CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION - user callback for seeking in input stream
#include <curl/curl.h>
/* These are the return codes for the seek callbacks */ #define CURL_SEEKFUNC_OK 0 #define CURL_SEEKFUNC_FAIL 1 /* fail the entire transfer */ #define CURL_SEEKFUNC_CANTSEEK 2 /* tell libcurl seeking can't be done, so libcurl might try other means instead */
int seek_callback(void *userp, curl_off_t offset, int origin);
CURLcode curl_easy_setopt(CURL *handle, CURLOPT_SEEKFUNCTION, seek_callback);
Pass a pointer to your callback function, which should match the prototype shown above.
This function gets called by libcurl to seek to a certain position in the input stream and can be used to fast forward a file in a resumed upload (instead of reading all uploaded bytes with the normal read function/callback). It is also called to rewind a stream when doing a HTTP PUT or POST with a multi-pass authentication method. The function shall work like fseek(3) or lseek(3) and it gets SEEK_SET, SEEK_CUR or SEEK_END as argument for origin, although libcurl currently only passes SEEK_SET.
userp is the pointer you set with CURLOPT_SEEKDATA.
The callback function must return CURL_SEEKFUNC_OK on success, CURL_SEEKFUNC_FAIL to cause the upload operation to fail or CURL_SEEKFUNC_CANTSEEK to indicate that while the seek failed, libcurl is free to work around the problem if possible. The latter can sometimes be done by instead reading from the input or similar.
If you forward the input arguments directly to fseek(3) or lseek(3), note that the data type for offset is not the same as defined for curl_off_t on many systems!
By default, this is NULL and unused.
Returns CURLE_OK if the option is supported, and CURLE_UNKNOWN_OPTION if not.
CURLOPT_SEEKDATA CURLOPT_IOCTLFUNCTION
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