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-rw-r--r--Lib/http/client.py1187
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diff --git a/Lib/http/client.py b/Lib/http/client.py
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+"""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 email.parser
+import email.message
+import io
+import os
+import socket
+import collections
+from urllib.parse 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
+
+# maximal line length when calling readline().
+_MAXLINE = 65536
+
+class HTTPMessage(email.message.Message):
+ # XXX The only usage of this method is in
+ # http.server.CGIHTTPRequestHandler. Maybe move the code there so
+ # that it doesn't need to be part of the public API. The API has
+ # never been defined so this could cause backwards compatibility
+ # issues.
+
+ def getallmatchingheaders(self, name):
+ """Find all header lines matching a given header name.
+
+ Look through the list of headers and find all lines matching a given
+ header name (and their continuation lines). A list of the lines is
+ returned, without interpretation. If the header does not occur, an
+ empty list is returned. If the header occurs multiple times, all
+ occurrences are returned. Case is not important in the header name.
+
+ """
+ name = name.lower() + ':'
+ n = len(name)
+ lst = []
+ hit = 0
+ for line in self.keys():
+ if line[:n].lower() == name:
+ hit = 1
+ elif not line[:1].isspace():
+ hit = 0
+ if hit:
+ lst.append(line)
+ return lst
+
+def parse_headers(fp, _class=HTTPMessage):
+ """Parses only RFC2822 headers from a file pointer.
+
+ email Parser wants to see strings rather than bytes.
+ But a TextIOWrapper around self.rfile would buffer too many bytes
+ from the stream, bytes which we later need to read as bytes.
+ So we read the correct bytes here, as bytes, for email Parser
+ to parse.
+
+ """
+ headers = []
+ while True:
+ line = fp.readline(_MAXLINE + 1)
+ if len(line) > _MAXLINE:
+ raise LineTooLong("header line")
+ headers.append(line)
+ if line in (b'\r\n', b'\n', b''):
+ break
+ hstring = b''.join(headers).decode('iso-8859-1')
+ return email.parser.Parser(_class=_class).parsestr(hstring)
+
+
+_strict_sentinel = object()
+
+class HTTPResponse(io.RawIOBase):
+
+ # 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=_strict_sentinel, method=None, url=None):
+ # 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. This will
+ # happen if a self.fp.read() is done (without a size) whether
+ # self.fp is buffered or not. So, no self.fp.read() by
+ # clients unless they know what they are doing.
+ self.fp = sock.makefile("rb")
+ self.debuglevel = debuglevel
+ if strict is not _strict_sentinel:
+ warnings.warn("the 'strict' argument isn't supported anymore; "
+ "http.client now always assumes HTTP/1.x compliant servers.",
+ DeprecationWarning, 2)
+ self._method = method
+
+ # The HTTPResponse object is returned via urllib. The clients
+ # of http and urllib expect different attributes for the
+ # headers. headers is used here and supports urllib. msg is
+ # provided as a backwards compatibility layer for http
+ # clients.
+
+ self.headers = 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):
+ line = str(self.fp.readline(_MAXLINE + 1), "iso-8859-1")
+ if len(line) > _MAXLINE:
+ raise LineTooLong("status line")
+ 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.
+ version = ""
+ if not version.startswith("HTTP/"):
+ self.close()
+ raise BadStatusLine(line)
+
+ # 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.headers 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(_MAXLINE + 1)
+ if len(skip) > _MAXLINE:
+ raise LineTooLong("header line")
+ skip = skip.strip()
+ if not skip:
+ break
+ if self.debuglevel > 0:
+ print("header:", skip)
+
+ self.code = self.status = status
+ self.reason = reason.strip()
+ if version in ("HTTP/1.0", "HTTP/0.9"):
+ # Some servers might still return "0.9", treat it as 1.0 anyway
+ self.version = 10
+ elif version.startswith("HTTP/1."):
+ self.version = 11 # use HTTP/1.1 code for HTTP/1.x where x>=1
+ else:
+ raise UnknownProtocol(version)
+
+ self.headers = self.msg = parse_headers(self.fp)
+
+ if self.debuglevel > 0:
+ for hdr in self.headers:
+ print("header:", hdr, end=" ")
+
+ # are we using the chunked-style of transfer encoding?
+ tr_enc = self.headers.get("transfer-encoding")
+ if tr_enc and tr_enc.lower() == "chunked":
+ self.chunked = True
+ self.chunk_left = None
+ else:
+ self.chunked = False
+
+ # 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.headers.get("content-length")
+
+ # are we using the chunked-style of transfer encoding?
+ tr_enc = self.headers.get("transfer-encoding")
+ 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 = True
+
+ def _check_close(self):
+ conn = self.headers.get("connection")
+ if self.version == 11:
+ # An HTTP/1.1 proxy is assumed to stay open unless
+ # explicitly closed.
+ conn = self.headers.get("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.headers.get("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.headers.get("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()
+
+ def readable(self):
+ return True
+
+ # 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
+
+ def read(self, amt=None):
+ if self.fp is None:
+ return b""
+
+ if self._method == "HEAD":
+ self.close()
+ 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()
+ else:
+ if not s:
+ self.close()
+
+ return s
+
+ def _read_chunked(self, amt):
+ assert self.chunked != _UNKNOWN
+ chunk_left = self.chunk_left
+ value = []
+ while True:
+ if chunk_left is None:
+ line = self.fp.readline(_MAXLINE + 1)
+ if len(line) > _MAXLINE:
+ raise LineTooLong("chunk size")
+ 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(b''.join(value))
+ if chunk_left == 0:
+ break
+ if amt is None:
+ value.append(self._safe_read(chunk_left))
+ elif amt < chunk_left:
+ value.append(self._safe_read(amt))
+ self.chunk_left = chunk_left - amt
+ return b''.join(value)
+ elif amt == chunk_left:
+ value.append(self._safe_read(amt))
+ self._safe_read(2) # toss the CRLF at the end of the chunk
+ self.chunk_left = None
+ return b''.join(value)
+ else:
+ value.append(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(_MAXLINE + 1)
+ if len(line) > _MAXLINE:
+ raise LineTooLong("trailer line")
+ if not line:
+ # a vanishingly small number of sites EOF without
+ # sending the trailer
+ break
+ if line in (b'\r\n', b'\n', b''):
+ break
+
+ # we read everything; close the "file"
+ self.close()
+
+ return b''.join(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(b''.join(s), amt)
+ s.append(chunk)
+ amt -= len(chunk)
+ return b"".join(s)
+
+ def fileno(self):
+ return self.fp.fileno()
+
+ def getheader(self, name, default=None):
+ if self.headers is None:
+ raise ResponseNotReady()
+ headers = self.headers.get_all(name) or default
+ if isinstance(headers, str) or not hasattr(headers, '__iter__'):
+ return headers
+ else:
+ return ', '.join(headers)
+
+ def getheaders(self):
+ """Return list of (header, value) tuples."""
+ if self.headers is None:
+ raise ResponseNotReady()
+ return list(self.headers.items())
+
+ # We override IOBase.__iter__ so that it doesn't check for closed-ness
+
+ def __iter__(self):
+ return self
+
+ # For compatibility with old-style urllib responses.
+
+ def info(self):
+ return self.headers
+
+ def geturl(self):
+ return self.url
+
+ def getcode(self):
+ return self.status
+
+class HTTPConnection:
+
+ _http_vsn = 11
+ _http_vsn_str = 'HTTP/1.1'
+
+ response_class = HTTPResponse
+ default_port = HTTP_PORT
+ auto_open = 1
+ debuglevel = 0
+
+ def __init__(self, host, port=None, strict=_strict_sentinel,
+ timeout=socket._GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT, source_address=None):
+ if strict is not _strict_sentinel:
+ warnings.warn("the 'strict' argument isn't supported anymore; "
+ "http.client now always assumes HTTP/1.x compliant servers.",
+ DeprecationWarning, 2)
+ self.timeout = timeout
+ self.source_address = source_address
+ self.sock = None
+ self._buffer = []
+ self.__response = None
+ self.__state = _CS_IDLE
+ self._method = None
+ self._tunnel_host = None
+ self._tunnel_port = None
+ self._tunnel_headers = {}
+
+ self._set_hostport(host, port)
+
+ def set_tunnel(self, host, port=None, headers=None):
+ """ Sets up the host and the port for the HTTP CONNECT Tunnelling.
+
+ The headers argument should be a mapping of extra HTTP headers
+ to send with the CONNECT request.
+ """
+ self._tunnel_host = host
+ self._tunnel_port = port
+ if headers:
+ self._tunnel_headers = headers
+ else:
+ self._tunnel_headers.clear()
+
+ 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:
+ if host[i+1:] == "": # http://foo.com:/ == http://foo.com/
+ port = self.default_port
+ else:
+ 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 _tunnel(self):
+ self._set_hostport(self._tunnel_host, self._tunnel_port)
+ connect_str = "CONNECT %s:%d HTTP/1.0\r\n" % (self.host, self.port)
+ connect_bytes = connect_str.encode("ascii")
+ self.send(connect_bytes)
+ for header, value in self._tunnel_headers.items():
+ header_str = "%s: %s\r\n" % (header, value)
+ header_bytes = header_str.encode("latin1")
+ self.send(header_bytes)
+ self.send(b'\r\n')
+
+ response = self.response_class(self.sock, method=self._method)
+ (version, code, message) = response._read_status()
+
+ if code != 200:
+ self.close()
+ raise socket.error("Tunnel connection failed: %d %s" % (code,
+ message.strip()))
+ while True:
+ line = response.fp.readline(_MAXLINE + 1)
+ if len(line) > _MAXLINE:
+ raise LineTooLong("header line")
+ if not line:
+ # for sites which EOF without sending a trailer
+ break
+ if line in (b'\r\n', b'\n', b''):
+ break
+
+ def connect(self):
+ """Connect to the host and port specified in __init__."""
+ self.sock = socket.create_connection((self.host,self.port),
+ self.timeout, self.source_address)
+ if self._tunnel_host:
+ self._tunnel()
+
+ 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, data):
+ """Send `data' to the server.
+ ``data`` can be a string object, a bytes object, an array object, a
+ file-like object that supports a .read() method, or an iterable object.
+ """
+
+ if self.sock is None:
+ if self.auto_open:
+ self.connect()
+ else:
+ raise NotConnected()
+
+ if self.debuglevel > 0:
+ print("send:", repr(data))
+ blocksize = 8192
+ if hasattr(data, "read") :
+ if self.debuglevel > 0:
+ print("sendIng a read()able")
+ encode = False
+ try:
+ mode = data.mode
+ except AttributeError:
+ # io.BytesIO and other file-like objects don't have a `mode`
+ # attribute.
+ pass
+ else:
+ if "b" not in mode:
+ encode = True
+ if self.debuglevel > 0:
+ print("encoding file using iso-8859-1")
+ while 1:
+ datablock = data.read(blocksize)
+ if not datablock:
+ break
+ if encode:
+ datablock = datablock.encode("iso-8859-1")
+ self.sock.sendall(datablock)
+
+ try:
+ self.sock.sendall(data)
+ except TypeError:
+ if isinstance(data, collections.Iterable):
+ for d in data:
+ self.sock.sendall(d)
+ else:
+ raise TypeError("data should be a bytes-like object "
+ "or an iterable, got %r" % type(data))
+
+ 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, message_body=None):
+ """Send the currently buffered request and clear the buffer.
+
+ Appends an extra \\r\\n to the buffer.
+ A message_body may be specified, to be appended to the request.
+ """
+ self._buffer.extend((b"", b""))
+ msg = b"\r\n".join(self._buffer)
+ del self._buffer[:]
+ # If msg and message_body are sent in a single send() call,
+ # it will avoid performance problems caused by the interaction
+ # between delayed ack and the Nagle algorithm.
+ if isinstance(message_body, bytes):
+ msg += message_body
+ message_body = None
+ self.send(msg)
+ if message_body is not None:
+ # message_body was not a string (i.e. it is a file), and
+ # we must run the risk of Nagle.
+ self.send(message_body)
+
+ 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(self.__state)
+
+ # 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")
+
+ # As per RFC 273, IPv6 address should be wrapped with []
+ # when used as Host header
+
+ if self.host.find(':') >= 0:
+ host_enc = b'[' + host_enc + b']'
+
+ if self.port == self.default_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, *values):
+ """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')
+ values = list(values)
+ for i, one_value in enumerate(values):
+ if hasattr(one_value, 'encode'):
+ values[i] = one_value.encode('latin1')
+ elif isinstance(one_value, int):
+ values[i] = str(one_value).encode('ascii')
+ value = b'\r\n\t'.join(values)
+ header = header + b': ' + value
+ self._output(header)
+
+ def endheaders(self, message_body=None):
+ """Indicate that the last header line has been sent to the server.
+
+ This method sends the request to the server. The optional message_body
+ argument can be used to pass a message body associated with the
+ request. The message body will be sent in the same packet as the
+ message headers if it is a string, otherwise it is sent as a separate
+ packet.
+ """
+ if self.__state == _CS_REQ_STARTED:
+ self.__state = _CS_REQ_SENT
+ else:
+ raise CannotSendHeader()
+ self._send_output(message_body)
+
+ def request(self, method, url, body=None, headers={}):
+ """Send a complete request to the server."""
+ self._send_request(method, url, body, headers)
+
+ def _set_content_length(self, body):
+ # Set the content-length based on the body.
+ thelen = None
+ try:
+ thelen = str(len(body))
+ except TypeError as te:
+ # If this is a file-like object, try to
+ # fstat its file descriptor
+ 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)
+
+ def _send_request(self, method, url, body, headers):
+ # Honor 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 is not None and ('content-length' not in header_names):
+ self._set_content_length(body)
+ for hdr, value in headers.items():
+ self.putheader(hdr, value)
+ if isinstance(body, str):
+ # RFC 2616 Section 3.7.1 says that text default has a
+ # default charset of iso-8859-1.
+ body = body.encode('iso-8859-1')
+ self.endheaders(body)
+
+ def getresponse(self):
+ """Get the response from the server.
+
+ If the HTTPConnection is in the correct state, returns an
+ instance of HTTPResponse or of whatever object is returned by
+ class the response_class variable.
+
+ If a request has not been sent or if a previous response has
+ not be handled, ResponseNotReady is raised. If the HTTP
+ response indicates that the connection should be closed, then
+ it will be closed before the response is returned. When the
+ connection is closed, the underlying socket is closed.
+ """
+
+ # 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(self.__state)
+
+ if self.debuglevel > 0:
+ response = self.response_class(self.sock, self.debuglevel,
+ method=self._method)
+ else:
+ response = self.response_class(self.sock, 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
+
+ # XXX Should key_file and cert_file be deprecated in favour of context?
+
+ def __init__(self, host, port=None, key_file=None, cert_file=None,
+ strict=_strict_sentinel, timeout=socket._GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT,
+ source_address=None, *, context=None, check_hostname=None):
+ super(HTTPSConnection, self).__init__(host, port, strict, timeout,
+ source_address)
+ self.key_file = key_file
+ self.cert_file = cert_file
+ if context is None:
+ # Some reasonable defaults
+ context = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv23)
+ context.options |= ssl.OP_NO_SSLv2
+ will_verify = context.verify_mode != ssl.CERT_NONE
+ if check_hostname is None:
+ check_hostname = will_verify
+ elif check_hostname and not will_verify:
+ raise ValueError("check_hostname needs a SSL context with "
+ "either CERT_OPTIONAL or CERT_REQUIRED")
+ if key_file or cert_file:
+ context.load_cert_chain(cert_file, key_file)
+ self._context = context
+ self._check_hostname = check_hostname
+
+ def connect(self):
+ "Connect to a host on a given (SSL) port."
+
+ sock = socket.create_connection((self.host, self.port),
+ self.timeout, self.source_address)
+
+ if self._tunnel_host:
+ self.sock = sock
+ self._tunnel()
+
+ server_hostname = self.host if ssl.HAS_SNI else None
+ self.sock = self._context.wrap_socket(sock,
+ server_hostname=server_hostname)
+ try:
+ if self._check_hostname:
+ ssl.match_hostname(self.sock.getpeercert(), self.host)
+ except Exception:
+ self.sock.shutdown(socket.SHUT_RDWR)
+ self.sock.close()
+ raise
+
+ __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, expected=None):
+ self.args = partial,
+ self.partial = partial
+ self.expected = expected
+ def __repr__(self):
+ if self.expected is not None:
+ e = ', %i more expected' % self.expected
+ else:
+ e = ''
+ return 'IncompleteRead(%i bytes read%s)' % (len(self.partial), e)
+ def __str__(self):
+ return repr(self)
+
+class ImproperConnectionState(HTTPException):
+ pass
+
+class CannotSendRequest(ImproperConnectionState):
+ pass
+
+class CannotSendHeader(ImproperConnectionState):
+ pass
+
+class ResponseNotReady(ImproperConnectionState):
+ pass
+
+class BadStatusLine(HTTPException):
+ def __init__(self, line):
+ if not line:
+ line = repr(line)
+ self.args = line,
+ self.line = line
+
+class LineTooLong(HTTPException):
+ def __init__(self, line_type):
+ HTTPException.__init__(self, "got more than %d bytes when reading %s"
+ % (_MAXLINE, line_type))
+
+# for backwards compatibility
+error = HTTPException