3 This is a basic port of curl and libcurl to Symbian OS. The port is
4 a straightforward one using Symbian's P.I.P.S. POSIX compatibility
5 layer, which was first available for OS version 9.1. A more complete
6 port would involve writing a Symbian C++ binding, or wrapping libcurl
7 as a Symbian application server with a C++ API to handle requests
8 from client applications as well as creating a GUI application to allow
9 file transfers. The author has no current plans to do so.
11 This means that integration with standard Symbian OS programs can be
12 tricky, since libcurl isn't designed with Symbian's native asynchronous
13 message passing idioms in mind. However, it may be possible to use libcurl
14 in an active object-based application through libcurl's multi interface.
15 The port is most easily used when porting POSIX applications to Symbian
18 libcurl is built as a standard Symbian ordinal-linked DLL, and curl is
19 built as a text mode EXE application. They have not been Symbian
20 Signed, which is required in order to install them on most phones.
22 Following are some things to keep in mind when using this port.
27 When starting curl in the Windows emulator from the Windows command-line,
28 place a double-dash -- before the first curl command-line option.
29 e.g. \epoc32\release\winscw\udeb\curl -- -v http://localhost/
30 Failure to do so may mean that some of your options won't be correctly
33 Symbian's ESHELL allows for redirecting stdin and stdout to files, but
34 stderr goes to the epocwind.out file (on the emulator). The standard
35 curl options -o, --stderr and --trace-ascii can be used to
36 redirect output to a file (or stdout) instead.
38 P.I.P.S. doesn't inherit the current working directory at startup from
39 the shell, so relative path names are always relative to
42 P.I.P.S. provides no way to disable echoing of characters as they are
43 entered, so passwords typed in on the console will be visible. It also
44 line buffers keyboard input so interactive telnet sessions are not very
47 All screen output disappears after curl exits, so after a command completes,
48 curl waits by default for Enter to be pressed before exiting. This behaviour
49 is suppressed when the -s option is given.
51 curl's "home directory" in Symbian is C:\Private\f0206442\. The .curlrc file
52 is read from this directory on startup.
57 libcurl uses writable static data, so the EPOCALLOWDLLDATA option is
58 used in its MMP file, with the corresponding additional memory usage
59 and limitations on the Windows emulator.
61 curl_global_init() *must* be called (either explicitly or implicitly through
62 calling certain other libcurl functions) before any libcurl functions
63 that could allocate memory (like curl_getenv()).
65 P.I.P.S. doesn't support signals or the alarm() call, so some timeouts
66 (such as the connect timeout) are not honoured.
68 P.I.P.S. causes a USER:87 panic if certain timeouts much longer than
69 half an hour are selected.
71 SSL/TLS encryption is not supported, nor are LDAP, SCP or SFTP URLs.
73 Debug builds are not supported (i.e. --enable-debug) because they cause
74 additional symbol exports in the library which are not frozen in the .def
79 dan@coneharvesters.com