| :mod:`pickle` --- Python object serialization |
| ============================================= |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: persistence |
| pair: persistent; objects |
| pair: serializing; objects |
| pair: marshalling; objects |
| pair: flattening; objects |
| pair: pickling; objects |
| |
| .. module:: pickle |
| :synopsis: Convert Python objects to streams of bytes and back. |
| .. sectionauthor:: Jim Kerr <jbkerr@sr.hp.com>. |
| .. sectionauthor:: Barry Warsaw <barry@zope.com> |
| |
| The :mod:`pickle` module implements a fundamental, but powerful algorithm for |
| serializing and de-serializing a Python object structure. "Pickling" is the |
| process whereby a Python object hierarchy is converted into a byte stream, and |
| "unpickling" is the inverse operation, whereby a byte stream is converted back |
| into an object hierarchy. Pickling (and unpickling) is alternatively known as |
| "serialization", "marshalling," [#]_ or "flattening", however, to avoid |
| confusion, the terms used here are "pickling" and "unpickling".. |
| |
| |
| Relationship to other Python modules |
| ------------------------------------ |
| |
| The :mod:`pickle` module has an transparent optimizer (:mod:`_pickle`) written |
| in C. It is used whenever available. Otherwise the pure Python implementation is |
| used. |
| |
| Python has a more primitive serialization module called :mod:`marshal`, but in |
| general :mod:`pickle` should always be the preferred way to serialize Python |
| objects. :mod:`marshal` exists primarily to support Python's :file:`.pyc` |
| files. |
| |
| The :mod:`pickle` module differs from :mod:`marshal` several significant ways: |
| |
| * The :mod:`pickle` module keeps track of the objects it has already serialized, |
| so that later references to the same object won't be serialized again. |
| :mod:`marshal` doesn't do this. |
| |
| This has implications both for recursive objects and object sharing. Recursive |
| objects are objects that contain references to themselves. These are not |
| handled by marshal, and in fact, attempting to marshal recursive objects will |
| crash your Python interpreter. Object sharing happens when there are multiple |
| references to the same object in different places in the object hierarchy being |
| serialized. :mod:`pickle` stores such objects only once, and ensures that all |
| other references point to the master copy. Shared objects remain shared, which |
| can be very important for mutable objects. |
| |
| * :mod:`marshal` cannot be used to serialize user-defined classes and their |
| instances. :mod:`pickle` can save and restore class instances transparently, |
| however the class definition must be importable and live in the same module as |
| when the object was stored. |
| |
| * The :mod:`marshal` serialization format is not guaranteed to be portable |
| across Python versions. Because its primary job in life is to support |
| :file:`.pyc` files, the Python implementers reserve the right to change the |
| serialization format in non-backwards compatible ways should the need arise. |
| The :mod:`pickle` serialization format is guaranteed to be backwards compatible |
| across Python releases. |
| |
| .. warning:: |
| |
| The :mod:`pickle` module is not intended to be secure against erroneous or |
| maliciously constructed data. Never unpickle data received from an untrusted or |
| unauthenticated source. |
| |
| Note that serialization is a more primitive notion than persistence; although |
| :mod:`pickle` reads and writes file objects, it does not handle the issue of |
| naming persistent objects, nor the (even more complicated) issue of concurrent |
| access to persistent objects. The :mod:`pickle` module can transform a complex |
| object into a byte stream and it can transform the byte stream into an object |
| with the same internal structure. Perhaps the most obvious thing to do with |
| these byte streams is to write them onto a file, but it is also conceivable to |
| send them across a network or store them in a database. The module |
| :mod:`shelve` provides a simple interface to pickle and unpickle objects on |
| DBM-style database files. |
| |
| |
| Data stream format |
| ------------------ |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: XDR |
| single: External Data Representation |
| |
| The data format used by :mod:`pickle` is Python-specific. This has the |
| advantage that there are no restrictions imposed by external standards such as |
| XDR (which can't represent pointer sharing); however it means that non-Python |
| programs may not be able to reconstruct pickled Python objects. |
| |
| By default, the :mod:`pickle` data format uses a compact binary representation. |
| The module :mod:`pickletools` contains tools for analyzing data streams |
| generated by :mod:`pickle`. |
| |
| There are currently 4 different protocols which can be used for pickling. |
| |
| * Protocol version 0 is the original ASCII protocol and is backwards compatible |
| with earlier versions of Python. |
| |
| * Protocol version 1 is the old binary format which is also compatible with |
| earlier versions of Python. |
| |
| * Protocol version 2 was introduced in Python 2.3. It provides much more |
| efficient pickling of :term:`new-style class`\es. |
| |
| * Protocol version 3 was added in Python 3.0. It has explicit support for |
| bytes and cannot be unpickled by Python 2.x pickle modules. This is |
| the current recommended protocol, use it whenever it is possible. |
| |
| Refer to :pep:`307` for information about improvements brought by |
| protocol 2. See :mod:`pickletools`'s source code for extensive |
| comments about opcodes used by pickle protocols. |
| |
| If a *protocol* is not specified, protocol 3 is used. If *protocol* is |
| specified as a negative value or :const:`HIGHEST_PROTOCOL`, the highest |
| protocol version available will be used. |
| |
| |
| Module Interface |
| ---------------- |
| |
| To serialize an object hierarchy, you first create a pickler, then you call the |
| pickler's :meth:`dump` method. To de-serialize a data stream, you first create |
| an unpickler, then you call the unpickler's :meth:`load` method. The |
| :mod:`pickle` module provides the following constant: |
| |
| |
| .. data:: HIGHEST_PROTOCOL |
| |
| The highest protocol version available. This value can be passed as a |
| *protocol* value. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| Be sure to always open pickle files created with protocols >= 1 in binary mode. |
| For the old ASCII-based pickle protocol 0 you can use either text mode or binary |
| mode as long as you stay consistent. |
| |
| A pickle file written with protocol 0 in binary mode will contain lone linefeeds |
| as line terminators and therefore will look "funny" when viewed in Notepad or |
| other editors which do not support this format. |
| |
| .. data:: DEFAULT_PROTOCOL |
| |
| The default protocol used for pickling. May be less than HIGHEST_PROTOCOL. |
| Currently the default protocol is 3; a backward-incompatible protocol |
| designed for Python 3.0. |
| |
| |
| The :mod:`pickle` module provides the following functions to make the pickling |
| process more convenient: |
| |
| .. function:: dump(obj, file[, protocol]) |
| |
| Write a pickled representation of *obj* to the open file object *file*. This |
| is equivalent to ``Pickler(file, protocol).dump(obj)``. |
| |
| The optional *protocol* argument tells the pickler to use the given protocol; |
| supported protocols are 0, 1, 2, 3. The default protocol is 3; a |
| backward-incompatible protocol designed for Python 3.0. |
| |
| Specifying a negative protocol version selects the highest protocol version |
| supported. The higher the protocol used, the more recent the version of |
| Python needed to read the pickle produced. |
| |
| The *file* argument must have a write() method that accepts a single bytes |
| argument. It can thus be a file object opened for binary writing, a |
| io.BytesIO instance, or any other custom object that meets this interface. |
| |
| .. function:: dumps(obj[, protocol]) |
| |
| Return the pickled representation of the object as a :class:`bytes` |
| object, instead of writing it to a file. |
| |
| The optional *protocol* argument tells the pickler to use the given protocol; |
| supported protocols are 0, 1, 2, 3. The default protocol is 3; a |
| backward-incompatible protocol designed for Python 3.0. |
| |
| Specifying a negative protocol version selects the highest protocol version |
| supported. The higher the protocol used, the more recent the version of |
| Python needed to read the pickle produced. |
| |
| .. function:: load(file, [\*, encoding="ASCII", errors="strict"]) |
| |
| Read a pickled object representation from the open file object *file* and |
| return the reconstituted object hierarchy specified therein. This is |
| equivalent to ``Unpickler(file).load()``. |
| |
| The protocol version of the pickle is detected automatically, so no protocol |
| argument is needed. Bytes past the pickled object's representation are |
| ignored. |
| |
| The argument *file* must have two methods, a read() method that takes an |
| integer argument, and a readline() method that requires no arguments. Both |
| methods should return bytes. Thus *file* can be a binary file object opened |
| for reading, a BytesIO object, or any other custom object that meets this |
| interface. |
| |
| Optional keyword arguments are encoding and errors, which are used to decode |
| 8-bit string instances pickled by Python 2.x. These default to 'ASCII' and |
| 'strict', respectively. |
| |
| .. function:: loads(bytes_object, [\*, encoding="ASCII", errors="strict"]) |
| |
| Read a pickled object hierarchy from a :class:`bytes` object and return the |
| reconstituted object hierarchy specified therein |
| |
| The protocol version of the pickle is detected automatically, so no protocol |
| argument is needed. Bytes past the pickled object's representation are |
| ignored. |
| |
| Optional keyword arguments are encoding and errors, which are used to decode |
| 8-bit string instances pickled by Python 2.x. These default to 'ASCII' and |
| 'strict', respectively. |
| |
| |
| The :mod:`pickle` module defines three exceptions: |
| |
| .. exception:: PickleError |
| |
| Common base class for the other pickling exceptions. It inherits |
| :exc:`Exception`. |
| |
| .. exception:: PicklingError |
| |
| Error raised when an unpicklable object is encountered by :class:`Pickler`. |
| It inherits :exc:`PickleError`. |
| |
| Refer to :ref:`pickle-picklable` to learn what kinds of objects can be |
| pickled. |
| |
| .. exception:: UnpicklingError |
| |
| Error raised when there a problem unpickling an object, such as a data |
| corruption or a security violation. It inherits :exc:`PickleError`. |
| |
| Note that other exceptions may also be raised during unpickling, including |
| (but not necessarily limited to) AttributeError, EOFError, ImportError, and |
| IndexError. |
| |
| |
| The :mod:`pickle` module exports two classes, :class:`Pickler` and |
| :class:`Unpickler`: |
| |
| .. class:: Pickler(file[, protocol]) |
| |
| This takes a binary file for writing a pickle data stream. |
| |
| The optional *protocol* argument tells the pickler to use the given protocol; |
| supported protocols are 0, 1, 2, 3. The default protocol is 3; a |
| backward-incompatible protocol designed for Python 3.0. |
| |
| Specifying a negative protocol version selects the highest protocol version |
| supported. The higher the protocol used, the more recent the version of |
| Python needed to read the pickle produced. |
| |
| The *file* argument must have a write() method that accepts a single bytes |
| argument. It can thus be a file object opened for binary writing, a |
| io.BytesIO instance, or any other custom object that meets this interface. |
| |
| .. method:: dump(obj) |
| |
| Write a pickled representation of *obj* to the open file object given in |
| the constructor. |
| |
| .. method:: persistent_id(obj) |
| |
| Do nothing by default. This exists so a subclass can override it. |
| |
| If :meth:`persistent_id` returns ``None``, *obj* is pickled as usual. Any |
| other value causes :class:`Pickler` to emit the returned value as a |
| persistent ID for *obj*. The meaning of this persistent ID should be |
| defined by :meth:`Unpickler.persistent_load`. Note that the value |
| returned by :meth:`persistent_id` cannot itself have a persistent ID. |
| |
| See :ref:`pickle-persistent` for details and examples of uses. |
| |
| .. method:: clear_memo() |
| |
| Deprecated. Use the :meth:`clear` method on :attr:`memo`, instead. |
| Clear the pickler's memo, useful when reusing picklers. |
| |
| .. attribute:: fast |
| |
| Enable fast mode if set to a true value. The fast mode disables the usage |
| of memo, therefore speeding the pickling process by not generating |
| superfluous PUT opcodes. It should not be used with self-referential |
| objects, doing otherwise will cause :class:`Pickler` to recurse |
| infinitely. |
| |
| Use :func:`pickletools.optimize` if you need more compact pickles. |
| |
| .. attribute:: memo |
| |
| Dictionary holding previously pickled objects to allow shared or |
| recursive objects to pickled by reference as opposed to by value. |
| |
| |
| It is possible to make multiple calls to the :meth:`dump` method of the same |
| :class:`Pickler` instance. These must then be matched to the same number of |
| calls to the :meth:`load` method of the corresponding :class:`Unpickler` |
| instance. If the same object is pickled by multiple :meth:`dump` calls, the |
| :meth:`load` will all yield references to the same object. |
| |
| Please note, this is intended for pickling multiple objects without intervening |
| modifications to the objects or their parts. If you modify an object and then |
| pickle it again using the same :class:`Pickler` instance, the object is not |
| pickled again --- a reference to it is pickled and the :class:`Unpickler` will |
| return the old value, not the modified one. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: Unpickler(file, [\*, encoding="ASCII", errors="strict"]) |
| |
| This takes a binary file for reading a pickle data stream. |
| |
| The protocol version of the pickle is detected automatically, so no |
| protocol argument is needed. |
| |
| The argument *file* must have two methods, a read() method that takes an |
| integer argument, and a readline() method that requires no arguments. Both |
| methods should return bytes. Thus *file* can be a binary file object opened |
| for reading, a BytesIO object, or any other custom object that meets this |
| interface. |
| |
| Optional keyword arguments are encoding and errors, which are used to decode |
| 8-bit string instances pickled by Python 2.x. These default to 'ASCII' and |
| 'strict', respectively. |
| |
| .. method:: load() |
| |
| Read a pickled object representation from the open file object given in |
| the constructor, and return the reconstituted object hierarchy specified |
| therein. Bytes past the pickled object's representation are ignored. |
| |
| .. method:: persistent_load(pid) |
| |
| Raise an :exc:`UnpickingError` by default. |
| |
| If defined, :meth:`persistent_load` should return the object specified by |
| the persistent ID *pid*. If an invalid persistent ID is encountered, an |
| :exc:`UnpickingError` should be raised. |
| |
| See :ref:`pickle-persistent` for details and examples of uses. |
| |
| .. method:: find_class(module, name) |
| |
| Import *module* if necessary and return the object called *name* from it, |
| where the *module* and *name* arguments are :class:`str` objects. Note, |
| unlike its name suggests, :meth:`find_class` is also used for finding |
| functions. |
| |
| Subclasses may override this to gain control over what type of objects and |
| how they can be loaded, potentially reducing security risks. Refer to |
| :ref:`pickle-restrict` for details. |
| |
| |
| .. _pickle-picklable: |
| |
| What can be pickled and unpickled? |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| The following types can be pickled: |
| |
| * ``None``, ``True``, and ``False`` |
| |
| * integers, floating point numbers, complex numbers |
| |
| * strings, bytes, bytearrays |
| |
| * tuples, lists, sets, and dictionaries containing only picklable objects |
| |
| * functions defined at the top level of a module |
| |
| * built-in functions defined at the top level of a module |
| |
| * classes that are defined at the top level of a module |
| |
| * instances of such classes whose :attr:`__dict__` or :meth:`__setstate__` is |
| picklable (see section :ref:`pickle-protocol` for details) |
| |
| Attempts to pickle unpicklable objects will raise the :exc:`PicklingError` |
| exception; when this happens, an unspecified number of bytes may have already |
| been written to the underlying file. Trying to pickle a highly recursive data |
| structure may exceed the maximum recursion depth, a :exc:`RuntimeError` will be |
| raised in this case. You can carefully raise this limit with |
| :func:`sys.setrecursionlimit`. |
| |
| Note that functions (built-in and user-defined) are pickled by "fully qualified" |
| name reference, not by value. This means that only the function name is |
| pickled, along with the name of module the function is defined in. Neither the |
| function's code, nor any of its function attributes are pickled. Thus the |
| defining module must be importable in the unpickling environment, and the module |
| must contain the named object, otherwise an exception will be raised. [#]_ |
| |
| Similarly, classes are pickled by named reference, so the same restrictions in |
| the unpickling environment apply. Note that none of the class's code or data is |
| pickled, so in the following example the class attribute ``attr`` is not |
| restored in the unpickling environment:: |
| |
| class Foo: |
| attr = 'A class attribute' |
| |
| picklestring = pickle.dumps(Foo) |
| |
| These restrictions are why picklable functions and classes must be defined in |
| the top level of a module. |
| |
| Similarly, when class instances are pickled, their class's code and data are not |
| pickled along with them. Only the instance data are pickled. This is done on |
| purpose, so you can fix bugs in a class or add methods to the class and still |
| load objects that were created with an earlier version of the class. If you |
| plan to have long-lived objects that will see many versions of a class, it may |
| be worthwhile to put a version number in the objects so that suitable |
| conversions can be made by the class's :meth:`__setstate__` method. |
| |
| |
| .. _pickle-protocol: |
| |
| The pickle protocol |
| ------------------- |
| |
| This section describes the "pickling protocol" that defines the interface |
| between the pickler/unpickler and the objects that are being serialized. This |
| protocol provides a standard way for you to define, customize, and control how |
| your objects are serialized and de-serialized. The description in this section |
| doesn't cover specific customizations that you can employ to make the unpickling |
| environment slightly safer from untrusted pickle data streams; see section |
| :ref:`pickle-restrict` for more details. |
| |
| |
| .. _pickle-inst: |
| |
| Pickling and unpickling normal class instances |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: __getinitargs__() (copy protocol) |
| single: __init__() (instance constructor) |
| |
| .. XXX is __getinitargs__ only used with old-style classes? |
| .. XXX update w.r.t Py3k's classes |
| |
| When a pickled class instance is unpickled, its :meth:`__init__` method is |
| normally *not* invoked. If it is desirable that the :meth:`__init__` method be |
| called on unpickling, an old-style class can define a method |
| :meth:`__getinitargs__`, which should return a *tuple* containing the arguments |
| to be passed to the class constructor (:meth:`__init__` for example). The |
| :meth:`__getinitargs__` method is called at pickle time; the tuple it returns is |
| incorporated in the pickle for the instance. |
| |
| .. index:: single: __getnewargs__() (copy protocol) |
| |
| New-style types can provide a :meth:`__getnewargs__` method that is used for |
| protocol 2. Implementing this method is needed if the type establishes some |
| internal invariants when the instance is created, or if the memory allocation is |
| affected by the values passed to the :meth:`__new__` method for the type (as it |
| is for tuples and strings). Instances of a :term:`new-style class` :class:`C` |
| are created using :: |
| |
| obj = C.__new__(C, *args) |
| |
| |
| where *args* is the result of calling :meth:`__getnewargs__` on the original |
| object; if there is no :meth:`__getnewargs__`, an empty tuple is assumed. |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: __getstate__() (copy protocol) |
| single: __setstate__() (copy protocol) |
| single: __dict__ (instance attribute) |
| |
| Classes can further influence how their instances are pickled; if the class |
| defines the method :meth:`__getstate__`, it is called and the return state is |
| pickled as the contents for the instance, instead of the contents of the |
| instance's dictionary. If there is no :meth:`__getstate__` method, the |
| instance's :attr:`__dict__` is pickled. |
| |
| Upon unpickling, if the class also defines the method :meth:`__setstate__`, it |
| is called with the unpickled state. [#]_ If there is no :meth:`__setstate__` |
| method, the pickled state must be a dictionary and its items are assigned to the |
| new instance's dictionary. If a class defines both :meth:`__getstate__` and |
| :meth:`__setstate__`, the state object needn't be a dictionary and these methods |
| can do what they want. [#]_ |
| |
| .. warning:: |
| |
| If :meth:`__getstate__` returns a false value, the :meth:`__setstate__` |
| method will not be called. |
| |
| |
| Pickling and unpickling extension types |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: __reduce__() (pickle protocol) |
| single: __reduce_ex__() (pickle protocol) |
| single: __safe_for_unpickling__ (pickle protocol) |
| |
| When the :class:`Pickler` encounters an object of a type it knows nothing about |
| --- such as an extension type --- it looks in two places for a hint of how to |
| pickle it. One alternative is for the object to implement a :meth:`__reduce__` |
| method. If provided, at pickling time :meth:`__reduce__` will be called with no |
| arguments, and it must return either a string or a tuple. |
| |
| If a string is returned, it names a global variable whose contents are pickled |
| as normal. The string returned by :meth:`__reduce__` should be the object's |
| local name relative to its module; the pickle module searches the module |
| namespace to determine the object's module. |
| |
| When a tuple is returned, it must be between two and five elements long. |
| Optional elements can either be omitted, or ``None`` can be provided as their |
| value. The contents of this tuple are pickled as normal and used to |
| reconstruct the object at unpickling time. The semantics of each element are: |
| |
| * A callable object that will be called to create the initial version of the |
| object. The next element of the tuple will provide arguments for this callable, |
| and later elements provide additional state information that will subsequently |
| be used to fully reconstruct the pickled data. |
| |
| In the unpickling environment this object must be either a class, a callable |
| registered as a "safe constructor" (see below), or it must have an attribute |
| :attr:`__safe_for_unpickling__` with a true value. Otherwise, an |
| :exc:`UnpicklingError` will be raised in the unpickling environment. Note that |
| as usual, the callable itself is pickled by name. |
| |
| * A tuple of arguments for the callable object, not ``None``. |
| |
| * Optionally, the object's state, which will be passed to the object's |
| :meth:`__setstate__` method as described in section :ref:`pickle-inst`. If the |
| object has no :meth:`__setstate__` method, then, as above, the value must be a |
| dictionary and it will be added to the object's :attr:`__dict__`. |
| |
| * Optionally, an iterator (and not a sequence) yielding successive list items. |
| These list items will be pickled, and appended to the object using either |
| ``obj.append(item)`` or ``obj.extend(list_of_items)``. This is primarily used |
| for list subclasses, but may be used by other classes as long as they have |
| :meth:`append` and :meth:`extend` methods with the appropriate signature. |
| (Whether :meth:`append` or :meth:`extend` is used depends on which pickle |
| protocol version is used as well as the number of items to append, so both must |
| be supported.) |
| |
| * Optionally, an iterator (not a sequence) yielding successive dictionary items, |
| which should be tuples of the form ``(key, value)``. These items will be |
| pickled and stored to the object using ``obj[key] = value``. This is primarily |
| used for dictionary subclasses, but may be used by other classes as long as they |
| implement :meth:`__setitem__`. |
| |
| It is sometimes useful to know the protocol version when implementing |
| :meth:`__reduce__`. This can be done by implementing a method named |
| :meth:`__reduce_ex__` instead of :meth:`__reduce__`. :meth:`__reduce_ex__`, when |
| it exists, is called in preference over :meth:`__reduce__` (you may still |
| provide :meth:`__reduce__` for backwards compatibility). The |
| :meth:`__reduce_ex__` method will be called with a single integer argument, the |
| protocol version. |
| |
| The :class:`object` class implements both :meth:`__reduce__` and |
| :meth:`__reduce_ex__`; however, if a subclass overrides :meth:`__reduce__` but |
| not :meth:`__reduce_ex__`, the :meth:`__reduce_ex__` implementation detects this |
| and calls :meth:`__reduce__`. |
| |
| An alternative to implementing a :meth:`__reduce__` method on the object to be |
| pickled, is to register the callable with the :mod:`copyreg` module. This |
| module provides a way for programs to register "reduction functions" and |
| constructors for user-defined types. Reduction functions have the same |
| semantics and interface as the :meth:`__reduce__` method described above, except |
| that they are called with a single argument, the object to be pickled. |
| |
| The registered constructor is deemed a "safe constructor" for purposes of |
| unpickling as described above. |
| |
| |
| .. _pickle-persistent: |
| |
| Pickling and unpickling external objects |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: persistent_id (pickle protocol) |
| single: persistent_load (pickle protocol) |
| |
| For the benefit of object persistence, the :mod:`pickle` module supports the |
| notion of a reference to an object outside the pickled data stream. Such |
| objects are referenced by a persistent ID, which should be either a string of |
| alphanumeric characters (for protocol 0) [#]_ or just an arbitrary object (for |
| any newer protocol). |
| |
| The resolution of such persistent IDs is not defined by the :mod:`pickle` |
| module; it will delegate this resolution to the user defined methods on the |
| pickler and unpickler, :meth:`persistent_id` and :meth:`persistent_load` |
| respectively. |
| |
| To pickle objects that have an external persistent id, the pickler must have a |
| custom :meth:`persistent_id` method that takes an object as an argument and |
| returns either ``None`` or the persistent id for that object. When ``None`` is |
| returned, the pickler simply pickles the object as normal. When a persistent ID |
| string is returned, the pickler will pickle that object, along with a marker so |
| that the unpickler will recognize it as a persistent ID. |
| |
| To unpickle external objects, the unpickler must have a custom |
| :meth:`persistent_load` method that takes a persistent ID object and returns the |
| referenced object. |
| |
| Example: |
| |
| .. XXX Work around for some bug in sphinx/pygments. |
| .. highlightlang:: python |
| .. literalinclude:: ../includes/dbpickle.py |
| .. highlightlang:: python3 |
| |
| .. _pickle-restrict: |
| |
| Restricting Globals |
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: find_class() (pickle protocol) |
| |
| By default, unpickling will import any class or function that it finds in the |
| pickle data. For many applications, this behaviour is unacceptable as it |
| permits the unpickler to import and invoke arbitrary code. Just consider what |
| this hand-crafted pickle data stream does when loaded:: |
| |
| >>> import pickle |
| >>> pickle.loads(b"cos\nsystem\n(S'echo hello world'\ntR.") |
| hello world |
| 0 |
| |
| In this example, the unpickler imports the :func:`os.system` function and then |
| apply the string argument "echo hello world". Although this example is |
| inoffensive, it is not difficult to imagine one that could damage your system. |
| |
| For this reason, you may want to control what gets unpickled by customizing |
| :meth:`Unpickler.find_class`. Unlike its name suggests, :meth:`find_class` is |
| called whenever a global (i.e., a class or a function) is requested. Thus it is |
| possible to either forbid completely globals or restrict them to a safe subset. |
| |
| Here is an example of an unpickler allowing only few safe classes from the |
| :mod:`builtins` module to be loaded:: |
| |
| import builtins |
| import io |
| import pickle |
| |
| safe_builtins = { |
| 'range', |
| 'complex', |
| 'set', |
| 'frozenset', |
| 'slice', |
| } |
| |
| class RestrictedUnpickler(pickle.Unpickler): |
| def find_class(self, module, name): |
| # Only allow safe classes from builtins. |
| if module == "builtins" and name in safe_builtins: |
| return getattr(builtins, name) |
| # Forbid everything else. |
| raise pickle.UnpicklingError("global '%s.%s' is forbidden" % |
| (module, name)) |
| |
| def restricted_loads(s): |
| """Helper function analogous to pickle.loads().""" |
| return RestrictedUnpickler(io.BytesIO(s)).load() |
| |
| A sample usage of our unpickler working has intended:: |
| |
| >>> restricted_loads(pickle.dumps([1, 2, range(15)])) |
| [1, 2, range(0, 15)] |
| >>> restricted_loads(b"cos\nsystem\n(S'echo hello world'\ntR.") |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| pickle.UnpicklingError: global 'os.system' is forbidden |
| >>> restricted_loads(b'cbuiltins\neval\n' |
| ... b'(S\'getattr(__import__("os"), "system")' |
| ... b'("echo hello world")\'\ntR.') |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| pickle.UnpicklingError: global 'builtins.eval' is forbidden |
| |
| As our examples shows, you have to be careful with what you allow to |
| be unpickled. Therefore if security is a concern, you may want to consider |
| alternatives such as the marshalling API in :mod:`xmlrpc.client` or |
| third-party solutions. |
| |
| .. _pickle-example: |
| |
| Example |
| ------- |
| |
| For the simplest code, use the :func:`dump` and :func:`load` functions. Note |
| that a self-referencing list is pickled and restored correctly. :: |
| |
| import pickle |
| |
| data1 = {'a': [1, 2.0, 3, 4+6j], |
| 'b': ("string", "string using Unicode features \u0394"), |
| 'c': None} |
| |
| selfref_list = [1, 2, 3] |
| selfref_list.append(selfref_list) |
| |
| output = open('data.pkl', 'wb') |
| |
| # Pickle dictionary using protocol 2. |
| pickle.dump(data1, output, 2) |
| |
| # Pickle the list using the highest protocol available. |
| pickle.dump(selfref_list, output, -1) |
| |
| output.close() |
| |
| The following example reads the resulting pickled data. When reading a |
| pickle-containing file, you should open the file in binary mode because you |
| can't be sure if the ASCII or binary format was used. :: |
| |
| import pprint, pickle |
| |
| pkl_file = open('data.pkl', 'rb') |
| |
| data1 = pickle.load(pkl_file) |
| pprint.pprint(data1) |
| |
| data2 = pickle.load(pkl_file) |
| pprint.pprint(data2) |
| |
| pkl_file.close() |
| |
| Here's a larger example that shows how to modify pickling behavior for a class. |
| The :class:`TextReader` class opens a text file, and returns the line number and |
| line contents each time its :meth:`readline` method is called. If a |
| :class:`TextReader` instance is pickled, all attributes *except* the file object |
| member are saved. When the instance is unpickled, the file is reopened, and |
| reading resumes from the last location. The :meth:`__setstate__` and |
| :meth:`__getstate__` methods are used to implement this behavior. :: |
| |
| #!/usr/local/bin/python |
| |
| class TextReader: |
| """Print and number lines in a text file.""" |
| def __init__(self, file): |
| self.file = file |
| self.fh = open(file) |
| self.lineno = 0 |
| |
| def readline(self): |
| self.lineno = self.lineno + 1 |
| line = self.fh.readline() |
| if not line: |
| return None |
| if line.endswith("\n"): |
| line = line[:-1] |
| return "%d: %s" % (self.lineno, line) |
| |
| def __getstate__(self): |
| odict = self.__dict__.copy() # copy the dict since we change it |
| del odict['fh'] # remove filehandle entry |
| return odict |
| |
| def __setstate__(self, dict): |
| fh = open(dict['file']) # reopen file |
| count = dict['lineno'] # read from file... |
| while count: # until line count is restored |
| fh.readline() |
| count = count - 1 |
| self.__dict__.update(dict) # update attributes |
| self.fh = fh # save the file object |
| |
| A sample usage might be something like this:: |
| |
| >>> import TextReader |
| >>> obj = TextReader.TextReader("TextReader.py") |
| >>> obj.readline() |
| '1: #!/usr/local/bin/python' |
| >>> obj.readline() |
| '2: ' |
| >>> obj.readline() |
| '3: class TextReader:' |
| >>> import pickle |
| >>> pickle.dump(obj, open('save.p', 'wb')) |
| |
| If you want to see that :mod:`pickle` works across Python processes, start |
| another Python session, before continuing. What follows can happen from either |
| the same process or a new process. :: |
| |
| >>> import pickle |
| >>> reader = pickle.load(open('save.p', 'rb')) |
| >>> reader.readline() |
| '4: """Print and number lines in a text file."""' |
| |
| |
| .. seealso:: |
| |
| Module :mod:`copyreg` |
| Pickle interface constructor registration for extension types. |
| |
| Module :mod:`shelve` |
| Indexed databases of objects; uses :mod:`pickle`. |
| |
| Module :mod:`copy` |
| Shallow and deep object copying. |
| |
| Module :mod:`marshal` |
| High-performance serialization of built-in types. |
| |
| |
| .. rubric:: Footnotes |
| |
| .. [#] Don't confuse this with the :mod:`marshal` module |
| |
| .. [#] The exception raised will likely be an :exc:`ImportError` or an |
| :exc:`AttributeError` but it could be something else. |
| |
| .. [#] These methods can also be used to implement copying class instances. |
| |
| .. [#] This protocol is also used by the shallow and deep copying operations |
| defined in the :mod:`copy` module. |
| |
| .. [#] The limitation on alphanumeric characters is due to the fact |
| the persistent IDs, in protocol 0, are delimited by the newline |
| character. Therefore if any kind of newline characters occurs in |
| persistent IDs, the resulting pickle will become unreadable. |