cpython/Lib/urllib2.py
Guido van Rossum d59da4b432 Merged revisions 55407-55513 via svnmerge from
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/branches/p3yk

................
  r55413 | fred.drake | 2007-05-17 12:30:10 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 1 line

  fix argument name in documentation; match the implementation
................
  r55430 | jack.diederich | 2007-05-18 06:39:59 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

  Implements class decorators, PEP 3129.
................
  r55432 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-05-18 08:09:41 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 2 lines

  obsubmit.
................
  r55434 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-05-18 09:39:10 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 3 lines

  Fix bug in test_inspect.  (I presume this is how it should be fixed;
  Jack Diedrich, please verify.)
................
  r55460 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 00:31:57 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 4 lines

  Remove the imageop module.  With imgfile already removed in Python 3.0 and
  rgbimg gone in Python 2.6 the unit tests themselves were made worthless.  Plus
  third-party libraries perform the same function much better.
................
  r55469 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 11:28:20 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 118 lines

  Merged revisions 55324-55467 via svnmerge from
  svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

  ........
    r55348 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-15 13:19:34 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 4 lines

    HTML-escape the plain traceback in cgitb's HTML output, to prevent
    the traceback inadvertently or maliciously closing the comment and
    injecting HTML into the error page.
  ........
    r55372 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-15 21:33:50 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 6 lines

    Port rev 55353 from Guido:
    Add what looks like a necessary call to PyErr_NoMemory() when PyMem_MALLOC()
    fails.

    Will backport.
  ........
    r55377 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-15 22:06:33 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 1 line

    Mention removal of some directories for obsolete platforms
  ........
    r55380 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-15 22:50:03 -0700 (Tue, 15 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Change the maintainer of the BeOS port.
  ........
    r55383 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-16 06:44:18 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Bug #1719995: don't use deprecated method in sets example.
  ........
    r55386 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-16 13:05:11 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 5 lines

    Fix bug in marshal where bad data would cause a segfault due to
    lack of an infinite recursion check.

    Contributed by Damien Miller at Google.
  ........
    r55389 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-16 15:42:29 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 6 lines

    Remove the gopherlib module.  It has been raising a DeprecationWarning since
    Python 2.5.

    Also remove gopher support from urllib/urllib2.  As both imported gopherlib the
    usage of the support would have raised a DeprecationWarning.
  ........
    r55394 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-16 18:08:04 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 1 line

    calendar.py gets no benefit from xrange() instead of range()
  ........
    r55395 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-16 19:02:56 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 3 lines

    Complete deprecation of BaseException.message.  Some subclasses were directly
    accessing the message attribute instead of using the descriptor.
  ........
    r55396 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-16 23:11:36 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 4 lines

    Reduce the max stack depth to see if this fixes the segfaults on
    Windows and some other boxes.  If this is successful, this rev should
    be backported.  I'm not sure how close to the limit we should push this.
  ........
    r55397 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-16 23:23:50 -0700 (Wed, 16 May 2007) | 4 lines

    Set the depth to something very small to try to determine if the
    crashes on Windows are really due to the stack size or possibly
    some other problem.
  ........
    r55398 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-17 00:04:46 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 4 lines

    Last try for tweaking the max stack depth.  5000 was the original value,
    4000 didn't work either.  1000 does work on Windows.  If 2000 works,
    that will hopefully be a reasonable balance.
  ........
    r55412 | fred.drake | 2007-05-17 12:29:58 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 1 line

    fix argument name in documentation; match the implementation
  ........
    r55427 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-17 22:47:16 -0700 (Thu, 17 May 2007) | 1 line

    Verify neither dumps or loads overflow the stack and segfault.
  ........
    r55446 | collin.winter | 2007-05-18 16:11:24 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

    Backport PEP 3110's new 'except' syntax to 2.6.
  ........
    r55448 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-18 18:11:16 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

    Improvements to NamedTuple's implementation, tests, and documentation
  ........
    r55449 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-18 18:50:11 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

    Fix beginner mistake -- don't mix spaces and tabs.
  ........
    r55450 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-18 20:48:47 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

    Clear data so random memory does not get freed.  Will backport.
  ........
    r55452 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-18 21:34:55 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 3 lines

    Whoops, need to pay attention to those test failures.
    Move the clear to *before* the first use, not after.
  ........
    r55453 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-18 21:35:52 -0700 (Fri, 18 May 2007) | 1 line

    Give some clue as to what happened if the test fails.
  ........
    r55455 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-19 11:09:26 -0700 (Sat, 19 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Fix docstring for add_package in site.py.
  ........
    r55458 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 00:09:50 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Remove the rgbimg module.  It has been deprecated since Python 2.5.
  ........
    r55465 | nick.coghlan | 2007-05-20 04:12:49 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line

    Fix typo in example (should be backported, but my maintenance branch is woefully out of date)
  ........
................
  r55472 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 12:06:18 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines

  Remove imageop from the Windows build process.
................
  r55486 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 23:59:52 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line

  Remove callable() builtin
................
  r55506 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-22 00:43:29 -0700 (Tue, 22 May 2007) | 78 lines

  Merged revisions 55468-55505 via svnmerge from
  svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

  ........
    r55468 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 11:06:27 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line

    rotor is long gone.
  ........
    r55470 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-20 11:43:00 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line

    Update directories/files at the top-level.
  ........
    r55471 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 12:05:06 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Try to remove rgbimg from Windows builds.
  ........
    r55474 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 16:17:38 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 4 lines

    Remove the macfs module.  This led to the deprecation of macostools.touched();
    it completely relied on macfs and is a no-op on OS X according to code
    comments.
  ........
    r55476 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 16:56:18 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 3 lines

    Move imgfile import to the global namespace to trigger an import error ASAP to
    prevent creation of a test file.
  ........
    r55477 | brett.cannon | 2007-05-20 16:57:38 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 3 lines

    Cause posixfile to raise a DeprecationWarning.  Documented as deprecated since
    Ptyhon 1.5.
  ........
    r55479 | andrew.kuchling | 2007-05-20 17:03:15 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 1 line

    Note removed modules
  ........
    r55481 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-05-20 21:35:47 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Add Alexandre Vassalotti.
  ........
    r55482 | george.yoshida | 2007-05-20 21:41:21 -0700 (Sun, 20 May 2007) | 4 lines

    fix against r55474 [Remove the macfs module]

    Remove "libmacfs.tex" from Makefile.deps and mac/mac.tex.
  ........
    r55487 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-21 01:13:35 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 1 line

    Replace assertion with straight error-checking.
  ........
    r55489 | raymond.hettinger | 2007-05-21 09:40:10 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 1 line

    Allow all alphanumeric and underscores in type and field names.
  ........
    r55490 | facundo.batista | 2007-05-21 10:32:32 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 5 lines


    Added timeout support to HTTPSConnection, through the
    socket.create_connection function. Also added a small
    test for this, and updated NEWS file.
  ........
    r55495 | georg.brandl | 2007-05-21 13:34:16 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 2 lines

    Patch #1686487: you can now pass any mapping after '**' in function calls.
  ........
    r55502 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-21 23:03:36 -0700 (Mon, 21 May 2007) | 1 line

    Document new params to HTTPSConnection
  ........
    r55504 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-22 00:16:10 -0700 (Tue, 22 May 2007) | 1 line

    Stop using METH_OLDARGS
  ........
    r55505 | neal.norwitz | 2007-05-22 00:16:44 -0700 (Tue, 22 May 2007) | 1 line

    Stop using METH_OLDARGS implicitly
  ........
................
2007-05-22 18:11:13 +00:00

1336 lines
46 KiB
Python

"""An extensible library for opening URLs using a variety of protocols
The simplest way to use this module is to call the urlopen function,
which accepts a string containing a URL or a Request object (described
below). It opens the URL and returns the results as file-like
object; the returned object has some extra methods described below.
The OpenerDirector manages a collection of Handler objects that do
all the actual work. Each Handler implements a particular protocol or
option. The OpenerDirector is a composite object that invokes the
Handlers needed to open the requested URL. For example, the
HTTPHandler performs HTTP GET and POST requests and deals with
non-error returns. The HTTPRedirectHandler automatically deals with
HTTP 301, 302, 303 and 307 redirect errors, and the HTTPDigestAuthHandler
deals with digest authentication.
urlopen(url, data=None) -- Basic usage is the same as original
urllib. pass the url and optionally data to post to an HTTP URL, and
get a file-like object back. One difference is that you can also pass
a Request instance instead of URL. Raises a URLError (subclass of
IOError); for HTTP errors, raises an HTTPError, which can also be
treated as a valid response.
build_opener -- Function that creates a new OpenerDirector instance.
Will install the default handlers. Accepts one or more Handlers as
arguments, either instances or Handler classes that it will
instantiate. If one of the argument is a subclass of the default
handler, the argument will be installed instead of the default.
install_opener -- Installs a new opener as the default opener.
objects of interest:
OpenerDirector --
Request -- An object that encapsulates the state of a request. The
state can be as simple as the URL. It can also include extra HTTP
headers, e.g. a User-Agent.
BaseHandler --
exceptions:
URLError -- A subclass of IOError, individual protocols have their own
specific subclass.
HTTPError -- Also a valid HTTP response, so you can treat an HTTP error
as an exceptional event or valid response.
internals:
BaseHandler and parent
_call_chain conventions
Example usage:
import urllib2
# set up authentication info
authinfo = urllib2.HTTPBasicAuthHandler()
authinfo.add_password(realm='PDQ Application',
uri='https://mahler:8092/site-updates.py',
user='klem',
passwd='geheim$parole')
proxy_support = urllib2.ProxyHandler({"http" : "http://ahad-haam:3128"})
# build a new opener that adds authentication and caching FTP handlers
opener = urllib2.build_opener(proxy_support, authinfo, urllib2.CacheFTPHandler)
# install it
urllib2.install_opener(opener)
f = urllib2.urlopen('http://www.python.org/')
"""
# XXX issues:
# If an authentication error handler that tries to perform
# authentication for some reason but fails, how should the error be
# signalled? The client needs to know the HTTP error code. But if
# the handler knows that the problem was, e.g., that it didn't know
# that hash algo that requested in the challenge, it would be good to
# pass that information along to the client, too.
# ftp errors aren't handled cleanly
# check digest against correct (i.e. non-apache) implementation
# Possible extensions:
# complex proxies XXX not sure what exactly was meant by this
# abstract factory for opener
import base64
import hashlib
import httplib
import mimetools
import os
import posixpath
import random
import re
import socket
import sys
import time
import urlparse
import bisect
from io import StringIO
from urllib import (unwrap, unquote, splittype, splithost, quote,
addinfourl, splitport, splitquery,
splitattr, ftpwrapper, noheaders, splituser, splitpasswd, splitvalue)
# support for FileHandler, proxies via environment variables
from urllib import localhost, url2pathname, getproxies
# used in User-Agent header sent
__version__ = sys.version[:3]
_opener = None
def urlopen(url, data=None):
global _opener
if _opener is None:
_opener = build_opener()
return _opener.open(url, data)
def install_opener(opener):
global _opener
_opener = opener
# do these error classes make sense?
# make sure all of the IOError stuff is overridden. we just want to be
# subtypes.
class URLError(IOError):
# URLError is a sub-type of IOError, but it doesn't share any of
# the implementation. need to override __init__ and __str__.
# It sets self.args for compatibility with other EnvironmentError
# subclasses, but args doesn't have the typical format with errno in
# slot 0 and strerror in slot 1. This may be better than nothing.
def __init__(self, reason):
self.args = reason,
self.reason = reason
def __str__(self):
return '<urlopen error %s>' % self.reason
class HTTPError(URLError, addinfourl):
"""Raised when HTTP error occurs, but also acts like non-error return"""
__super_init = addinfourl.__init__
def __init__(self, url, code, msg, hdrs, fp):
self.code = code
self.msg = msg
self.hdrs = hdrs
self.fp = fp
self.filename = url
# The addinfourl classes depend on fp being a valid file
# object. In some cases, the HTTPError may not have a valid
# file object. If this happens, the simplest workaround is to
# not initialize the base classes.
if fp is not None:
self.__super_init(fp, hdrs, url)
def __str__(self):
return 'HTTP Error %s: %s' % (self.code, self.msg)
# copied from cookielib.py
_cut_port_re = re.compile(r":\d+$")
def request_host(request):
"""Return request-host, as defined by RFC 2965.
Variation from RFC: returned value is lowercased, for convenient
comparison.
"""
url = request.get_full_url()
host = urlparse.urlparse(url)[1]
if host == "":
host = request.get_header("Host", "")
# remove port, if present
host = _cut_port_re.sub("", host, 1)
return host.lower()
class Request:
def __init__(self, url, data=None, headers={},
origin_req_host=None, unverifiable=False):
# unwrap('<URL:type://host/path>') --> 'type://host/path'
self.__original = unwrap(url)
self.type = None
# self.__r_type is what's left after doing the splittype
self.host = None
self.port = None
self.data = data
self.headers = {}
for key, value in headers.items():
self.add_header(key, value)
self.unredirected_hdrs = {}
if origin_req_host is None:
origin_req_host = request_host(self)
self.origin_req_host = origin_req_host
self.unverifiable = unverifiable
def __getattr__(self, attr):
# XXX this is a fallback mechanism to guard against these
# methods getting called in a non-standard order. this may be
# too complicated and/or unnecessary.
# XXX should the __r_XXX attributes be public?
if attr[:12] == '_Request__r_':
name = attr[12:]
if hasattr(Request, 'get_' + name):
getattr(self, 'get_' + name)()
return getattr(self, attr)
raise AttributeError, attr
def get_method(self):
if self.has_data():
return "POST"
else:
return "GET"
# XXX these helper methods are lame
def add_data(self, data):
self.data = data
def has_data(self):
return self.data is not None
def get_data(self):
return self.data
def get_full_url(self):
return self.__original
def get_type(self):
if self.type is None:
self.type, self.__r_type = splittype(self.__original)
if self.type is None:
raise ValueError, "unknown url type: %s" % self.__original
return self.type
def get_host(self):
if self.host is None:
self.host, self.__r_host = splithost(self.__r_type)
if self.host:
self.host = unquote(self.host)
return self.host
def get_selector(self):
return self.__r_host
def set_proxy(self, host, type):
self.host, self.type = host, type
self.__r_host = self.__original
def get_origin_req_host(self):
return self.origin_req_host
def is_unverifiable(self):
return self.unverifiable
def add_header(self, key, val):
# useful for something like authentication
self.headers[key.capitalize()] = val
def add_unredirected_header(self, key, val):
# will not be added to a redirected request
self.unredirected_hdrs[key.capitalize()] = val
def has_header(self, header_name):
return (header_name in self.headers or
header_name in self.unredirected_hdrs)
def get_header(self, header_name, default=None):
return self.headers.get(
header_name,
self.unredirected_hdrs.get(header_name, default))
def header_items(self):
hdrs = self.unredirected_hdrs.copy()
hdrs.update(self.headers)
return list(hdrs.items())
class OpenerDirector:
def __init__(self):
client_version = "Python-urllib/%s" % __version__
self.addheaders = [('User-agent', client_version)]
# manage the individual handlers
self.handlers = []
self.handle_open = {}
self.handle_error = {}
self.process_response = {}
self.process_request = {}
def add_handler(self, handler):
added = False
for meth in dir(handler):
if meth in ["redirect_request", "do_open", "proxy_open"]:
# oops, coincidental match
continue
i = meth.find("_")
protocol = meth[:i]
condition = meth[i+1:]
if condition.startswith("error"):
j = condition.find("_") + i + 1
kind = meth[j+1:]
try:
kind = int(kind)
except ValueError:
pass
lookup = self.handle_error.get(protocol, {})
self.handle_error[protocol] = lookup
elif condition == "open":
kind = protocol
lookup = self.handle_open
elif condition == "response":
kind = protocol
lookup = self.process_response
elif condition == "request":
kind = protocol
lookup = self.process_request
else:
continue
handlers = lookup.setdefault(kind, [])
if handlers:
bisect.insort(handlers, handler)
else:
handlers.append(handler)
added = True
if added:
# the handlers must work in an specific order, the order
# is specified in a Handler attribute
bisect.insort(self.handlers, handler)
handler.add_parent(self)
def close(self):
# Only exists for backwards compatibility.
pass
def _call_chain(self, chain, kind, meth_name, *args):
# Handlers raise an exception if no one else should try to handle
# the request, or return None if they can't but another handler
# could. Otherwise, they return the response.
handlers = chain.get(kind, ())
for handler in handlers:
func = getattr(handler, meth_name)
result = func(*args)
if result is not None:
return result
def open(self, fullurl, data=None):
# accept a URL or a Request object
if isinstance(fullurl, basestring):
req = Request(fullurl, data)
else:
req = fullurl
if data is not None:
req.add_data(data)
protocol = req.get_type()
# pre-process request
meth_name = protocol+"_request"
for processor in self.process_request.get(protocol, []):
meth = getattr(processor, meth_name)
req = meth(req)
response = self._open(req, data)
# post-process response
meth_name = protocol+"_response"
for processor in self.process_response.get(protocol, []):
meth = getattr(processor, meth_name)
response = meth(req, response)
return response
def _open(self, req, data=None):
result = self._call_chain(self.handle_open, 'default',
'default_open', req)
if result:
return result
protocol = req.get_type()
result = self._call_chain(self.handle_open, protocol, protocol +
'_open', req)
if result:
return result
return self._call_chain(self.handle_open, 'unknown',
'unknown_open', req)
def error(self, proto, *args):
if proto in ('http', 'https'):
# XXX http[s] protocols are special-cased
dict = self.handle_error['http'] # https is not different than http
proto = args[2] # YUCK!
meth_name = 'http_error_%s' % proto
http_err = 1
orig_args = args
else:
dict = self.handle_error
meth_name = proto + '_error'
http_err = 0
args = (dict, proto, meth_name) + args
result = self._call_chain(*args)
if result:
return result
if http_err:
args = (dict, 'default', 'http_error_default') + orig_args
return self._call_chain(*args)
# XXX probably also want an abstract factory that knows when it makes
# sense to skip a superclass in favor of a subclass and when it might
# make sense to include both
def build_opener(*handlers):
"""Create an opener object from a list of handlers.
The opener will use several default handlers, including support
for HTTP and FTP.
If any of the handlers passed as arguments are subclasses of the
default handlers, the default handlers will not be used.
"""
import types
def isclass(obj):
return isinstance(obj, types.ClassType) or hasattr(obj, "__bases__")
opener = OpenerDirector()
default_classes = [ProxyHandler, UnknownHandler, HTTPHandler,
HTTPDefaultErrorHandler, HTTPRedirectHandler,
FTPHandler, FileHandler, HTTPErrorProcessor]
if hasattr(httplib, 'HTTPS'):
default_classes.append(HTTPSHandler)
skip = []
for klass in default_classes:
for check in handlers:
if isclass(check):
if issubclass(check, klass):
skip.append(klass)
elif isinstance(check, klass):
skip.append(klass)
for klass in skip:
default_classes.remove(klass)
for klass in default_classes:
opener.add_handler(klass())
for h in handlers:
if isclass(h):
h = h()
opener.add_handler(h)
return opener
class BaseHandler:
handler_order = 500
def add_parent(self, parent):
self.parent = parent
def close(self):
# Only exists for backwards compatibility
pass
def __lt__(self, other):
if not hasattr(other, "handler_order"):
# Try to preserve the old behavior of having custom classes
# inserted after default ones (works only for custom user
# classes which are not aware of handler_order).
return True
return self.handler_order < other.handler_order
class HTTPErrorProcessor(BaseHandler):
"""Process HTTP error responses."""
handler_order = 1000 # after all other processing
def http_response(self, request, response):
code, msg, hdrs = response.code, response.msg, response.info()
# According to RFC 2616, "2xx" code indicates that the client's
# request was successfully received, understood, and accepted.
if not (200 <= code < 300):
response = self.parent.error(
'http', request, response, code, msg, hdrs)
return response
https_response = http_response
class HTTPDefaultErrorHandler(BaseHandler):
def http_error_default(self, req, fp, code, msg, hdrs):
raise HTTPError(req.get_full_url(), code, msg, hdrs, fp)
class HTTPRedirectHandler(BaseHandler):
# maximum number of redirections to any single URL
# this is needed because of the state that cookies introduce
max_repeats = 4
# maximum total number of redirections (regardless of URL) before
# assuming we're in a loop
max_redirections = 10
def redirect_request(self, req, fp, code, msg, headers, newurl):
"""Return a Request or None in response to a redirect.
This is called by the http_error_30x methods when a
redirection response is received. If a redirection should
take place, return a new Request to allow http_error_30x to
perform the redirect. Otherwise, raise HTTPError if no-one
else should try to handle this url. Return None if you can't
but another Handler might.
"""
m = req.get_method()
if (code in (301, 302, 303, 307) and m in ("GET", "HEAD")
or code in (301, 302, 303) and m == "POST"):
# Strictly (according to RFC 2616), 301 or 302 in response
# to a POST MUST NOT cause a redirection without confirmation
# from the user (of urllib2, in this case). In practice,
# essentially all clients do redirect in this case, so we
# do the same.
# be conciliant with URIs containing a space
newurl = newurl.replace(' ', '%20')
return Request(newurl,
headers=req.headers,
origin_req_host=req.get_origin_req_host(),
unverifiable=True)
else:
raise HTTPError(req.get_full_url(), code, msg, headers, fp)
# Implementation note: To avoid the server sending us into an
# infinite loop, the request object needs to track what URLs we
# have already seen. Do this by adding a handler-specific
# attribute to the Request object.
def http_error_302(self, req, fp, code, msg, headers):
# Some servers (incorrectly) return multiple Location headers
# (so probably same goes for URI). Use first header.
if 'location' in headers:
newurl = headers.getheaders('location')[0]
elif 'uri' in headers:
newurl = headers.getheaders('uri')[0]
else:
return
newurl = urlparse.urljoin(req.get_full_url(), newurl)
# XXX Probably want to forget about the state of the current
# request, although that might interact poorly with other
# handlers that also use handler-specific request attributes
new = self.redirect_request(req, fp, code, msg, headers, newurl)
if new is None:
return
# loop detection
# .redirect_dict has a key url if url was previously visited.
if hasattr(req, 'redirect_dict'):
visited = new.redirect_dict = req.redirect_dict
if (visited.get(newurl, 0) >= self.max_repeats or
len(visited) >= self.max_redirections):
raise HTTPError(req.get_full_url(), code,
self.inf_msg + msg, headers, fp)
else:
visited = new.redirect_dict = req.redirect_dict = {}
visited[newurl] = visited.get(newurl, 0) + 1
# Don't close the fp until we are sure that we won't use it
# with HTTPError.
fp.read()
fp.close()
return self.parent.open(new)
http_error_301 = http_error_303 = http_error_307 = http_error_302
inf_msg = "The HTTP server returned a redirect error that would " \
"lead to an infinite loop.\n" \
"The last 30x error message was:\n"
def _parse_proxy(proxy):
"""Return (scheme, user, password, host/port) given a URL or an authority.
If a URL is supplied, it must have an authority (host:port) component.
According to RFC 3986, having an authority component means the URL must
have two slashes after the scheme:
>>> _parse_proxy('file:/ftp.example.com/')
Traceback (most recent call last):
ValueError: proxy URL with no authority: 'file:/ftp.example.com/'
The first three items of the returned tuple may be None.
Examples of authority parsing:
>>> _parse_proxy('proxy.example.com')
(None, None, None, 'proxy.example.com')
>>> _parse_proxy('proxy.example.com:3128')
(None, None, None, 'proxy.example.com:3128')
The authority component may optionally include userinfo (assumed to be
username:password):
>>> _parse_proxy('joe:password@proxy.example.com')
(None, 'joe', 'password', 'proxy.example.com')
>>> _parse_proxy('joe:password@proxy.example.com:3128')
(None, 'joe', 'password', 'proxy.example.com:3128')
Same examples, but with URLs instead:
>>> _parse_proxy('http://proxy.example.com/')
('http', None, None, 'proxy.example.com')
>>> _parse_proxy('http://proxy.example.com:3128/')
('http', None, None, 'proxy.example.com:3128')
>>> _parse_proxy('http://joe:password@proxy.example.com/')
('http', 'joe', 'password', 'proxy.example.com')
>>> _parse_proxy('http://joe:password@proxy.example.com:3128')
('http', 'joe', 'password', 'proxy.example.com:3128')
Everything after the authority is ignored:
>>> _parse_proxy('ftp://joe:password@proxy.example.com/rubbish:3128')
('ftp', 'joe', 'password', 'proxy.example.com')
Test for no trailing '/' case:
>>> _parse_proxy('http://joe:password@proxy.example.com')
('http', 'joe', 'password', 'proxy.example.com')
"""
scheme, r_scheme = splittype(proxy)
if not r_scheme.startswith("/"):
# authority
scheme = None
authority = proxy
else:
# URL
if not r_scheme.startswith("//"):
raise ValueError("proxy URL with no authority: %r" % proxy)
# We have an authority, so for RFC 3986-compliant URLs (by ss 3.
# and 3.3.), path is empty or starts with '/'
end = r_scheme.find("/", 2)
if end == -1:
end = None
authority = r_scheme[2:end]
userinfo, hostport = splituser(authority)
if userinfo is not None:
user, password = splitpasswd(userinfo)
else:
user = password = None
return scheme, user, password, hostport
class ProxyHandler(BaseHandler):
# Proxies must be in front
handler_order = 100
def __init__(self, proxies=None):
if proxies is None:
proxies = getproxies()
assert hasattr(proxies, 'keys'), "proxies must be a mapping"
self.proxies = proxies
for type, url in proxies.items():
setattr(self, '%s_open' % type,
lambda r, proxy=url, type=type, meth=self.proxy_open: \
meth(r, proxy, type))
def proxy_open(self, req, proxy, type):
orig_type = req.get_type()
proxy_type, user, password, hostport = _parse_proxy(proxy)
if proxy_type is None:
proxy_type = orig_type
if user and password:
user_pass = '%s:%s' % (unquote(user), unquote(password))
creds = base64.b64encode(user_pass).strip()
req.add_header('Proxy-authorization', 'Basic ' + creds)
hostport = unquote(hostport)
req.set_proxy(hostport, proxy_type)
if orig_type == proxy_type:
# let other handlers take care of it
return None
else:
# need to start over, because the other handlers don't
# grok the proxy's URL type
# e.g. if we have a constructor arg proxies like so:
# {'http': 'ftp://proxy.example.com'}, we may end up turning
# a request for http://acme.example.com/a into one for
# ftp://proxy.example.com/a
return self.parent.open(req)
class HTTPPasswordMgr:
def __init__(self):
self.passwd = {}
def add_password(self, realm, uri, user, passwd):
# uri could be a single URI or a sequence
if isinstance(uri, basestring):
uri = [uri]
if not realm in self.passwd:
self.passwd[realm] = {}
for default_port in True, False:
reduced_uri = tuple(
[self.reduce_uri(u, default_port) for u in uri])
self.passwd[realm][reduced_uri] = (user, passwd)
def find_user_password(self, realm, authuri):
domains = self.passwd.get(realm, {})
for default_port in True, False:
reduced_authuri = self.reduce_uri(authuri, default_port)
for uris, authinfo in domains.items():
for uri in uris:
if self.is_suburi(uri, reduced_authuri):
return authinfo
return None, None
def reduce_uri(self, uri, default_port=True):
"""Accept authority or URI and extract only the authority and path."""
# note HTTP URLs do not have a userinfo component
parts = urlparse.urlsplit(uri)
if parts[1]:
# URI
scheme = parts[0]
authority = parts[1]
path = parts[2] or '/'
else:
# host or host:port
scheme = None
authority = uri
path = '/'
host, port = splitport(authority)
if default_port and port is None and scheme is not None:
dport = {"http": 80,
"https": 443,
}.get(scheme)
if dport is not None:
authority = "%s:%d" % (host, dport)
return authority, path
def is_suburi(self, base, test):
"""Check if test is below base in a URI tree
Both args must be URIs in reduced form.
"""
if base == test:
return True
if base[0] != test[0]:
return False
common = posixpath.commonprefix((base[1], test[1]))
if len(common) == len(base[1]):
return True
return False
class HTTPPasswordMgrWithDefaultRealm(HTTPPasswordMgr):
def find_user_password(self, realm, authuri):
user, password = HTTPPasswordMgr.find_user_password(self, realm,
authuri)
if user is not None:
return user, password
return HTTPPasswordMgr.find_user_password(self, None, authuri)
class AbstractBasicAuthHandler:
# XXX this allows for multiple auth-schemes, but will stupidly pick
# the last one with a realm specified.
rx = re.compile('(?:.*,)*[ \t]*([^ \t]+)[ \t]+realm="([^"]*)"', re.I)
# XXX could pre-emptively send auth info already accepted (RFC 2617,
# end of section 2, and section 1.2 immediately after "credentials"
# production).
def __init__(self, password_mgr=None):
if password_mgr is None:
password_mgr = HTTPPasswordMgr()
self.passwd = password_mgr
self.add_password = self.passwd.add_password
def http_error_auth_reqed(self, authreq, host, req, headers):
# host may be an authority (without userinfo) or a URL with an
# authority
# XXX could be multiple headers
authreq = headers.get(authreq, None)
if authreq:
mo = AbstractBasicAuthHandler.rx.search(authreq)
if mo:
scheme, realm = mo.groups()
if scheme.lower() == 'basic':
return self.retry_http_basic_auth(host, req, realm)
def retry_http_basic_auth(self, host, req, realm):
user, pw = self.passwd.find_user_password(realm, host)
if pw is not None:
raw = "%s:%s" % (user, pw)
auth = 'Basic %s' % base64.b64encode(raw).strip()
if req.headers.get(self.auth_header, None) == auth:
return None
req.add_header(self.auth_header, auth)
return self.parent.open(req)
else:
return None
class HTTPBasicAuthHandler(AbstractBasicAuthHandler, BaseHandler):
auth_header = 'Authorization'
def http_error_401(self, req, fp, code, msg, headers):
url = req.get_full_url()
return self.http_error_auth_reqed('www-authenticate',
url, req, headers)
class ProxyBasicAuthHandler(AbstractBasicAuthHandler, BaseHandler):
auth_header = 'Proxy-authorization'
def http_error_407(self, req, fp, code, msg, headers):
# http_error_auth_reqed requires that there is no userinfo component in
# authority. Assume there isn't one, since urllib2 does not (and
# should not, RFC 3986 s. 3.2.1) support requests for URLs containing
# userinfo.
authority = req.get_host()
return self.http_error_auth_reqed('proxy-authenticate',
authority, req, headers)
def randombytes(n):
"""Return n random bytes."""
# Use /dev/urandom if it is available. Fall back to random module
# if not. It might be worthwhile to extend this function to use
# other platform-specific mechanisms for getting random bytes.
if os.path.exists("/dev/urandom"):
f = open("/dev/urandom")
s = f.read(n)
f.close()
return s
else:
L = [chr(random.randrange(0, 256)) for i in range(n)]
return "".join(L)
class AbstractDigestAuthHandler:
# Digest authentication is specified in RFC 2617.
# XXX The client does not inspect the Authentication-Info header
# in a successful response.
# XXX It should be possible to test this implementation against
# a mock server that just generates a static set of challenges.
# XXX qop="auth-int" supports is shaky
def __init__(self, passwd=None):
if passwd is None:
passwd = HTTPPasswordMgr()
self.passwd = passwd
self.add_password = self.passwd.add_password
self.retried = 0
self.nonce_count = 0
def reset_retry_count(self):
self.retried = 0
def http_error_auth_reqed(self, auth_header, host, req, headers):
authreq = headers.get(auth_header, None)
if self.retried > 5:
# Don't fail endlessly - if we failed once, we'll probably
# fail a second time. Hm. Unless the Password Manager is
# prompting for the information. Crap. This isn't great
# but it's better than the current 'repeat until recursion
# depth exceeded' approach <wink>
raise HTTPError(req.get_full_url(), 401, "digest auth failed",
headers, None)
else:
self.retried += 1
if authreq:
scheme = authreq.split()[0]
if scheme.lower() == 'digest':
return self.retry_http_digest_auth(req, authreq)
def retry_http_digest_auth(self, req, auth):
token, challenge = auth.split(' ', 1)
chal = parse_keqv_list(parse_http_list(challenge))
auth = self.get_authorization(req, chal)
if auth:
auth_val = 'Digest %s' % auth
if req.headers.get(self.auth_header, None) == auth_val:
return None
req.add_unredirected_header(self.auth_header, auth_val)
resp = self.parent.open(req)
return resp
def get_cnonce(self, nonce):
# The cnonce-value is an opaque
# quoted string value provided by the client and used by both client
# and server to avoid chosen plaintext attacks, to provide mutual
# authentication, and to provide some message integrity protection.
# This isn't a fabulous effort, but it's probably Good Enough.
dig = hashlib.sha1("%s:%s:%s:%s" % (self.nonce_count, nonce, time.ctime(),
randombytes(8))).hexdigest()
return dig[:16]
def get_authorization(self, req, chal):
try:
realm = chal['realm']
nonce = chal['nonce']
qop = chal.get('qop')
algorithm = chal.get('algorithm', 'MD5')
# mod_digest doesn't send an opaque, even though it isn't
# supposed to be optional
opaque = chal.get('opaque', None)
except KeyError:
return None
H, KD = self.get_algorithm_impls(algorithm)
if H is None:
return None
user, pw = self.passwd.find_user_password(realm, req.get_full_url())
if user is None:
return None
# XXX not implemented yet
if req.has_data():
entdig = self.get_entity_digest(req.get_data(), chal)
else:
entdig = None
A1 = "%s:%s:%s" % (user, realm, pw)
A2 = "%s:%s" % (req.get_method(),
# XXX selector: what about proxies and full urls
req.get_selector())
if qop == 'auth':
self.nonce_count += 1
ncvalue = '%08x' % self.nonce_count
cnonce = self.get_cnonce(nonce)
noncebit = "%s:%s:%s:%s:%s" % (nonce, ncvalue, cnonce, qop, H(A2))
respdig = KD(H(A1), noncebit)
elif qop is None:
respdig = KD(H(A1), "%s:%s" % (nonce, H(A2)))
else:
# XXX handle auth-int.
pass
# XXX should the partial digests be encoded too?
base = 'username="%s", realm="%s", nonce="%s", uri="%s", ' \
'response="%s"' % (user, realm, nonce, req.get_selector(),
respdig)
if opaque:
base += ', opaque="%s"' % opaque
if entdig:
base += ', digest="%s"' % entdig
base += ', algorithm="%s"' % algorithm
if qop:
base += ', qop=auth, nc=%s, cnonce="%s"' % (ncvalue, cnonce)
return base
def get_algorithm_impls(self, algorithm):
# lambdas assume digest modules are imported at the top level
if algorithm == 'MD5':
H = lambda x: hashlib.md5(x).hexdigest()
elif algorithm == 'SHA':
H = lambda x: hashlib.sha1(x).hexdigest()
# XXX MD5-sess
KD = lambda s, d: H("%s:%s" % (s, d))
return H, KD
def get_entity_digest(self, data, chal):
# XXX not implemented yet
return None
class HTTPDigestAuthHandler(BaseHandler, AbstractDigestAuthHandler):
"""An authentication protocol defined by RFC 2069
Digest authentication improves on basic authentication because it
does not transmit passwords in the clear.
"""
auth_header = 'Authorization'
handler_order = 490 # before Basic auth
def http_error_401(self, req, fp, code, msg, headers):
host = urlparse.urlparse(req.get_full_url())[1]
retry = self.http_error_auth_reqed('www-authenticate',
host, req, headers)
self.reset_retry_count()
return retry
class ProxyDigestAuthHandler(BaseHandler, AbstractDigestAuthHandler):
auth_header = 'Proxy-Authorization'
handler_order = 490 # before Basic auth
def http_error_407(self, req, fp, code, msg, headers):
host = req.get_host()
retry = self.http_error_auth_reqed('proxy-authenticate',
host, req, headers)
self.reset_retry_count()
return retry
class AbstractHTTPHandler(BaseHandler):
def __init__(self, debuglevel=0):
self._debuglevel = debuglevel
def set_http_debuglevel(self, level):
self._debuglevel = level
def do_request_(self, request):
host = request.get_host()
if not host:
raise URLError('no host given')
if request.has_data(): # POST
data = request.get_data()
if not request.has_header('Content-type'):
request.add_unredirected_header(
'Content-type',
'application/x-www-form-urlencoded')
if not request.has_header('Content-length'):
request.add_unredirected_header(
'Content-length', '%d' % len(data))
scheme, sel = splittype(request.get_selector())
sel_host, sel_path = splithost(sel)
if not request.has_header('Host'):
request.add_unredirected_header('Host', sel_host or host)
for name, value in self.parent.addheaders:
name = name.capitalize()
if not request.has_header(name):
request.add_unredirected_header(name, value)
return request
def do_open(self, http_class, req):
"""Return an addinfourl object for the request, using http_class.
http_class must implement the HTTPConnection API from httplib.
The addinfourl return value is a file-like object. It also
has methods and attributes including:
- info(): return a mimetools.Message object for the headers
- geturl(): return the original request URL
- code: HTTP status code
"""
host = req.get_host()
if not host:
raise URLError('no host given')
h = http_class(host) # will parse host:port
h.set_debuglevel(self._debuglevel)
headers = dict(req.headers)
headers.update(req.unredirected_hdrs)
# We want to make an HTTP/1.1 request, but the addinfourl
# class isn't prepared to deal with a persistent connection.
# It will try to read all remaining data from the socket,
# which will block while the server waits for the next request.
# So make sure the connection gets closed after the (only)
# request.
headers["Connection"] = "close"
headers = dict(
(name.title(), val) for name, val in headers.items())
try:
h.request(req.get_method(), req.get_selector(), req.data, headers)
r = h.getresponse()
except socket.error as err: # XXX what error?
raise URLError(err)
# Pick apart the HTTPResponse object to get the addinfourl
# object initialized properly.
# Wrap the HTTPResponse object in socket's file object adapter
# for Windows. That adapter calls recv(), so delegate recv()
# to read(). This weird wrapping allows the returned object to
# have readline() and readlines() methods.
r.recv = r.read
# XXX socket._fileobject is gone; use some class from io.py instead
fp = socket._fileobject(r, close=True)
resp = addinfourl(fp, r.msg, req.get_full_url())
resp.code = r.status
resp.msg = r.reason
return resp
class HTTPHandler(AbstractHTTPHandler):
def http_open(self, req):
return self.do_open(httplib.HTTPConnection, req)
http_request = AbstractHTTPHandler.do_request_
if hasattr(httplib, 'HTTPS'):
class HTTPSHandler(AbstractHTTPHandler):
def https_open(self, req):
return self.do_open(httplib.HTTPSConnection, req)
https_request = AbstractHTTPHandler.do_request_
class HTTPCookieProcessor(BaseHandler):
def __init__(self, cookiejar=None):
import cookielib
if cookiejar is None:
cookiejar = cookielib.CookieJar()
self.cookiejar = cookiejar
def http_request(self, request):
self.cookiejar.add_cookie_header(request)
return request
def http_response(self, request, response):
self.cookiejar.extract_cookies(response, request)
return response
https_request = http_request
https_response = http_response
class UnknownHandler(BaseHandler):
def unknown_open(self, req):
type = req.get_type()
raise URLError('unknown url type: %s' % type)
def parse_keqv_list(l):
"""Parse list of key=value strings where keys are not duplicated."""
parsed = {}
for elt in l:
k, v = elt.split('=', 1)
if v[0] == '"' and v[-1] == '"':
v = v[1:-1]
parsed[k] = v
return parsed
def parse_http_list(s):
"""Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.
In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
the list may include quoted-strings. A quoted-string could
contain a comma. A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
middle. Neither commas nor quotes count if they are escaped.
Only double-quotes count, not single-quotes.
"""
res = []
part = ''
escape = quote = False
for cur in s:
if escape:
part += cur
escape = False
continue
if quote:
if cur == '\\':
escape = True
continue
elif cur == '"':
quote = False
part += cur
continue
if cur == ',':
res.append(part)
part = ''
continue
if cur == '"':
quote = True
part += cur
# append last part
if part:
res.append(part)
return [part.strip() for part in res]
class FileHandler(BaseHandler):
# Use local file or FTP depending on form of URL
def file_open(self, req):
url = req.get_selector()
if url[:2] == '//' and url[2:3] != '/':
req.type = 'ftp'
return self.parent.open(req)
else:
return self.open_local_file(req)
# names for the localhost
names = None
def get_names(self):
if FileHandler.names is None:
try:
FileHandler.names = (socket.gethostbyname('localhost'),
socket.gethostbyname(socket.gethostname()))
except socket.gaierror:
FileHandler.names = (socket.gethostbyname('localhost'),)
return FileHandler.names
# not entirely sure what the rules are here
def open_local_file(self, req):
import email.utils
import mimetypes
host = req.get_host()
file = req.get_selector()
localfile = url2pathname(file)
try:
stats = os.stat(localfile)
size = stats.st_size
modified = email.utils.formatdate(stats.st_mtime, usegmt=True)
mtype = mimetypes.guess_type(file)[0]
headers = mimetools.Message(StringIO(
'Content-type: %s\nContent-length: %d\nLast-modified: %s\n' %
(mtype or 'text/plain', size, modified)))
if host:
host, port = splitport(host)
if not host or \
(not port and socket.gethostbyname(host) in self.get_names()):
return addinfourl(open(localfile, 'rb'),
headers, 'file:'+file)
except OSError as msg:
# urllib2 users shouldn't expect OSErrors coming from urlopen()
raise URLError(msg)
raise URLError('file not on local host')
class FTPHandler(BaseHandler):
def ftp_open(self, req):
import ftplib
import mimetypes
host = req.get_host()
if not host:
raise IOError, ('ftp error', 'no host given')
host, port = splitport(host)
if port is None:
port = ftplib.FTP_PORT
else:
port = int(port)
# username/password handling
user, host = splituser(host)
if user:
user, passwd = splitpasswd(user)
else:
passwd = None
host = unquote(host)
user = unquote(user or '')
passwd = unquote(passwd or '')
try:
host = socket.gethostbyname(host)
except socket.error as msg:
raise URLError(msg)
path, attrs = splitattr(req.get_selector())
dirs = path.split('/')
dirs = map(unquote, dirs)
dirs, file = dirs[:-1], dirs[-1]
if dirs and not dirs[0]:
dirs = dirs[1:]
try:
fw = self.connect_ftp(user, passwd, host, port, dirs)
type = file and 'I' or 'D'
for attr in attrs:
attr, value = splitvalue(attr)
if attr.lower() == 'type' and \
value in ('a', 'A', 'i', 'I', 'd', 'D'):
type = value.upper()
fp, retrlen = fw.retrfile(file, type)
headers = ""
mtype = mimetypes.guess_type(req.get_full_url())[0]
if mtype:
headers += "Content-type: %s\n" % mtype
if retrlen is not None and retrlen >= 0:
headers += "Content-length: %d\n" % retrlen
sf = StringIO(headers)
headers = mimetools.Message(sf)
return addinfourl(fp, headers, req.get_full_url())
except ftplib.all_errors as msg:
raise IOError, ('ftp error', msg), sys.exc_info()[2]
def connect_ftp(self, user, passwd, host, port, dirs):
fw = ftpwrapper(user, passwd, host, port, dirs)
## fw.ftp.set_debuglevel(1)
return fw
class CacheFTPHandler(FTPHandler):
# XXX would be nice to have pluggable cache strategies
# XXX this stuff is definitely not thread safe
def __init__(self):
self.cache = {}
self.timeout = {}
self.soonest = 0
self.delay = 60
self.max_conns = 16
def setTimeout(self, t):
self.delay = t
def setMaxConns(self, m):
self.max_conns = m
def connect_ftp(self, user, passwd, host, port, dirs):
key = user, host, port, '/'.join(dirs)
if key in self.cache:
self.timeout[key] = time.time() + self.delay
else:
self.cache[key] = ftpwrapper(user, passwd, host, port, dirs)
self.timeout[key] = time.time() + self.delay
self.check_cache()
return self.cache[key]
def check_cache(self):
# first check for old ones
t = time.time()
if self.soonest <= t:
for k, v in list(self.timeout.items()):
if v < t:
self.cache[k].close()
del self.cache[k]
del self.timeout[k]
self.soonest = min(list(self.timeout.values()))
# then check the size
if len(self.cache) == self.max_conns:
for k, v in list(self.timeout.items()):
if v == self.soonest:
del self.cache[k]
del self.timeout[k]
break
self.soonest = min(list(self.timeout.values()))