# HSTS support curl features **EXPERIMENTAL** support for the Strict-Transport-Security: HTTP header. Added in curl 7.74.0 ## Standard [HTTP Strict Transport Security](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6797) ## Behavior libcurl features an in-memory cache for HSTS hosts, so that subsequent HTTP-only requests to a host name present in the cache will get internally "redirected" to the HTTPS version. ## `curl_easy_setopt()` options: - `CURLOPT_HSTS_CTRL` - enable HSTS for this easy handle - `CURLOPT_HSTS` - specify file name where to store the HSTS cache on close (and possibly read from at startup) ## curl cmdline options - `--hsts [filename]` - enable HSTS, use the file as HSTS cache. If filename is `""` (no length) then no file will be used, only in-memory cache. ## HSTS cache file format Lines starting with `#` are ignored. For each hsts entry: [host name] "YYYYMMDD HH:MM:SS" The `[host name]` is dot-prefixed if it is a includeSubDomain. The time stamp is when the entry expires. I considered using wget's file format for the HSTS cache. However, they store the time stamp as the epoch (number of seconds since 1970) and I strongly disagree with using that format. Instead I opted to use a format similar to the curl alt-svc cache file format. ## Possible future additions - `CURLOPT_HSTS_PRELOAD` - provide a set of preloaded HSTS host names - ability to save to something else than a file