Note
This is a (slightly) more active fork of curl-impersonate. Differences include:
- Encrypted Client Hello(ECH) support introduced in Chrome 119.
- ZSTD compression support introduced in Chrome 123.
- X25519Kyber768 curve introduced in Chrome 124.
- More options for impersonation Akamai http/2 fingerprints, especially for Safari.
- Upgrade to more recent version of curl, 8.7.1 as of April, 2024.
- Ability to change extension orders and enable/disable TLS grease.
- (In progress) Single binary to support both Webkit-based and Gecko-based browsers, i.e. Chrome and Firefox.
A special build of curl that can impersonate the four major browsers: Chrome, Edge, Safari and Firefox(In progress). curl-impersonate
is able to perform TLS and HTTP handshakes that are identical to that of a real browser.
curl-impersonate
can be used either as a command line tool, similar to the regular curl, or as a library that can be integrated instead of the regular libcurl. See Usage below.
When you use an HTTP client with a TLS website, it first performs a TLS handshake. The first message of that handshake is called Client Hello. The Client Hello message that most HTTP clients and libraries produce differs drastically from that of a real browser.
If the server uses HTTP/2, then in addition to the TLS handshake there is also an HTTP/2 handshake where various settings are exchanged. The settings that most HTTP clients and libraries use differ as well from those of any real browsers.
For these reasons, some web services use the TLS and HTTP handshakes to fingerprint which client is accessing them, and then present different content for different clients. These methods are known as TLS fingerprinting and HTTP/2 fingerprinting respectively. Their widespread use has led to the web becoming less open, less private and much more restrictive towards specific web clients
With the modified curl in this repository, the TLS and HTTP handshakes look exactly like those of a real browser.
To make this work, curl
was patched significantly to resemble a browser. Specifically, The modifications that were needed to make this work:
- Compiling with BoringSSL, Google's TLS library, which is used by Chrome and Safari.
- Modifying the way curl configures various TLS extensions and SSL options.
- Adding support for new TLS extensions.
- Changing the settings that curl uses for its HTTP/2 connections.
- Running curl with some non-default flags, for example
--ciphers
,--curves
and some-H
headers.
The resulting curl looks, from a network perspective, identical to a real browser.
Read the full technical description in the blog posts: part a, part b.
The following browsers can be impersonated.
Browser | Version | Build | OS | Target name | Wrapper script |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
99 | 99.0.4844.51 | Windows 10 | chrome99 |
curl_chrome99 | |
100 | 100.0.4896.75 | Windows 10 | chrome100 |
curl_chrome100 | |
101 | 101.0.4951.67 | Windows 10 | chrome101 |
curl_chrome101 | |
104 | 104.0.5112.81 | Windows 10 | chrome104 |
curl_chrome104 | |
107 | 107.0.5304.107 | Windows 10 | chrome107 |
curl_chrome107 | |
110 | 110.0.5481.177 | Windows 10 | chrome110 |
curl_chrome110 | |
116 | 116.0.5845.180 | Windows 10 | chrome116 |
curl_chrome116 | |
119 | 119.0.6045.199 | macOS Sonoma | chrome119 |
curl_chrome119 | |
120 | 120.0.6099.109 | macOS Sonoma | chrome120 |
curl_chrome120 | |
123 | 123.0.6312.124 | macOS Sonoma | chrome123 |
curl_chrome123 | |
124 | 124.0.6367.60 | macOS Sonoma | chrome124 |
curl_chrome124 | |
131 | 131.0.6778.86 | macOS Sonoma | chrome131 |
curl_chrome131 | |
99 | 99.0.4844.73 | Android 12 | chrome99_android |
curl_chrome99_android | |
131 | 131.0.6778.81 | Android 14 | chrome131_android |
curl_chrome131_android | |
99 | 99.0.1150.30 | Windows 10 | edge99 |
curl_edge99 | |
101 | 101.0.1210.47 | Windows 10 | edge101 |
curl_edge101 | |
15.3 | 16612.4.9.1.8 | MacOS Big Sur | safari15_3 |
curl_safari15_3 | |
15.5 | 17613.2.7.1.8 | MacOS Monterey | safari15_5 |
curl_safari15_5 | |
17.0 | unclear | MacOS Sonoma | safari17_0 |
curl_safari17_0 | |
17.2 | unclear | iOS 17.2 | safari17_2_ios |
curl_safari17_2_ios | |
18.0 | unclear | MacOS Sequoia | safari18_0 |
curl_safari18_0 | |
18.0 | unclear | iOS 18.0 | safari18_0_ios |
curl_safari18_0_ios |
- Chromium-based browsers all share the same fingerprints, except for the
User-Agent
header andsec-ch-ua-platform
header. They will not be updated unless this assumption changed. Use your own header if you need to impersonateEdge
,Chrome Android
etc. - The original Safari fingerprints in the upstream fork are not correct.
This list is also available in the browsers.json file.() Needs to be updated.
For each supported browser there is a wrapper script that launches curl-impersonate
with all the needed headers and flags. For example:
curl_chrome123 https://www.wikipedia.org
You can add command line flags and they will be passed on to curl. However, some flags change curl's TLS signature which may cause it to be detected.
Please note that the wrapper scripts use a default set of HTTP headers. If you want to change these headers, you may want to modify the wrapper scripts to fit your own purpose.
See Advanced usage for more options, including using libcurl-impersonate
as a library.
More documentation is available in the docs/ directory.
There are two versions of curl-impersonate
for technical reasons. The chrome version is used to impersonate Chrome, Edge and Safari.
Pre-compiled binaries for Windows, Linux and macOS are available at the GitHub releases page. Before you use them you may need to install zstd and CA certificates:
- Ubuntu -
sudo apt install ca-certificates zstd libzstd-dev
- Red Hat/Fedora/CentOS -
yum install ca-certificates zstd libzstd-devel
- Archlinux -
pacman -S ca-certificates zstd
- macOS -
brew install ca-certificates zstd
The pre-compiled binaries contain libcurl-impersonate and a statically compiled curl-impersonate for ease of use.
The pre-compiled Linux binaries are built for Ubuntu systems. On other distributions if you have errors with certificate verification you may have to tell curl where to find the CA certificates. For example:
curl_chrome123 https://www.wikipedia.org --cacert /etc/ssl/certs/ca-bundle.crt
Also make sure to read Notes on Dependencies.
See INSTALL.md.
Warning
New docker images added in this fork are work in progress.
Docker images based on Alpine Linux and Debian with curl-impersonate
compiled and ready to use are available on Docker Hub. The images contain the binary and all the wrapper scripts. Use like the following:
# Chrome version, Alpine Linux
docker pull lwthiker/curl-impersonate:0.5-chrome
docker run --rm lwthiker/curl-impersonate:0.5-chrome curl_chrome110 https://www.wikipedia.org
Warning
This is for the upstream project
AUR packages are available to Archlinux users:
- Pre-compiled package: curl-impersonate-bin, libcurl-impersonate-bin.
- Build from source code: curl-impersonate-chrome, curl-impersonate-firefox.
libcurl-impersonate.so
is libcurl compiled with the same changes as the command line curl-impersonate
.
It has an additional API function:
CURLcode curl_easy_impersonate(struct Curl_easy *data, const char *target,
int default_headers);
You can call it with the target names, e.g. chrome123
, and it will internally set all the options and headers that are otherwise set by the wrapper scripts.
If default_headers
is set to 0, the built-in list of HTTP headers will not be set, and the user is expected to provide them instead using the regular CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER
libcurl option.
Calling the above function sets the following libcurl options:
CURLOPT_HTTP_VERSION
CURLOPT_SSLVERSION
,CURLOPT_SSL_CIPHER_LIST
,CURLOPT_SSL_EC_CURVES
,CURLOPT_SSL_ENABLE_NPN
,CURLOPT_SSL_ENABLE_ALPN
CURLOPT_HTTPBASEHEADER
, ifdefault_headers
is non-zero (this is a non-standard HTTP option created for this project).CURLOPT_HTTP2_PSEUDO_HEADERS_ORDER
, sets http2 pseudo header order, for exmaple:masp
(non-standard HTTP/2 options created for this project).CURLOPT_HTTP2_SETTINGS
sets the settings frame values, for example1:65536;3:1000;4:6291456;6:262144
(non-standard HTTP/2 options created for this project).CURLOPT_HTTP2_WINDOW_UPDATE
sets intial window update value for http2, for example15663105
(non-standard HTTP/2 options created for this project).CURLOPT_SSL_ENABLE_ALPS
,CURLOPT_SSL_SIG_HASH_ALGS
,CURLOPT_SSL_CERT_COMPRESSION
,CURLOPT_SSL_ENABLE_TICKET
(non-standard TLS options created for this project).CURLOPT_SSL_PERMUTE_EXTENSIONS
, whether to permute extensions like Chrome 110+. (non-standard TLS options created for this project).CURLOPT_TLS_GREASE
, whether to enable the grease behavior. (non-standard TLS options created for this project).CURLOPT_TLS_EXTENSION_ORDER
, explicit order or TLS extensions, in the format of0-5-10
. (non-standard TLS options created for this project).
Note that if you call curl_easy_setopt()
later with one of the above it will override the options set by curl_easy_impersonate()
.
If your application uses libcurl
already, you can replace the existing library at runtime with LD_PRELOAD
(Linux only). You can then set the CURL_IMPERSONATE
env var. For example:
LD_PRELOAD=/path/to/libcurl-impersonate.so CURL_IMPERSONATE=chrome116 my_app
The CURL_IMPERSONATE
env var has two effects:
curl_easy_impersonate()
is called automatically for any new curl handle created bycurl_easy_init()
.curl_easy_impersonate()
is called automatically after anycurl_easy_reset()
call.
This means that all the options needed for impersonation will be automatically set for any curl handle.
If you need precise control over the HTTP headers, set CURL_IMPERSONATE_HEADERS=no
to disable the built-in list of HTTP headers, then set them yourself with curl_easy_setopt()
. For example:
LD_PRELOAD=/path/to/libcurl-impersonate.so CURL_IMPERSONATE=chrome116 CURL_IMPERSONATE_HEADERS=no my_app
Note that the LD_PRELOAD
method will NOT WORK for curl
itself because the curl tool overrides the TLS settings. Use the wrapper scripts instead.
If you intend to copy the self-compiled artifacts to another system, or use the Pre-compiled binaries provided by the project, make sure that all the additional dependencies are met on the target system as well. In particular, see the note about the Firefox version.
This repository contains these folders:
- chrome - Scripts and patches for building the Chrome version of
curl-impersonate
.- curl_chrome110, curl_chrome124 - Wrapper scripts that launch
curl-impersonate
with the correct flags. - curl-impersonate.patch - The main patch that makes curl use the same TLS extensions as Firefox. Also makes curl compile statically with libnghttp2.
- boringssl.patch - The boringssl patch that tweaks boringssl behaviors.
- curl_chrome110, curl_chrome124 - Wrapper scripts that launch
- win - Scripts for building the Windows version of
curl-impersonate
, which is quite different from*nix
. - zigshim - We use the awesome
zig
toolchain to bringcurl-impersonate
to more archs on Linux. Special thanks to @bjia56 for making it possible. - docker - Debian and alpine dockerfiles for this project.
Other files of interest:
- tests/signatures - YAML database of known browser signatures that can be impersonated.
If you'd like to help, please check out the open issues in the origional repo and open issues here. You can open a pull request with your changes. Note that some of the upstream issues have been fixed.
This repository contains the build process for curl-impersonate
. The actual patches to curl
are maintained in a separate repository forked from lwthiker's fork of the upstream curl. The changes are maintained in the impersonate-firefox and impersonate-chrome branches.
You may also need the forked and patched BoringSSL.
Original sponsor info:
Sponsors help keep this project open and maintained. If you wish to become a sponsor, please contact me directly at: lwt at lwthiker dot com.
No one has sponsored this fork.