v1.43

rclone copyurl

Copy the contents of the URL supplied content to dest:path.

Synopsis

Download a URL’s content and copy it to the destination without saving it in temporary storage.

Setting --auto-filename will attempt to automatically determine the filename from the URL (after any redirections) and used in the destination path.

With --auto-filename-header in addition, if a specific filename is set in HTTP headers, it will be used instead of the name from the URL. With --print-filename in addition, the resulting file name will be printed.

Setting --no-clobber will prevent overwriting file on the destination if there is one with the same name.

Setting --stdout or making the output file name - will cause the output to be written to standard output.

Troublshooting

If you can’t get rclone copyurl to work then here are some things you can try:

  • --disable-http2 rclone will use HTTP2 if available - try disabling it
  • --bind 0.0.0.0 rclone will use IPv6 if available - try disabling it
  • --bind ::0 to disable IPv4
  • --user agent curl - some sites have whitelists for curl’s user-agent - try that
  • Make sure the site works with curl directly
  1. rclone copyurl https://example.com dest:path [flags]

Options

  1. -a, --auto-filename Get the file name from the URL and use it for destination file path
  2. --header-filename Get the file name from the Content-Disposition header
  3. -h, --help help for copyurl
  4. --no-clobber Prevent overwriting file with same name
  5. -p, --print-filename Print the resulting name from --auto-filename
  6. --stdout Write the output to stdout rather than a file

Options shared with other commands are described next. See the global flags page for global options not listed here.

Important Options

Important flags useful for most commands

  1. -n, --dry-run Do a trial run with no permanent changes
  2. -i, --interactive Enable interactive mode
  3. -v, --verbose count Print lots more stuff (repeat for more)

See Also

  • rclone - Show help for rclone commands, flags and backends.