blob: de27c17b4cff261b3f914b75ac64d167d477798e [file] [log] [blame]
"""HTTP/1.1 client library
<intro stuff goes here>
<other stuff, too>
HTTPConnection goes through a number of "states", which define when a client
may legally make another request or fetch the response for a particular
request. This diagram details these state transitions:
(null)
|
| HTTPConnection()
v
Idle
|
| putrequest()
v
Request-started
|
| ( putheader() )* endheaders()
v
Request-sent
|
| response = getresponse()
v
Unread-response [Response-headers-read]
|\____________________
| |
| response.read() | putrequest()
v v
Idle Req-started-unread-response
______/|
/ |
response.read() | | ( putheader() )* endheaders()
v v
Request-started Req-sent-unread-response
|
| response.read()
v
Request-sent
This diagram presents the following rules:
-- a second request may not be started until {response-headers-read}
-- a response [object] cannot be retrieved until {request-sent}
-- there is no differentiation between an unread response body and a
partially read response body
Note: this enforcement is applied by the HTTPConnection class. The
HTTPResponse class does not enforce this state machine, which
implies sophisticated clients may accelerate the request/response
pipeline. Caution should be taken, though: accelerating the states
beyond the above pattern may imply knowledge of the server's
connection-close behavior for certain requests. For example, it
is impossible to tell whether the server will close the connection
UNTIL the response headers have been read; this means that further
requests cannot be placed into the pipeline until it is known that
the server will NOT be closing the connection.
Logical State __state __response
------------- ------- ----------
Idle _CS_IDLE None
Request-started _CS_REQ_STARTED None
Request-sent _CS_REQ_SENT None
Unread-response _CS_IDLE <response_class>
Req-started-unread-response _CS_REQ_STARTED <response_class>
Req-sent-unread-response _CS_REQ_SENT <response_class>
"""
import io
import mimetools
import socket
from urlparse import urlsplit
import warnings
__all__ = ["HTTPResponse", "HTTPConnection",
"HTTPException", "NotConnected", "UnknownProtocol",
"UnknownTransferEncoding", "UnimplementedFileMode",
"IncompleteRead", "InvalidURL", "ImproperConnectionState",
"CannotSendRequest", "CannotSendHeader", "ResponseNotReady",
"BadStatusLine", "error", "responses"]
HTTP_PORT = 80
HTTPS_PORT = 443
_UNKNOWN = 'UNKNOWN'
# connection states
_CS_IDLE = 'Idle'
_CS_REQ_STARTED = 'Request-started'
_CS_REQ_SENT = 'Request-sent'
# status codes
# informational
CONTINUE = 100
SWITCHING_PROTOCOLS = 101
PROCESSING = 102
# successful
OK = 200
CREATED = 201
ACCEPTED = 202
NON_AUTHORITATIVE_INFORMATION = 203
NO_CONTENT = 204
RESET_CONTENT = 205
PARTIAL_CONTENT = 206
MULTI_STATUS = 207
IM_USED = 226
# redirection
MULTIPLE_CHOICES = 300
MOVED_PERMANENTLY = 301
FOUND = 302
SEE_OTHER = 303
NOT_MODIFIED = 304
USE_PROXY = 305
TEMPORARY_REDIRECT = 307
# client error
BAD_REQUEST = 400
UNAUTHORIZED = 401
PAYMENT_REQUIRED = 402
FORBIDDEN = 403
NOT_FOUND = 404
METHOD_NOT_ALLOWED = 405
NOT_ACCEPTABLE = 406
PROXY_AUTHENTICATION_REQUIRED = 407
REQUEST_TIMEOUT = 408
CONFLICT = 409
GONE = 410
LENGTH_REQUIRED = 411
PRECONDITION_FAILED = 412
REQUEST_ENTITY_TOO_LARGE = 413
REQUEST_URI_TOO_LONG = 414
UNSUPPORTED_MEDIA_TYPE = 415
REQUESTED_RANGE_NOT_SATISFIABLE = 416
EXPECTATION_FAILED = 417
UNPROCESSABLE_ENTITY = 422
LOCKED = 423
FAILED_DEPENDENCY = 424
UPGRADE_REQUIRED = 426
# server error
INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR = 500
NOT_IMPLEMENTED = 501
BAD_GATEWAY = 502
SERVICE_UNAVAILABLE = 503
GATEWAY_TIMEOUT = 504
HTTP_VERSION_NOT_SUPPORTED = 505
INSUFFICIENT_STORAGE = 507
NOT_EXTENDED = 510
# Mapping status codes to official W3C names
responses = {
100: 'Continue',
101: 'Switching Protocols',
200: 'OK',
201: 'Created',
202: 'Accepted',
203: 'Non-Authoritative Information',
204: 'No Content',
205: 'Reset Content',
206: 'Partial Content',
300: 'Multiple Choices',
301: 'Moved Permanently',
302: 'Found',
303: 'See Other',
304: 'Not Modified',
305: 'Use Proxy',
306: '(Unused)',
307: 'Temporary Redirect',
400: 'Bad Request',
401: 'Unauthorized',
402: 'Payment Required',
403: 'Forbidden',
404: 'Not Found',
405: 'Method Not Allowed',
406: 'Not Acceptable',
407: 'Proxy Authentication Required',
408: 'Request Timeout',
409: 'Conflict',
410: 'Gone',
411: 'Length Required',
412: 'Precondition Failed',
413: 'Request Entity Too Large',
414: 'Request-URI Too Long',
415: 'Unsupported Media Type',
416: 'Requested Range Not Satisfiable',
417: 'Expectation Failed',
500: 'Internal Server Error',
501: 'Not Implemented',
502: 'Bad Gateway',
503: 'Service Unavailable',
504: 'Gateway Timeout',
505: 'HTTP Version Not Supported',
}
# maximal amount of data to read at one time in _safe_read
MAXAMOUNT = 1048576
class HTTPMessage(mimetools.Message):
def addheader(self, key, value):
"""Add header for field key handling repeats."""
prev = self.dict.get(key)
if prev is None:
self.dict[key] = value
else:
combined = ", ".join((prev, value))
self.dict[key] = combined
def addcontinue(self, key, more):
"""Add more field data from a continuation line."""
prev = self.dict[key]
self.dict[key] = prev + "\n " + more
def readheaders(self):
"""Read header lines.
Read header lines up to the entirely blank line that terminates them.
The (normally blank) line that ends the headers is skipped, but not
included in the returned list. If a non-header line ends the headers,
(which is an error), an attempt is made to backspace over it; it is
never included in the returned list.
The variable self.status is set to the empty string if all went well,
otherwise it is an error message. The variable self.headers is a
completely uninterpreted list of lines contained in the header (so
printing them will reproduce the header exactly as it appears in the
file).
If multiple header fields with the same name occur, they are combined
according to the rules in RFC 2616 sec 4.2:
Appending each subsequent field-value to the first, each separated
by a comma. The order in which header fields with the same field-name
are received is significant to the interpretation of the combined
field value.
"""
# XXX The implementation overrides the readheaders() method of
# rfc822.Message. The base class design isn't amenable to
# customized behavior here so the method here is a copy of the
# base class code with a few small changes.
self.dict = {}
self.unixfrom = ''
self.headers = hlist = []
self.status = ''
headerseen = ""
firstline = 1
startofline = unread = tell = None
if hasattr(self.fp, 'unread'):
unread = self.fp.unread
elif self.seekable:
tell = self.fp.tell
while True:
if tell:
try:
startofline = tell()
except IOError:
startofline = tell = None
self.seekable = 0
line = str(self.fp.readline(), "iso-8859-1")
if not line:
self.status = 'EOF in headers'
break
# Skip unix From name time lines
if firstline and line.startswith('From '):
self.unixfrom = self.unixfrom + line
continue
firstline = 0
if headerseen and line[0] in ' \t':
# XXX Not sure if continuation lines are handled properly
# for http and/or for repeating headers
# It's a continuation line.
hlist.append(line)
self.addcontinue(headerseen, line.strip())
continue
elif self.iscomment(line):
# It's a comment. Ignore it.
continue
elif self.islast(line):
# Note! No pushback here! The delimiter line gets eaten.
break
headerseen = self.isheader(line)
if headerseen:
# It's a legal header line, save it.
hlist.append(line)
self.addheader(headerseen, line[len(headerseen)+1:].strip())
continue
else:
# It's not a header line; throw it back and stop here.
if not self.dict:
self.status = 'No headers'
else:
self.status = 'Non-header line where header expected'
# Try to undo the read.
if unread:
unread(line)
elif tell:
self.fp.seek(startofline)
else:
self.status = self.status + '; bad seek'
break
class HTTPResponse:
# strict: If true, raise BadStatusLine if the status line can't be
# parsed as a valid HTTP/1.0 or 1.1 status line. By default it is
# false because it prevents clients from talking to HTTP/0.9
# servers. Note that a response with a sufficiently corrupted
# status line will look like an HTTP/0.9 response.
# See RFC 2616 sec 19.6 and RFC 1945 sec 6 for details.
# The bytes from the socket object are iso-8859-1 strings.
# See RFC 2616 sec 2.2 which notes an exception for MIME-encoded
# text following RFC 2047. The basic status line parsing only
# accepts iso-8859-1.
def __init__(self, sock, debuglevel=0, strict=0, method=None):
# XXX If the response includes a content-length header, we
# need to make sure that the client doesn't read more than the
# specified number of bytes. If it does, it will block until
# the server times out and closes the connection. (The only
# applies to HTTP/1.1 connections.) Since some clients access
# self.fp directly rather than calling read(), this is a little
# tricky.
self.fp = sock.makefile("rb", 0)
self.debuglevel = debuglevel
self.strict = strict
self._method = method
self.msg = None
# from the Status-Line of the response
self.version = _UNKNOWN # HTTP-Version
self.status = _UNKNOWN # Status-Code
self.reason = _UNKNOWN # Reason-Phrase
self.chunked = _UNKNOWN # is "chunked" being used?
self.chunk_left = _UNKNOWN # bytes left to read in current chunk
self.length = _UNKNOWN # number of bytes left in response
self.will_close = _UNKNOWN # conn will close at end of response
def _read_status(self):
# Initialize with Simple-Response defaults.
line = str(self.fp.readline(), "iso-8859-1")
if self.debuglevel > 0:
print("reply:", repr(line))
if not line:
# Presumably, the server closed the connection before
# sending a valid response.
raise BadStatusLine(line)
try:
[version, status, reason] = line.split(None, 2)
except ValueError:
try:
[version, status] = line.split(None, 1)
reason = ""
except ValueError:
# empty version will cause next test to fail and status
# will be treated as 0.9 response.
version = ""
if not version.startswith("HTTP/"):
if self.strict:
self.close()
raise BadStatusLine(line)
else:
# Assume it's a Simple-Response from an 0.9 server.
# We have to convert the first line back to raw bytes
# because self.fp.readline() needs to return bytes.
self.fp = LineAndFileWrapper(bytes(line, "ascii"), self.fp)
return "HTTP/0.9", 200, ""
# The status code is a three-digit number
try:
status = int(status)
if status < 100 or status > 999:
raise BadStatusLine(line)
except ValueError:
raise BadStatusLine(line)
return version, status, reason
def begin(self):
if self.msg is not None:
# we've already started reading the response
return
# read until we get a non-100 response
while True:
version, status, reason = self._read_status()
if status != CONTINUE:
break
# skip the header from the 100 response
while True:
skip = self.fp.readline().strip()
if not skip:
break
if self.debuglevel > 0:
print("header:", skip)
self.status = status
self.reason = reason.strip()
if version == "HTTP/1.0":
self.version = 10
elif version.startswith("HTTP/1."):
self.version = 11 # use HTTP/1.1 code for HTTP/1.x where x>=1
elif version == "HTTP/0.9":
self.version = 9
else:
raise UnknownProtocol(version)
if self.version == 9:
self.length = None
self.chunked = 0
self.will_close = 1
self.msg = HTTPMessage(io.BytesIO())
return
self.msg = HTTPMessage(self.fp, 0)
if self.debuglevel > 0:
for hdr in self.msg.headers:
print("header:", hdr, end=" ")
# don't let the msg keep an fp
self.msg.fp = None
# are we using the chunked-style of transfer encoding?
tr_enc = self.msg.getheader("transfer-encoding")
if tr_enc and tr_enc.lower() == "chunked":
self.chunked = 1
self.chunk_left = None
else:
self.chunked = 0
# will the connection close at the end of the response?
self.will_close = self._check_close()
# do we have a Content-Length?
# NOTE: RFC 2616, S4.4, #3 says we ignore this if tr_enc is "chunked"
self.length = None
length = self.msg.getheader("content-length")
if length and not self.chunked:
try:
self.length = int(length)
except ValueError:
self.length = None
else:
if self.length < 0: # ignore nonsensical negative lengths
self.length = None
else:
self.length = None
# does the body have a fixed length? (of zero)
if (status == NO_CONTENT or status == NOT_MODIFIED or
100 <= status < 200 or # 1xx codes
self._method == "HEAD"):
self.length = 0
# if the connection remains open, and we aren't using chunked, and
# a content-length was not provided, then assume that the connection
# WILL close.
if (not self.will_close and
not self.chunked and
self.length is None):
self.will_close = 1
def _check_close(self):
conn = self.msg.getheader("connection")
if self.version == 11:
# An HTTP/1.1 proxy is assumed to stay open unless
# explicitly closed.
conn = self.msg.getheader("connection")
if conn and "close" in conn.lower():
return True
return False
# Some HTTP/1.0 implementations have support for persistent
# connections, using rules different than HTTP/1.1.
# For older HTTP, Keep-Alive indicates persistent connection.
if self.msg.getheader("keep-alive"):
return False
# At least Akamai returns a "Connection: Keep-Alive" header,
# which was supposed to be sent by the client.
if conn and "keep-alive" in conn.lower():
return False
# Proxy-Connection is a netscape hack.
pconn = self.msg.getheader("proxy-connection")
if pconn and "keep-alive" in pconn.lower():
return False
# otherwise, assume it will close
return True
def close(self):
if self.fp:
self.fp.close()
self.fp = None
# These implementations are for the benefit of io.BufferedReader.
# XXX This class should probably be revised to act more like
# the "raw stream" that BufferedReader expects.
@property
def closed(self):
return self.isclosed()
def flush(self):
self.fp.flush()
# End of "raw stream" methods
def isclosed(self):
# NOTE: it is possible that we will not ever call self.close(). This
# case occurs when will_close is TRUE, length is None, and we
# read up to the last byte, but NOT past it.
#
# IMPLIES: if will_close is FALSE, then self.close() will ALWAYS be
# called, meaning self.isclosed() is meaningful.
return self.fp is None
# XXX It would be nice to have readline and __iter__ for this, too.
def read(self, amt=None):
if self.fp is None:
return b""
if self.chunked:
return self._read_chunked(amt)
if amt is None:
# unbounded read
if self.length is None:
s = self.fp.read()
else:
s = self._safe_read(self.length)
self.length = 0
self.close() # we read everything
return s
if self.length is not None:
if amt > self.length:
# clip the read to the "end of response"
amt = self.length
# we do not use _safe_read() here because this may be a .will_close
# connection, and the user is reading more bytes than will be provided
# (for example, reading in 1k chunks)
s = self.fp.read(amt)
if self.length is not None:
self.length -= len(s)
if not self.length:
self.close()
return s
def _read_chunked(self, amt):
assert self.chunked != _UNKNOWN
chunk_left = self.chunk_left
value = b""
# XXX This accumulates chunks by repeated string concatenation,
# which is not efficient as the number or size of chunks gets big.
while True:
if chunk_left is None:
line = self.fp.readline()
i = line.find(b";")
if i >= 0:
line = line[:i] # strip chunk-extensions
try:
chunk_left = int(line, 16)
except ValueError:
# close the connection as protocol synchronisation is
# probably lost
self.close()
raise IncompleteRead(value)
if chunk_left == 0:
break
if amt is None:
value += self._safe_read(chunk_left)
elif amt < chunk_left:
value += self._safe_read(amt)
self.chunk_left = chunk_left - amt
return value
elif amt == chunk_left:
value += self._safe_read(amt)
self._safe_read(2) # toss the CRLF at the end of the chunk
self.chunk_left = None
return value
else:
value += self._safe_read(chunk_left)
amt -= chunk_left
# we read the whole chunk, get another
self._safe_read(2) # toss the CRLF at the end of the chunk
chunk_left = None
# read and discard trailer up to the CRLF terminator
### note: we shouldn't have any trailers!
while True:
line = self.fp.readline()
if not line:
# a vanishingly small number of sites EOF without
# sending the trailer
break
if line == b"\r\n":
break
# we read everything; close the "file"
self.close()
return value
def _safe_read(self, amt):
"""Read the number of bytes requested, compensating for partial reads.
Normally, we have a blocking socket, but a read() can be interrupted
by a signal (resulting in a partial read).
Note that we cannot distinguish between EOF and an interrupt when zero
bytes have been read. IncompleteRead() will be raised in this
situation.
This function should be used when <amt> bytes "should" be present for
reading. If the bytes are truly not available (due to EOF), then the
IncompleteRead exception can be used to detect the problem.
"""
s = []
while amt > 0:
chunk = self.fp.read(min(amt, MAXAMOUNT))
if not chunk:
raise IncompleteRead(s)
s.append(chunk)
amt -= len(chunk)
return b"".join(s)
def getheader(self, name, default=None):
if self.msg is None:
raise ResponseNotReady()
return self.msg.getheader(name, default)
def getheaders(self):
"""Return list of (header, value) tuples."""
if self.msg is None:
raise ResponseNotReady()
return list(self.msg.items())
class HTTPConnection:
_http_vsn = 11
_http_vsn_str = 'HTTP/1.1'
response_class = HTTPResponse
default_port = HTTP_PORT
auto_open = 1
debuglevel = 0
strict = 0
def __init__(self, host, port=None, strict=None, timeout=None):
self.timeout = timeout
self.sock = None
self._buffer = []
self.__response = None
self.__state = _CS_IDLE
self._method = None
self._set_hostport(host, port)
if strict is not None:
self.strict = strict
def _set_hostport(self, host, port):
if port is None:
i = host.rfind(':')
j = host.rfind(']') # ipv6 addresses have [...]
if i > j:
try:
port = int(host[i+1:])
except ValueError:
raise InvalidURL("nonnumeric port: '%s'" % host[i+1:])
host = host[:i]
else:
port = self.default_port
if host and host[0] == '[' and host[-1] == ']':
host = host[1:-1]
self.host = host
self.port = port
def set_debuglevel(self, level):
self.debuglevel = level
def connect(self):
"""Connect to the host and port specified in __init__."""
self.sock = socket.create_connection((self.host,self.port),
self.timeout)
def close(self):
"""Close the connection to the HTTP server."""
if self.sock:
self.sock.close() # close it manually... there may be other refs
self.sock = None
if self.__response:
self.__response.close()
self.__response = None
self.__state = _CS_IDLE
def send(self, str):
"""Send `str' to the server."""
if self.sock is None:
if self.auto_open:
self.connect()
else:
raise NotConnected()
# send the data to the server. if we get a broken pipe, then close
# the socket. we want to reconnect when somebody tries to send again.
#
# NOTE: we DO propagate the error, though, because we cannot simply
# ignore the error... the caller will know if they can retry.
if self.debuglevel > 0:
print("send:", repr(str))
try:
blocksize=8192
if hasattr(str,'read') :
if self.debuglevel > 0: print("sendIng a read()able")
data=str.read(blocksize)
while data:
self.sock.sendall(data)
data=str.read(blocksize)
else:
self.sock.sendall(str)
except socket.error as v:
if v.args[0] == 32: # Broken pipe
self.close()
raise
def _output(self, s):
"""Add a line of output to the current request buffer.
Assumes that the line does *not* end with \\r\\n.
"""
self._buffer.append(s)
def _send_output(self):
"""Send the currently buffered request and clear the buffer.
Appends an extra \\r\\n to the buffer.
"""
self._buffer.extend((b"", b""))
msg = b"\r\n".join(self._buffer)
del self._buffer[:]
self.send(msg)
def putrequest(self, method, url, skip_host=0, skip_accept_encoding=0):
"""Send a request to the server.
`method' specifies an HTTP request method, e.g. 'GET'.
`url' specifies the object being requested, e.g. '/index.html'.
`skip_host' if True does not add automatically a 'Host:' header
`skip_accept_encoding' if True does not add automatically an
'Accept-Encoding:' header
"""
# if a prior response has been completed, then forget about it.
if self.__response and self.__response.isclosed():
self.__response = None
# in certain cases, we cannot issue another request on this connection.
# this occurs when:
# 1) we are in the process of sending a request. (_CS_REQ_STARTED)
# 2) a response to a previous request has signalled that it is going
# to close the connection upon completion.
# 3) the headers for the previous response have not been read, thus
# we cannot determine whether point (2) is true. (_CS_REQ_SENT)
#
# if there is no prior response, then we can request at will.
#
# if point (2) is true, then we will have passed the socket to the
# response (effectively meaning, "there is no prior response"), and
# will open a new one when a new request is made.
#
# Note: if a prior response exists, then we *can* start a new request.
# We are not allowed to begin fetching the response to this new
# request, however, until that prior response is complete.
#
if self.__state == _CS_IDLE:
self.__state = _CS_REQ_STARTED
else:
raise CannotSendRequest()
# Save the method we use, we need it later in the response phase
self._method = method
if not url:
url = '/'
request = '%s %s %s' % (method, url, self._http_vsn_str)
# Non-ASCII characters should have been eliminated earlier
self._output(request.encode('ascii'))
if self._http_vsn == 11:
# Issue some standard headers for better HTTP/1.1 compliance
if not skip_host:
# this header is issued *only* for HTTP/1.1
# connections. more specifically, this means it is
# only issued when the client uses the new
# HTTPConnection() class. backwards-compat clients
# will be using HTTP/1.0 and those clients may be
# issuing this header themselves. we should NOT issue
# it twice; some web servers (such as Apache) barf
# when they see two Host: headers
# If we need a non-standard port,include it in the
# header. If the request is going through a proxy,
# but the host of the actual URL, not the host of the
# proxy.
netloc = ''
if url.startswith('http'):
nil, netloc, nil, nil, nil = urlsplit(url)
if netloc:
try:
netloc_enc = netloc.encode("ascii")
except UnicodeEncodeError:
netloc_enc = netloc.encode("idna")
self.putheader('Host', netloc_enc)
else:
try:
host_enc = self.host.encode("ascii")
except UnicodeEncodeError:
host_enc = self.host.encode("idna")
if self.port == HTTP_PORT:
self.putheader('Host', host_enc)
else:
host_enc = host_enc.decode("ascii")
self.putheader('Host', "%s:%s" % (host_enc, self.port))
# note: we are assuming that clients will not attempt to set these
# headers since *this* library must deal with the
# consequences. this also means that when the supporting
# libraries are updated to recognize other forms, then this
# code should be changed (removed or updated).
# we only want a Content-Encoding of "identity" since we don't
# support encodings such as x-gzip or x-deflate.
if not skip_accept_encoding:
self.putheader('Accept-Encoding', 'identity')
# we can accept "chunked" Transfer-Encodings, but no others
# NOTE: no TE header implies *only* "chunked"
#self.putheader('TE', 'chunked')
# if TE is supplied in the header, then it must appear in a
# Connection header.
#self.putheader('Connection', 'TE')
else:
# For HTTP/1.0, the server will assume "not chunked"
pass
def putheader(self, header, value):
"""Send a request header line to the server.
For example: h.putheader('Accept', 'text/html')
"""
if self.__state != _CS_REQ_STARTED:
raise CannotSendHeader()
if hasattr(header, 'encode'):
header = header.encode('ascii')
if hasattr(value, 'encode'):
value = value.encode('ascii')
header = header + b': ' + value
self._output(header)
def endheaders(self):
"""Indicate that the last header line has been sent to the server."""
if self.__state == _CS_REQ_STARTED:
self.__state = _CS_REQ_SENT
else:
raise CannotSendHeader()
self._send_output()
def request(self, method, url, body=None, headers={}):
"""Send a complete request to the server."""
try:
self._send_request(method, url, body, headers)
except socket.error as v:
# trap 'Broken pipe' if we're allowed to automatically reconnect
if v.args[0] != 32 or not self.auto_open:
raise
# try one more time
self._send_request(method, url, body, headers)
def _send_request(self, method, url, body, headers):
# honour explicitly requested Host: and Accept-Encoding headers
header_names = dict.fromkeys([k.lower() for k in headers])
skips = {}
if 'host' in header_names:
skips['skip_host'] = 1
if 'accept-encoding' in header_names:
skips['skip_accept_encoding'] = 1
self.putrequest(method, url, **skips)
if body and ('content-length' not in header_names):
thelen = None
try:
thelen = str(len(body))
except TypeError as te:
# If this is a file-like object, try to
# fstat its file descriptor
import os
try:
thelen = str(os.fstat(body.fileno()).st_size)
except (AttributeError, OSError):
# Don't send a length if this failed
if self.debuglevel > 0: print("Cannot stat!!")
if thelen is not None:
self.putheader('Content-Length',thelen)
for hdr, value in headers.items():
self.putheader(hdr, value)
self.endheaders()
if body:
if isinstance(body, str): body = body.encode('ascii')
self.send(body)
def getresponse(self):
"""Get the response from the server."""
# if a prior response has been completed, then forget about it.
if self.__response and self.__response.isclosed():
self.__response = None
#
# if a prior response exists, then it must be completed (otherwise, we
# cannot read this response's header to determine the connection-close
# behavior)
#
# note: if a prior response existed, but was connection-close, then the
# socket and response were made independent of this HTTPConnection
# object since a new request requires that we open a whole new
# connection
#
# this means the prior response had one of two states:
# 1) will_close: this connection was reset and the prior socket and
# response operate independently
# 2) persistent: the response was retained and we await its
# isclosed() status to become true.
#
if self.__state != _CS_REQ_SENT or self.__response:
raise ResponseNotReady()
if self.debuglevel > 0:
response = self.response_class(self.sock, self.debuglevel,
strict=self.strict,
method=self._method)
else:
response = self.response_class(self.sock, strict=self.strict,
method=self._method)
response.begin()
assert response.will_close != _UNKNOWN
self.__state = _CS_IDLE
if response.will_close:
# this effectively passes the connection to the response
self.close()
else:
# remember this, so we can tell when it is complete
self.__response = response
return response
try:
import ssl
except ImportError:
pass
else:
class HTTPSConnection(HTTPConnection):
"This class allows communication via SSL."
default_port = HTTPS_PORT
def __init__(self, host, port=None, key_file=None, cert_file=None,
strict=None, timeout=None):
HTTPConnection.__init__(self, host, port, strict, timeout)
self.key_file = key_file
self.cert_file = cert_file
def connect(self):
"Connect to a host on a given (SSL) port."
sock = socket.create_connection((self.host, self.port), self.timeout)
self.sock = ssl.wrap_socket(sock, self.key_file, self.cert_file)
def FakeSocket (sock, sslobj):
warnings.warn("FakeSocket is deprecated, and won't be in 3.x. " +
"Use the result of ssl.wrap_socket() directly instead.",
DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2)
return sslobj
__all__.append("HTTPSConnection")
class HTTPException(Exception):
# Subclasses that define an __init__ must call Exception.__init__
# or define self.args. Otherwise, str() will fail.
pass
class NotConnected(HTTPException):
pass
class InvalidURL(HTTPException):
pass
class UnknownProtocol(HTTPException):
def __init__(self, version):
self.args = version,
self.version = version
class UnknownTransferEncoding(HTTPException):
pass
class UnimplementedFileMode(HTTPException):
pass
class IncompleteRead(HTTPException):
def __init__(self, partial):
self.args = partial,
self.partial = partial
class ImproperConnectionState(HTTPException):
pass
class CannotSendRequest(ImproperConnectionState):
pass
class CannotSendHeader(ImproperConnectionState):
pass
class ResponseNotReady(ImproperConnectionState):
pass
class BadStatusLine(HTTPException):
def __init__(self, line):
self.args = line,
self.line = line
# for backwards compatibility
error = HTTPException
class LineAndFileWrapper:
"""A limited file-like object for HTTP/0.9 responses."""
# The status-line parsing code calls readline(), which normally
# get the HTTP status line. For a 0.9 response, however, this is
# actually the first line of the body! Clients need to get a
# readable file object that contains that line.
def __init__(self, line, file):
self._line = line
self._file = file
self._line_consumed = 0
self._line_offset = 0
self._line_left = len(line)
def __getattr__(self, attr):
return getattr(self._file, attr)
def _done(self):
# called when the last byte is read from the line. After the
# call, all read methods are delegated to the underlying file
# object.
self._line_consumed = 1
self.read = self._file.read
self.readline = self._file.readline
self.readlines = self._file.readlines
def read(self, amt=None):
if self._line_consumed:
return self._file.read(amt)
assert self._line_left
if amt is None or amt > self._line_left:
s = self._line[self._line_offset:]
self._done()
if amt is None:
return s + self._file.read()
else:
return s + self._file.read(amt - len(s))
else:
assert amt <= self._line_left
i = self._line_offset
j = i + amt
s = self._line[i:j]
self._line_offset = j
self._line_left -= amt
if self._line_left == 0:
self._done()
return s
def readline(self):
if self._line_consumed:
return self._file.readline()
assert self._line_left
s = self._line[self._line_offset:]
self._done()
return s
def readlines(self, size=None):
if self._line_consumed:
return self._file.readlines(size)
assert self._line_left
L = [self._line[self._line_offset:]]
self._done()
if size is None:
return L + self._file.readlines()
else:
return L + self._file.readlines(size)