--- c: Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, , et al. SPDX-License-Identifier: curl Long: netrc Short: n Help: Must read .netrc for username and password Category: auth Added: 4.6 Mutexed: netrc-file netrc-optional Multi: boolean See-also: - netrc-file - config - user Example: - --netrc $URL --- # `--netrc` Make curl scan the *.netrc* file in the user's home directory for login name and password. This is typically used for FTP on Unix. If used with HTTP, curl enables user authentication. See *netrc(5)* and *ftp(1)* for details on the file format. curl does not complain if that file does not have the right permissions (it should be neither world- nor group-readable). The environment variable `HOME` is used to find the home directory. If the `NETRC` environment variable is set, that filename is used as the netrc file. (Added in 8.16.0) If --netrc-file is used, that overrides all other ways to figure out the file. The netrc file provides credentials for a hostname independent of which protocol and port number that are used. On Windows two filenames in the home directory are checked: *.netrc* and *_netrc*, preferring the former. Older versions on Windows checked for *_netrc* only. A quick and simple example of how to setup a *.netrc* to allow curl to access the machine host.example.com with username `myself` and password `secret` could look similar to: machine host.example.com login myself password secret curl also supports the `default` keyword. This is the same as machine name except that default matches any name. There can be only one `default` token, and it must be after all machine tokens. When providing a username in the URL and a *.netrc* file, curl looks for the password for that specific user for the given host if such an entry appears in the file before a "generic" `machine` entry without `login` specified.