.. _api: Developer Interface =================== .. module:: requests This part of the documentation covers all the interfaces of Requests. For parts where Requests depends on external libraries, we document the most important right here and provide links to the canonical documentation. Main Interface -------------- All of Requests' functionality can be accessed by these 7 methods. They all return an instance of the :class:`Response ` object. .. autofunction:: request .. autofunction:: head .. autofunction:: get .. autofunction:: post .. autofunction:: put .. autofunction:: patch .. autofunction:: delete Lower-Level Classes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. autoclass:: requests.Request :inherited-members: .. autoclass:: Response :inherited-members: Request Sessions ---------------- .. autoclass:: Session :inherited-members: .. autoclass:: requests.adapters.HTTPAdapter :inherited-members: Exceptions ~~~~~~~~~~ .. autoexception:: requests.exceptions.RequestException .. autoexception:: requests.exceptions.ConnectionError .. autoexception:: requests.exceptions.HTTPError .. autoexception:: requests.exceptions.URLRequired .. autoexception:: requests.exceptions.TooManyRedirects Status Code Lookup ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. autofunction:: requests.codes :: >>> requests.codes['temporary_redirect'] 307 >>> requests.codes.teapot 418 >>> requests.codes['\o/'] 200 Cookies ~~~~~~~ .. autofunction:: requests.utils.dict_from_cookiejar .. autofunction:: requests.utils.cookiejar_from_dict .. autofunction:: requests.utils.add_dict_to_cookiejar Encodings ~~~~~~~~~ .. autofunction:: requests.utils.get_encodings_from_content .. autofunction:: requests.utils.get_encoding_from_headers .. autofunction:: requests.utils.get_unicode_from_response Classes ~~~~~~~ .. autoclass:: requests.Response :inherited-members: .. autoclass:: requests.Request :inherited-members: .. autoclass:: requests.PreparedRequest :inherited-members: .. _sessionapi: .. autoclass:: requests.Session :inherited-members: .. autoclass:: requests.adapters.HTTPAdapter :inherited-members: Migrating to 1.x ---------------- This section details the main differences between 0.x and 1.x and is meant to ease the pain of upgrading. API Changes ~~~~~~~~~~~ * ``Response.json`` is now a callable and not a property of a response. :: import requests r = requests.get('https://github.com/timeline.json') r.json() # This *call* raises an exception if JSON decoding fails * The ``Session`` API has changed. Sessions objects no longer take parameters. ``Session`` is also now capitalized, but it can still be instantiated with a lowercase ``session`` for backwards compatibility. :: s = requests.Session() # formerly, session took parameters s.auth = auth s.headers.update(headers) r = s.get('http://httpbin.org/headers') * All request hooks have been removed except 'response'. * Authentication helpers have been broken out into separate modules. See requests-oauthlib_ and requests-kerberos_. .. _requests-oauthlib: https://github.com/requests/requests-oauthlib .. _requests-kerberos: https://github.com/requests/requests-kerberos * The parameter for streaming requests was changed from ``prefetch`` to ``stream`` and the logic was inverted. In addition, ``stream`` is now required for raw response reading. :: # in 0.x, passing prefetch=False would accomplish the same thing r = requests.get('https://github.com/timeline.json', stream=True) for chunk in r.iter_content(8192): ... * The ``config`` parameter to the requests method has been removed. Some of these options are now configured on a ``Session`` such as keep-alive and maximum number of redirects. The verbosity option should be handled by configuring logging. :: import requests import logging # these two lines enable debugging at httplib level (requests->urllib3->httplib) # you will see the REQUEST, including HEADERS and DATA, and RESPONSE with HEADERS but without DATA. # the only thing missing will be the response.body which is not logged. import httplib httplib.HTTPConnection.debuglevel = 1 logging.basicConfig() # you need to initialize logging, otherwise you will not see anything from requests logging.getLogger().setLevel(logging.DEBUG) requests_log = logging.getLogger("requests.packages.urllib3") requests_log.setLevel(logging.DEBUG) requests_log.propagate = True requests.get('http://httpbin.org/headers') Licensing ~~~~~~~~~ One key difference that has nothing to do with the API is a change in the license from the ISC_ license to the `Apache 2.0`_ license. The Apache 2.0 license ensures that contributions to Requests are also covered by the Apache 2.0 license. .. _ISC: http://opensource.org/licenses/ISC .. _Apache 2.0: http://opensource.org/licenses/Apache-2.0 Migrating to 2.x ---------------- Compared with the 1.0 release, there were relatively few backwards incompatible changes, but there are still a few issues to be aware of with this major release. For more details on the changes in this release including new APIs, links to the relevant GitHub issues and some of the bug fixes, read Cory's blog_ on the subject. .. _blog: http://lukasa.co.uk/2013/09/Requests_20/ API Changes ~~~~~~~~~~~ * There were a couple changes to how Requests handles exceptions. ``RequestException`` is now a subclass of ``IOError`` rather than ``RuntimeError`` as that more accurately categorizes the type of error. In addition, an invalid URL escape sequence now raises a subclass of ``RequestException`` rather than a ``ValueError``. :: requests.get('http://%zz/') # raises requests.exceptions.InvalidURL Lastly, ``httplib.IncompleteRead`` exceptions caused by incorrect chunked encoding will now raise a Requests ``ChunkedEncodingError`` instead. * The proxy API has changed slightly. The scheme for a proxy URL is now required. :: proxies = { "http": "10.10.1.10:3128", # use http://10.10.1.10:3128 instead } # In requests 1.x, this was legal, in requests 2.x, # this raises requests.exceptions.MissingSchema requests.get("http://example.org", proxies=proxies) Behavioral Changes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Keys in the ``headers`` dictionary are now native strings on all Python versions, i.e. bytestrings on Python 2 and unicode on Python 3. If the keys are not native strings (unicode on Python2 or bytestrings on Python 3) they will be converted to the native string type assuming UTF-8 encoding. * Timeouts behave slightly differently. On streaming requests, the timeout only applies to the connection attempt. On regular requests, the timeout is applied to the connection process and on to all attempts to read data from the underlying socket. It does *not* apply to the total download time for the request. :: tarball_url = 'https://github.com/kennethreitz/requests/tarball/master' # One second timeout for the connection attempt # Unlimited time to download the tarball r = requests.get(tarball_url, stream=True, timeout=1) # One second timeout for the connection attempt # Another full second timeout to download the tarball r = requests.get(tarball_url, timeout=1)