones back if an HTTP request is made that matches.

There are two ways to switch on the cookie engine:

Enable cookie engine with reading

Ask libcurl to import cookies into the easy handle from a given filename with the CURLOPT_COOKIEFILE option:

curl_easy_setopt(easy, CURLOPT_COOKIEFILE, "cookies.txt");

A common trick is to just specify a non-existing filename or plain "" to have it just activate the cookie engine with a blank cookie store to start with.

This option can be set multiple times and then each of the given files are read.

Enable cookie engine with writing

Ask for received cookies to get stored in a file with the CURLOPT_COOKIEJAR option:

curl_easy_setopt(easy, CURLOPT_COOKIEJAR, "cookies.txt");

when the easy handle is closed later with curl_easy_cleanup(), all known cookies are stored in the given file. The file format is the well-known Netscape cookie file format that browsers also once used.

Setting custom cookies

A simpler and more direct way to just pass on a set of specific cookies in a request that does not add any cookies to the cookie store and does not even activate the cookie engine, is to set the set with CURLOPT_COOKIE:

curl_easy_setopt(easy, CURLOPT_COOKIE, "name=daniel; present=yes;");

The string you set there is the raw string that would be sent in the HTTP request and should be in the format of repeated sequences of NAME=VALUE; - including the semicolon separator.

Import export

The cookie in-memory store can hold a bunch of cookies, and libcurl offers very powerful ways for an application to play with them. You can set new cookies, you can replace an existing cookie and you can extract existing cookies.

Add a cookie to the cookie store

Add a new cookie to the cookie store by simply passing it into curl with CURLOPT_COOKIELIST with a new cookie. The format of the input is a single line in the cookie file format, or formatted as a Set-Cookie: response header, but we recommend the cookie file style:

#define SEP  "\t"  /* Tab separates the fields */

char *my_cookie =
  "example.com"    /* Hostname */
  SEP "FALSE"      /* Include subdomains */
  SEP "/"          /* Path */
  SEP "FALSE"      /* Secure */
  SEP "0"          /* Expiry in epoch time format. 0 == Session */
  SEP "foo"        /* Name */
  SEP "bar";       /* Value */

curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_COOKIELIST, my_cookie);

If that given cookie would match an already existing cookie (with the same domain and path, etc.), it would overwrite the old one with the new contents.

Get all cookies from the cookie store

Sometimes writing the cookie file when you close the handle is not enough and then your application can opt to extract all the currently known cookies from the store like this:

struct curl_slist *cookies
curl_easy_getinfo(easy, CURLINFO_COOKIELIST, &cookies);

This returns a pointer to a linked list of cookies, and each cookie is (again) specified as a single line of the cookie file format. The list is allocated for you, so do not forget to call curl_slist_free_all when the application is done with the information.

Cookie store commands

If setting and extracting cookies is not enough, you can also interfere with the cookie store in more ways:

Wipe the entire in-memory storage clean with:

curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_COOKIELIST, "ALL");

Erase all session cookies (cookies without expiry date) from memory:

curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_COOKIELIST, "SESS");

Force a write of all cookies to the filename previously specified with CURLOPT_COOKIEJAR:

curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_COOKIELIST, "FLUSH");

Force a reload of cookies from the filename previously specified with CURLOPT_COOKIEFILE:

curl_easy_setopt(curl, CURLOPT_COOKIELIST, "RELOAD");

Cookie file format

The cookie file format is text based and stores one cookie per line. Lines that start with # are treated as comments.

Each line that each specifies a single cookie consists of seven text fields separated with TAB characters.

Field Example Meaning
0 example.com Domain name
1 FALSE Include subdomains boolean
2 /foobar/ Path
3 FALSE Set over a secure transport
4 1462299217 Expires at – seconds since Jan 1st 1970, or 0
5 person Name of the cookie
6 daniel Value of the cookie