It all depends on the authentication method but for the most common ones - Basic Auth and Digest Auth, this works with ad hoc HTTP headers. Here's an example with Basic Auth:
curl -u john:pwd http://foo.com/misc
This performs a GET request with the corresponding header:
GET /misc HTTP/1.1
Authorization: Basic am9objpwd2Q=
User-Agent: curl/7.33.0
Host: foo.com
Accept: */*
The Authorization
header contains the authentication data the server is supposed to parse, base64 decode[1] and use. The same header would be set with a POST request. You can easily test it out with a service like httpbin(1) (see /basic-auth/:user/:passwd
endpoint).
Digest auth is a bit more complex but works with HTTP headers too:
- the client first send its request, the server replies with a
401 Unauthorized
including a WWW-Authenticate
header with a challenge to solve,
- the client solves the challenge and send another request with the response included into a
Authorization
header which has to be parsed and validated on the server-side.
[1]: base64("john:pwd")
-> am9objpwd2Q=
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