Curlopt_returntransfer options:
curl_setopt ($ch, curlopt_returntransfer,1);
If the result is successfully returned only, no content is automatically output.
False if failure is returned
curl_setopt ($ch, curlopt_returntransfer,0); Or do not use this option:
If the success only returns TRUE, the returned content is automatically output.
False if failure is returned
Some parameters of the Curl Method curl_setopt () function in PHP.
the bool curl_setopt (int ch, string option, mixed value) curl_setopt () function sets options for a curl session. The option parameter is the setting that you want, and value is the one given by this choice.
The values of the following options are used as long shapes (specified in the option parameter): curlopt_infilesize: When you upload a file to a remote site, This option tells PHP the size of your upload file. Curlopt_verbose: If you want curl to report every unexpected thing, set this option to a value other than 0. Curlopt_header: If you want to include a header in the output, set this option to a value other than 0. curlopt_noprogress: If you do not have PHP display a process bar for the Curl transfer, set this option to a value other than 0. Note: PHP automatically sets this option to a value other than 0, you should only change this option for debugging purposes. curlopt_nobody: If you do not want to include the body part in the output, set this option to a value other than 0. Curlopt_failonerror: If you want PHP to not display when an error occurs (HTTP code returns greater than or equal to 300), set this option to one person other than 0 value. The default behavior is to return a normal page, ignoring the code. curlopt_upload: If you want PHP to prepare for uploading, set this option to a value other than 0. curlopt_post: If you want PHP to do a regular HTTP POST, set this option to a value other than 0. This post is an ordinary application/x-www-from-urlencoded type, most of which is used by HTML forms. curlopt_ftplistonly: Set this option to a value other than 0, PHP lists the list of directory names for FTP. curlopt_ftpappend: Set this option to a value other than 0, PHP will apply the remote file instead of overwriting it. curlopt_netrc: Set this option to a value other than 0, PHP will look in your ~./netrc file for the user name and password of the remote site you want to make the connection to.   Curlopt_followlocation: Set this option to a non-0 value (like "Location:") header, the server will send it as part of the HTTP header (note that this is recursive, PHP will be sent as "location:" the head). curlopt_put: Set this option to use HTTP to upload a file for a value other than 0. To upload this file you must set the Curlopt_infile and Curlopt_infilesize options. Curlopt_mute: Set this option to a value other than 0, PHP will be completely silent for the curl function. curlopt_timeout: Sets a long shape number, as the maximum continuation of how many seconds. curlopt_low_speed_limit: Sets a long shaping number to control how many bytes are transferred. curlopt_low_speed_time: Sets a long shape number that controls how many seconds to transmit curlopt_low_speed_limit the specified number of bytes. Curlopt_resume_from: Pass a long shaping parameter that contains the byte offset address (the start form you want to transfer to). curlopt_sslversion: Pass a long parameter that contains the SSL version. The default PHP will be determined by its own efforts, and in more security you must set it up manually. curlopt_timecondition: Passes a long parameter that specifies how the Curlopt_timevalue parameter is handled. You can set this parameter to Timecond_ifmodsince or timecond_isunmodsince. This is used only for HTTP. Curlopt_timevalue: Passes a number of seconds from 1970-1-1 onwards to the present. This time will be used by the Curlopt_timevalue option as the specified value, or by default timecond_ifmodsince.
The values of the following options will be used as strings: Curlopt_url: This is the URL address you want to retrieve with PHP. You can also set this option when initializing with the Curl_init () function. curlopt_userpwd: Pass a shape like [Username]:[password] style string, function PHP to connect. curlopt_proxyuserpwd: Pass a string that is formatted as [Username]:[password] to connect to the HTTP proxy. Curlopt_range: Pass a range that you want to specify. It should be in the "X-y" format, except for X. or Y. HTTP delivery also supports several intervals, separated by a phrase (x-y,n-m). Curlopt_postfields: A string that passes all data as an HTTP "POST" operation. Curlopt_referer: A string that contains a "REFERER" header in an HTTP request. curlopt_useragent: A string that contains a "user-agent" header in an HTTP request. curlopt_ftpport: Pass an IP address that contains the FTP "POST" instruction used. This post command tells the remote server to connect to the IP address we specified. This string can be an IP address, a host name, a network interface name (under Unix), or '-' (using the system default IP address). Curlopt_cookie: Passes a header connection that contains an HTTP COOKIE. Curlopt_sslcert: Pass a string containing a PEM-formatted certificate. curlopt_sslcertpasswd: Pass a password that contains required to use the Curlopt_sslcert certificate. Curlopt_cookiefile: A string that passes the name of a file that contains cookie data. This cookie file can be netsThe Cape format, or the HTTP style header that is stockpiled in the file. curlopt_customrequest: When an HTTP request is made, passing a character is used by get or head. For a delete or other operation is beneficial, more pass a string to is used instead of GET or HEAD when doing an HTTP request. This was useful for doing or another, and more obscure, HTTP request. Note: Do not do this before confirming your server support commands. The following options require a file description (obtained by using the fopen () function): curlopt_file: This file will be the output file where you placed the transfer, and the default is stdout. curlopt_infile: This file is the input file you sent over. Curlopt_writeheader: This file is written with the head part of your output. Curlopt_stderr: This file is written with errors rather than STDERR. To get an example of a page that needs to be signed in, the current practice is to log in once every time, and the person who needs to do it is improved.