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570 lines
19 KiB
ReStructuredText
570 lines
19 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _quickstart:
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Quickstart
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==========
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.. module:: requests.models
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Eager to get started? This page gives a good introduction in how to get started
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with Requests.
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First, make sure that:
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* Requests is :ref:`installed <install>`
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* Requests is :ref:`up-to-date <updates>`
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Let's get started with some simple examples.
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Make a Request
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--------------
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Making a request with Requests is very simple.
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Begin by importing the Requests module::
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>>> import requests
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Now, let's try to get a webpage. For this example, let's get GitHub's public
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timeline::
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>>> r = requests.get('https://api.github.com/events')
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Now, we have a :class:`Response <requests.Response>` object called ``r``. We can
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get all the information we need from this object.
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Requests' simple API means that all forms of HTTP request are as obvious. For
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example, this is how you make an HTTP POST request::
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>>> r = requests.post('https://httpbin.org/post', data={'key': 'value'})
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Nice, right? What about the other HTTP request types: PUT, DELETE, HEAD and
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OPTIONS? These are all just as simple::
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>>> r = requests.put('https://httpbin.org/put', data={'key': 'value'})
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>>> r = requests.delete('https://httpbin.org/delete')
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>>> r = requests.head('https://httpbin.org/get')
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>>> r = requests.options('https://httpbin.org/get')
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That's all well and good, but it's also only the start of what Requests can
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do.
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Passing Parameters In URLs
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--------------------------
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You often want to send some sort of data in the URL's query string. If
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you were constructing the URL by hand, this data would be given as key/value
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pairs in the URL after a question mark, e.g. ``httpbin.org/get?key=val``.
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Requests allows you to provide these arguments as a dictionary of strings,
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using the ``params`` keyword argument. As an example, if you wanted to pass
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``key1=value1`` and ``key2=value2`` to ``httpbin.org/get``, you would use the
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following code::
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>>> payload = {'key1': 'value1', 'key2': 'value2'}
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>>> r = requests.get('https://httpbin.org/get', params=payload)
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You can see that the URL has been correctly encoded by printing the URL::
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>>> print(r.url)
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https://httpbin.org/get?key2=value2&key1=value1
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Note that any dictionary key whose value is ``None`` will not be added to the
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URL's query string.
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You can also pass a list of items as a value::
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>>> payload = {'key1': 'value1', 'key2': ['value2', 'value3']}
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>>> r = requests.get('https://httpbin.org/get', params=payload)
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>>> print(r.url)
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https://httpbin.org/get?key1=value1&key2=value2&key2=value3
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Response Content
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----------------
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We can read the content of the server's response. Consider the GitHub timeline
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again::
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>>> import requests
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>>> r = requests.get('https://api.github.com/events')
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>>> r.text
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'[{"repository":{"open_issues":0,"url":"https://github.com/...
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Requests will automatically decode content from the server. Most unicode
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charsets are seamlessly decoded.
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When you make a request, Requests makes educated guesses about the encoding of
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the response based on the HTTP headers. The text encoding guessed by Requests
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is used when you access ``r.text``. You can find out what encoding Requests is
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using, and change it, using the ``r.encoding`` property::
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>>> r.encoding
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'utf-8'
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>>> r.encoding = 'ISO-8859-1'
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If you change the encoding, Requests will use the new value of ``r.encoding``
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whenever you call ``r.text``. You might want to do this in any situation where
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you can apply special logic to work out what the encoding of the content will
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be. For example, HTML and XML have the ability to specify their encoding in
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their body. In situations like this, you should use ``r.content`` to find the
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encoding, and then set ``r.encoding``. This will let you use ``r.text`` with
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the correct encoding.
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Requests will also use custom encodings in the event that you need them. If
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you have created your own encoding and registered it with the ``codecs``
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module, you can simply use the codec name as the value of ``r.encoding`` and
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Requests will handle the decoding for you.
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Binary Response Content
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-----------------------
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You can also access the response body as bytes, for non-text requests::
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>>> r.content
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b'[{"repository":{"open_issues":0,"url":"https://github.com/...
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The ``gzip`` and ``deflate`` transfer-encodings are automatically decoded for you.
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The ``br`` transfer-encoding is automatically decoded for you if a Brotli library
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like `brotli <https://pypi.org/project/brotli>`_ or `brotlicffi <https://pypi.org/project/brotli>`_ is installed.
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For example, to create an image from binary data returned by a request, you can
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use the following code::
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>>> from PIL import Image
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>>> from io import BytesIO
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>>> i = Image.open(BytesIO(r.content))
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JSON Response Content
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---------------------
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There's also a builtin JSON decoder, in case you're dealing with JSON data::
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>>> import requests
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>>> r = requests.get('https://api.github.com/events')
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>>> r.json()
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[{'repository': {'open_issues': 0, 'url': 'https://github.com/...
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In case the JSON decoding fails, ``r.json()`` raises an exception. For example, if
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the response gets a 204 (No Content), or if the response contains invalid JSON,
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attempting ``r.json()`` raises ``requests.exceptions.JSONDecodeError``. This wrapper exception
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provides interoperability for multiple exceptions that may be thrown by different
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python versions and json serialization libraries.
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It should be noted that the success of the call to ``r.json()`` does **not**
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indicate the success of the response. Some servers may return a JSON object in a
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failed response (e.g. error details with HTTP 500). Such JSON will be decoded
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and returned. To check that a request is successful, use
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``r.raise_for_status()`` or check ``r.status_code`` is what you expect.
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Raw Response Content
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--------------------
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In the rare case that you'd like to get the raw socket response from the
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server, you can access ``r.raw``. If you want to do this, make sure you set
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``stream=True`` in your initial request. Once you do, you can do this::
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>>> r = requests.get('https://api.github.com/events', stream=True)
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>>> r.raw
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<urllib3.response.HTTPResponse object at 0x101194810>
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>>> r.raw.read(10)
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'\x1f\x8b\x08\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x03'
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In general, however, you should use a pattern like this to save what is being
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streamed to a file::
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with open(filename, 'wb') as fd:
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for chunk in r.iter_content(chunk_size=128):
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fd.write(chunk)
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Using ``Response.iter_content`` will handle a lot of what you would otherwise
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have to handle when using ``Response.raw`` directly. When streaming a
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download, the above is the preferred and recommended way to retrieve the
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content. Note that ``chunk_size`` can be freely adjusted to a number that
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may better fit your use cases.
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.. note::
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An important note about using ``Response.iter_content`` versus ``Response.raw``.
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``Response.iter_content`` will automatically decode the ``gzip`` and ``deflate``
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transfer-encodings. ``Response.raw`` is a raw stream of bytes -- it does not
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transform the response content. If you really need access to the bytes as they
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were returned, use ``Response.raw``.
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Custom Headers
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--------------
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If you'd like to add HTTP headers to a request, simply pass in a ``dict`` to the
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``headers`` parameter.
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For example, we didn't specify our user-agent in the previous example::
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>>> url = 'https://api.github.com/some/endpoint'
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>>> headers = {'user-agent': 'my-app/0.0.1'}
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>>> r = requests.get(url, headers=headers)
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Note: Custom headers are given less precedence than more specific sources of information. For instance:
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* Authorization headers set with `headers=` will be overridden if credentials
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are specified in ``.netrc``, which in turn will be overridden by the ``auth=``
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parameter. Requests will search for the netrc file at `~/.netrc`, `~/_netrc`,
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or at the path specified by the `NETRC` environment variable.
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* Authorization headers will be removed if you get redirected off-host.
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* Proxy-Authorization headers will be overridden by proxy credentials provided in the URL.
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* Content-Length headers will be overridden when we can determine the length of the content.
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Furthermore, Requests does not change its behavior at all based on which custom headers are specified. The headers are simply passed on into the final request.
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Note: All header values must be a ``string``, bytestring, or unicode. While permitted, it's advised to avoid passing unicode header values.
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More complicated POST requests
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------------------------------
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Typically, you want to send some form-encoded data — much like an HTML form.
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To do this, simply pass a dictionary to the ``data`` argument. Your
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dictionary of data will automatically be form-encoded when the request is made::
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>>> payload = {'key1': 'value1', 'key2': 'value2'}
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>>> r = requests.post("https://httpbin.org/post", data=payload)
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>>> print(r.text)
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{
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...
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"form": {
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"key2": "value2",
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"key1": "value1"
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},
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...
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}
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The ``data`` argument can also have multiple values for each key. This can be
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done by making ``data`` either a list of tuples or a dictionary with lists
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as values. This is particularly useful when the form has multiple elements that
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use the same key::
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>>> payload_tuples = [('key1', 'value1'), ('key1', 'value2')]
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>>> r1 = requests.post('https://httpbin.org/post', data=payload_tuples)
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>>> payload_dict = {'key1': ['value1', 'value2']}
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>>> r2 = requests.post('https://httpbin.org/post', data=payload_dict)
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>>> print(r1.text)
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{
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...
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"form": {
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"key1": [
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"value1",
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"value2"
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]
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},
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...
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}
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>>> r1.text == r2.text
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True
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There are times that you may want to send data that is not form-encoded. If
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you pass in a ``string`` instead of a ``dict``, that data will be posted directly.
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For example, the GitHub API v3 accepts JSON-Encoded POST/PATCH data::
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>>> import json
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>>> url = 'https://api.github.com/some/endpoint'
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>>> payload = {'some': 'data'}
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>>> r = requests.post(url, data=json.dumps(payload))
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Instead of encoding the ``dict`` yourself, you can also pass it directly using
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the ``json`` parameter (added in version 2.4.2) and it will be encoded automatically::
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>>> url = 'https://api.github.com/some/endpoint'
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>>> payload = {'some': 'data'}
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>>> r = requests.post(url, json=payload)
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Note, the ``json`` parameter is ignored if either ``data`` or ``files`` is passed.
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Using the ``json`` parameter in the request will change the ``Content-Type`` in the header to ``application/json``.
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POST a Multipart-Encoded File
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-----------------------------
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Requests makes it simple to upload Multipart-encoded files::
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>>> url = 'https://httpbin.org/post'
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>>> files = {'file': open('report.xls', 'rb')}
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>>> r = requests.post(url, files=files)
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>>> r.text
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{
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...
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"files": {
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"file": "<censored...binary...data>"
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},
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...
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}
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You can set the filename, content_type and headers explicitly::
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>>> url = 'https://httpbin.org/post'
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>>> files = {'file': ('report.xls', open('report.xls', 'rb'), 'application/vnd.ms-excel', {'Expires': '0'})}
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>>> r = requests.post(url, files=files)
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>>> r.text
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{
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...
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"files": {
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"file": "<censored...binary...data>"
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},
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...
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}
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If you want, you can send strings to be received as files::
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>>> url = 'https://httpbin.org/post'
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>>> files = {'file': ('report.csv', 'some,data,to,send\nanother,row,to,send\n')}
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>>> r = requests.post(url, files=files)
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>>> r.text
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{
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...
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"files": {
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"file": "some,data,to,send\\nanother,row,to,send\\n"
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},
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...
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}
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In the event you are posting a very large file as a ``multipart/form-data``
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request, you may want to stream the request. By default, ``requests`` does not
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support this, but there is a separate package which does -
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``requests-toolbelt``. You should read `the toolbelt's documentation
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<https://toolbelt.readthedocs.io>`_ for more details about how to use it.
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For sending multiple files in one request refer to the :ref:`advanced <advanced>`
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section.
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.. warning:: It is strongly recommended that you open files in :ref:`binary
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mode <tut-files>`. This is because Requests may attempt to provide
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the ``Content-Length`` header for you, and if it does this value
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will be set to the number of *bytes* in the file. Errors may occur
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if you open the file in *text mode*.
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Response Status Codes
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---------------------
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We can check the response status code::
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>>> r = requests.get('https://httpbin.org/get')
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>>> r.status_code
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200
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Requests also comes with a built-in status code lookup object for easy
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reference::
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>>> r.status_code == requests.codes.ok
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True
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If we made a bad request (a 4XX client error or 5XX server error response), we
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can raise it with
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:meth:`Response.raise_for_status() <requests.Response.raise_for_status>`::
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>>> bad_r = requests.get('https://httpbin.org/status/404')
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>>> bad_r.status_code
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404
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>>> bad_r.raise_for_status()
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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File "requests/models.py", line 832, in raise_for_status
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raise http_error
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requests.exceptions.HTTPError: 404 Client Error
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But, since our ``status_code`` for ``r`` was ``200``, when we call
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``raise_for_status()`` we get::
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>>> r.raise_for_status()
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None
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All is well.
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Response Headers
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----------------
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We can view the server's response headers using a Python dictionary::
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>>> r.headers
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{
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'content-encoding': 'gzip',
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'transfer-encoding': 'chunked',
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'connection': 'close',
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'server': 'nginx/1.0.4',
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'x-runtime': '148ms',
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'etag': '"e1ca502697e5c9317743dc078f67693f"',
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'content-type': 'application/json'
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}
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The dictionary is special, though: it's made just for HTTP headers. According to
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`RFC 7230 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7230#section-3.2>`_, HTTP Header names
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are case-insensitive.
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So, we can access the headers using any capitalization we want::
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>>> r.headers['Content-Type']
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'application/json'
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>>> r.headers.get('content-type')
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'application/json'
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It is also special in that the server could have sent the same header multiple
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times with different values, but requests combines them so they can be
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represented in the dictionary within a single mapping, as per
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`RFC 7230 <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7230#section-3.2>`_:
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A recipient MAY combine multiple header fields with the same field name
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into one "field-name: field-value" pair, without changing the semantics
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of the message, by appending each subsequent field value to the combined
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field value in order, separated by a comma.
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Cookies
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-------
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If a response contains some Cookies, you can quickly access them::
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>>> url = 'http://example.com/some/cookie/setting/url'
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>>> r = requests.get(url)
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>>> r.cookies['example_cookie_name']
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'example_cookie_value'
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To send your own cookies to the server, you can use the ``cookies``
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parameter::
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>>> url = 'https://httpbin.org/cookies'
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>>> cookies = dict(cookies_are='working')
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>>> r = requests.get(url, cookies=cookies)
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>>> r.text
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'{"cookies": {"cookies_are": "working"}}'
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Cookies are returned in a :class:`~requests.cookies.RequestsCookieJar`,
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which acts like a ``dict`` but also offers a more complete interface,
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suitable for use over multiple domains or paths. Cookie jars can
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also be passed in to requests::
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>>> jar = requests.cookies.RequestsCookieJar()
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>>> jar.set('tasty_cookie', 'yum', domain='httpbin.org', path='/cookies')
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>>> jar.set('gross_cookie', 'blech', domain='httpbin.org', path='/elsewhere')
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>>> url = 'https://httpbin.org/cookies'
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>>> r = requests.get(url, cookies=jar)
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>>> r.text
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'{"cookies": {"tasty_cookie": "yum"}}'
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Redirection and History
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-----------------------
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By default Requests will perform location redirection for all verbs except
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HEAD.
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We can use the ``history`` property of the Response object to track redirection.
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The :attr:`Response.history <requests.Response.history>` list contains the
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:class:`Response <requests.Response>` objects that were created in order to
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complete the request. The list is sorted from the oldest to the most recent
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response.
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For example, GitHub redirects all HTTP requests to HTTPS::
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>>> r = requests.get('http://github.com/')
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>>> r.url
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'https://github.com/'
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>>> r.status_code
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200
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>>> r.history
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[<Response [301]>]
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If you're using GET, OPTIONS, POST, PUT, PATCH or DELETE, you can disable
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redirection handling with the ``allow_redirects`` parameter::
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>>> r = requests.get('http://github.com/', allow_redirects=False)
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>>> r.status_code
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301
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>>> r.history
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[]
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If you're using HEAD, you can enable redirection as well::
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>>> r = requests.head('http://github.com/', allow_redirects=True)
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>>> r.url
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'https://github.com/'
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>>> r.history
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[<Response [301]>]
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Timeouts
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--------
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You can tell Requests to stop waiting for a response after a given number of
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seconds with the ``timeout`` parameter. Nearly all production code should use
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this parameter in nearly all requests. Failure to do so can cause your program
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to hang indefinitely::
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>>> requests.get('https://github.com/', timeout=0.001)
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
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requests.exceptions.Timeout: HTTPConnectionPool(host='github.com', port=80): Request timed out. (timeout=0.001)
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.. admonition:: Note
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``timeout`` is not a time limit on the entire response download;
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rather, an exception is raised if the server has not issued a
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response for ``timeout`` seconds (more precisely, if no bytes have been
|
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received on the underlying socket for ``timeout`` seconds). If no timeout is specified explicitly, requests do
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not time out.
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Errors and Exceptions
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---------------------
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In the event of a network problem (e.g. DNS failure, refused connection, etc),
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Requests will raise a :exc:`~requests.exceptions.ConnectionError` exception.
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:meth:`Response.raise_for_status() <requests.Response.raise_for_status>` will
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raise an :exc:`~requests.exceptions.HTTPError` if the HTTP request
|
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returned an unsuccessful status code.
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If a request times out, a :exc:`~requests.exceptions.Timeout` exception is
|
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raised.
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If a request exceeds the configured number of maximum redirections, a
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:exc:`~requests.exceptions.TooManyRedirects` exception is raised.
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All exceptions that Requests explicitly raises inherit from
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:exc:`requests.exceptions.RequestException`.
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-----------------------
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Ready for more? Check out the :ref:`advanced <advanced>` section.
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If you're on the job market, consider taking `this programming quiz <https://triplebyte.com/a/b1i2FB8/requests-docs-1>`_. A substantial donation will be made to this project, if you find a job through this platform.
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