|
|
- from __future__ import absolute_import
- import errno
- import logging
- import sys
- import warnings
-
- from socket import error as SocketError, timeout as SocketTimeout
- import socket
-
-
- from .exceptions import (
- ClosedPoolError,
- ProtocolError,
- EmptyPoolError,
- HeaderParsingError,
- HostChangedError,
- LocationValueError,
- MaxRetryError,
- ProxyError,
- ReadTimeoutError,
- SSLError,
- TimeoutError,
- InsecureRequestWarning,
- NewConnectionError,
- )
- from .packages.ssl_match_hostname import CertificateError
- from .packages import six
- from .packages.six.moves import queue
- from .connection import (
- port_by_scheme,
- DummyConnection,
- HTTPConnection, HTTPSConnection, VerifiedHTTPSConnection,
- HTTPException, BaseSSLError,
- )
- from .request import RequestMethods
- from .response import HTTPResponse
-
- from .util.connection import is_connection_dropped
- from .util.request import set_file_position
- from .util.response import assert_header_parsing
- from .util.retry import Retry
- from .util.timeout import Timeout
- from .util.url import get_host, Url, NORMALIZABLE_SCHEMES
- from .util.queue import LifoQueue
-
-
- xrange = six.moves.xrange
-
- log = logging.getLogger(__name__)
-
- _Default = object()
-
-
- # Pool objects
- class ConnectionPool(object):
- """
- Base class for all connection pools, such as
- :class:`.HTTPConnectionPool` and :class:`.HTTPSConnectionPool`.
- """
-
- scheme = None
- QueueCls = LifoQueue
-
- def __init__(self, host, port=None):
- if not host:
- raise LocationValueError("No host specified.")
-
- self.host = _ipv6_host(host, self.scheme)
- self._proxy_host = host.lower()
- self.port = port
-
- def __str__(self):
- return '%s(host=%r, port=%r)' % (type(self).__name__,
- self.host, self.port)
-
- def __enter__(self):
- return self
-
- def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb):
- self.close()
- # Return False to re-raise any potential exceptions
- return False
-
- def close(self):
- """
- Close all pooled connections and disable the pool.
- """
- pass
-
-
- # This is taken from http://hg.python.org/cpython/file/7aaba721ebc0/Lib/socket.py#l252
- _blocking_errnos = {errno.EAGAIN, errno.EWOULDBLOCK}
-
-
- class HTTPConnectionPool(ConnectionPool, RequestMethods):
- """
- Thread-safe connection pool for one host.
-
- :param host:
- Host used for this HTTP Connection (e.g. "localhost"), passed into
- :class:`httplib.HTTPConnection`.
-
- :param port:
- Port used for this HTTP Connection (None is equivalent to 80), passed
- into :class:`httplib.HTTPConnection`.
-
- :param strict:
- Causes BadStatusLine to be raised if the status line can't be parsed
- as a valid HTTP/1.0 or 1.1 status line, passed into
- :class:`httplib.HTTPConnection`.
-
- .. note::
- Only works in Python 2. This parameter is ignored in Python 3.
-
- :param timeout:
- Socket timeout in seconds for each individual connection. This can
- be a float or integer, which sets the timeout for the HTTP request,
- or an instance of :class:`urllib3.util.Timeout` which gives you more
- fine-grained control over request timeouts. After the constructor has
- been parsed, this is always a `urllib3.util.Timeout` object.
-
- :param maxsize:
- Number of connections to save that can be reused. More than 1 is useful
- in multithreaded situations. If ``block`` is set to False, more
- connections will be created but they will not be saved once they've
- been used.
-
- :param block:
- If set to True, no more than ``maxsize`` connections will be used at
- a time. When no free connections are available, the call will block
- until a connection has been released. This is a useful side effect for
- particular multithreaded situations where one does not want to use more
- than maxsize connections per host to prevent flooding.
-
- :param headers:
- Headers to include with all requests, unless other headers are given
- explicitly.
-
- :param retries:
- Retry configuration to use by default with requests in this pool.
-
- :param _proxy:
- Parsed proxy URL, should not be used directly, instead, see
- :class:`urllib3.connectionpool.ProxyManager`"
-
- :param _proxy_headers:
- A dictionary with proxy headers, should not be used directly,
- instead, see :class:`urllib3.connectionpool.ProxyManager`"
-
- :param \\**conn_kw:
- Additional parameters are used to create fresh :class:`urllib3.connection.HTTPConnection`,
- :class:`urllib3.connection.HTTPSConnection` instances.
- """
-
- scheme = 'http'
- ConnectionCls = HTTPConnection
- ResponseCls = HTTPResponse
-
- def __init__(self, host, port=None, strict=False,
- timeout=Timeout.DEFAULT_TIMEOUT, maxsize=1, block=False,
- headers=None, retries=None,
- _proxy=None, _proxy_headers=None,
- **conn_kw):
- ConnectionPool.__init__(self, host, port)
- RequestMethods.__init__(self, headers)
-
- self.strict = strict
-
- if not isinstance(timeout, Timeout):
- timeout = Timeout.from_float(timeout)
-
- if retries is None:
- retries = Retry.DEFAULT
-
- self.timeout = timeout
- self.retries = retries
-
- self.pool = self.QueueCls(maxsize)
- self.block = block
-
- self.proxy = _proxy
- self.proxy_headers = _proxy_headers or {}
-
- # Fill the queue up so that doing get() on it will block properly
- for _ in xrange(maxsize):
- self.pool.put(None)
-
- # These are mostly for testing and debugging purposes.
- self.num_connections = 0
- self.num_requests = 0
- self.conn_kw = conn_kw
-
- if self.proxy:
- # Enable Nagle's algorithm for proxies, to avoid packet fragmentation.
- # We cannot know if the user has added default socket options, so we cannot replace the
- # list.
- self.conn_kw.setdefault('socket_options', [])
-
- def _new_conn(self):
- """
- Return a fresh :class:`HTTPConnection`.
- """
- self.num_connections += 1
- log.debug("Starting new HTTP connection (%d): %s:%s",
- self.num_connections, self.host, self.port or "80")
-
- conn = self.ConnectionCls(host=self.host, port=self.port,
- timeout=self.timeout.connect_timeout,
- strict=self.strict, **self.conn_kw)
- return conn
-
- def _get_conn(self, timeout=None):
- """
- Get a connection. Will return a pooled connection if one is available.
-
- If no connections are available and :prop:`.block` is ``False``, then a
- fresh connection is returned.
-
- :param timeout:
- Seconds to wait before giving up and raising
- :class:`urllib3.exceptions.EmptyPoolError` if the pool is empty and
- :prop:`.block` is ``True``.
- """
- conn = None
- try:
- conn = self.pool.get(block=self.block, timeout=timeout)
-
- except AttributeError: # self.pool is None
- raise ClosedPoolError(self, "Pool is closed.")
-
- except queue.Empty:
- if self.block:
- raise EmptyPoolError(self,
- "Pool reached maximum size and no more "
- "connections are allowed.")
- pass # Oh well, we'll create a new connection then
-
- # If this is a persistent connection, check if it got disconnected
- if conn and is_connection_dropped(conn):
- log.debug("Resetting dropped connection: %s", self.host)
- conn.close()
- if getattr(conn, 'auto_open', 1) == 0:
- # This is a proxied connection that has been mutated by
- # httplib._tunnel() and cannot be reused (since it would
- # attempt to bypass the proxy)
- conn = None
-
- return conn or self._new_conn()
-
- def _put_conn(self, conn):
- """
- Put a connection back into the pool.
-
- :param conn:
- Connection object for the current host and port as returned by
- :meth:`._new_conn` or :meth:`._get_conn`.
-
- If the pool is already full, the connection is closed and discarded
- because we exceeded maxsize. If connections are discarded frequently,
- then maxsize should be increased.
-
- If the pool is closed, then the connection will be closed and discarded.
- """
- try:
- self.pool.put(conn, block=False)
- return # Everything is dandy, done.
- except AttributeError:
- # self.pool is None.
- pass
- except queue.Full:
- # This should never happen if self.block == True
- log.warning(
- "Connection pool is full, discarding connection: %s",
- self.host)
-
- # Connection never got put back into the pool, close it.
- if conn:
- conn.close()
-
- def _validate_conn(self, conn):
- """
- Called right before a request is made, after the socket is created.
- """
- pass
-
- def _prepare_proxy(self, conn):
- # Nothing to do for HTTP connections.
- pass
-
- def _get_timeout(self, timeout):
- """ Helper that always returns a :class:`urllib3.util.Timeout` """
- if timeout is _Default:
- return self.timeout.clone()
-
- if isinstance(timeout, Timeout):
- return timeout.clone()
- else:
- # User passed us an int/float. This is for backwards compatibility,
- # can be removed later
- return Timeout.from_float(timeout)
-
- def _raise_timeout(self, err, url, timeout_value):
- """Is the error actually a timeout? Will raise a ReadTimeout or pass"""
-
- if isinstance(err, SocketTimeout):
- raise ReadTimeoutError(self, url, "Read timed out. (read timeout=%s)" % timeout_value)
-
- # See the above comment about EAGAIN in Python 3. In Python 2 we have
- # to specifically catch it and throw the timeout error
- if hasattr(err, 'errno') and err.errno in _blocking_errnos:
- raise ReadTimeoutError(self, url, "Read timed out. (read timeout=%s)" % timeout_value)
-
- # Catch possible read timeouts thrown as SSL errors. If not the
- # case, rethrow the original. We need to do this because of:
- # http://bugs.python.org/issue10272
- if 'timed out' in str(err) or 'did not complete (read)' in str(err): # Python < 2.7.4
- raise ReadTimeoutError(self, url, "Read timed out. (read timeout=%s)" % timeout_value)
-
- def _make_request(self, conn, method, url, timeout=_Default, chunked=False,
- **httplib_request_kw):
- """
- Perform a request on a given urllib connection object taken from our
- pool.
-
- :param conn:
- a connection from one of our connection pools
-
- :param timeout:
- Socket timeout in seconds for the request. This can be a
- float or integer, which will set the same timeout value for
- the socket connect and the socket read, or an instance of
- :class:`urllib3.util.Timeout`, which gives you more fine-grained
- control over your timeouts.
- """
- self.num_requests += 1
-
- timeout_obj = self._get_timeout(timeout)
- timeout_obj.start_connect()
- conn.timeout = timeout_obj.connect_timeout
-
- # Trigger any extra validation we need to do.
- try:
- self._validate_conn(conn)
- except (SocketTimeout, BaseSSLError) as e:
- # Py2 raises this as a BaseSSLError, Py3 raises it as socket timeout.
- self._raise_timeout(err=e, url=url, timeout_value=conn.timeout)
- raise
-
- # conn.request() calls httplib.*.request, not the method in
- # urllib3.request. It also calls makefile (recv) on the socket.
- if chunked:
- conn.request_chunked(method, url, **httplib_request_kw)
- else:
- conn.request(method, url, **httplib_request_kw)
-
- # Reset the timeout for the recv() on the socket
- read_timeout = timeout_obj.read_timeout
-
- # App Engine doesn't have a sock attr
- if getattr(conn, 'sock', None):
- # In Python 3 socket.py will catch EAGAIN and return None when you
- # try and read into the file pointer created by http.client, which
- # instead raises a BadStatusLine exception. Instead of catching
- # the exception and assuming all BadStatusLine exceptions are read
- # timeouts, check for a zero timeout before making the request.
- if read_timeout == 0:
- raise ReadTimeoutError(
- self, url, "Read timed out. (read timeout=%s)" % read_timeout)
- if read_timeout is Timeout.DEFAULT_TIMEOUT:
- conn.sock.settimeout(socket.getdefaulttimeout())
- else: # None or a value
- conn.sock.settimeout(read_timeout)
-
- # Receive the response from the server
- try:
- try: # Python 2.7, use buffering of HTTP responses
- httplib_response = conn.getresponse(buffering=True)
- except TypeError: # Python 3
- try:
- httplib_response = conn.getresponse()
- except Exception as e:
- # Remove the TypeError from the exception chain in Python 3;
- # otherwise it looks like a programming error was the cause.
- six.raise_from(e, None)
- except (SocketTimeout, BaseSSLError, SocketError) as e:
- self._raise_timeout(err=e, url=url, timeout_value=read_timeout)
- raise
-
- # AppEngine doesn't have a version attr.
- http_version = getattr(conn, '_http_vsn_str', 'HTTP/?')
- log.debug("%s://%s:%s \"%s %s %s\" %s %s", self.scheme, self.host, self.port,
- method, url, http_version, httplib_response.status,
- httplib_response.length)
-
- try:
- assert_header_parsing(httplib_response.msg)
- except (HeaderParsingError, TypeError) as hpe: # Platform-specific: Python 3
- log.warning(
- 'Failed to parse headers (url=%s): %s',
- self._absolute_url(url), hpe, exc_info=True)
-
- return httplib_response
-
- def _absolute_url(self, path):
- return Url(scheme=self.scheme, host=self.host, port=self.port, path=path).url
-
- def close(self):
- """
- Close all pooled connections and disable the pool.
- """
- if self.pool is None:
- return
- # Disable access to the pool
- old_pool, self.pool = self.pool, None
-
- try:
- while True:
- conn = old_pool.get(block=False)
- if conn:
- conn.close()
-
- except queue.Empty:
- pass # Done.
-
- def is_same_host(self, url):
- """
- Check if the given ``url`` is a member of the same host as this
- connection pool.
- """
- if url.startswith('/'):
- return True
-
- # TODO: Add optional support for socket.gethostbyname checking.
- scheme, host, port = get_host(url)
-
- host = _ipv6_host(host, self.scheme)
-
- # Use explicit default port for comparison when none is given
- if self.port and not port:
- port = port_by_scheme.get(scheme)
- elif not self.port and port == port_by_scheme.get(scheme):
- port = None
-
- return (scheme, host, port) == (self.scheme, self.host, self.port)
-
- def urlopen(self, method, url, body=None, headers=None, retries=None,
- redirect=True, assert_same_host=True, timeout=_Default,
- pool_timeout=None, release_conn=None, chunked=False,
- body_pos=None, **response_kw):
- """
- Get a connection from the pool and perform an HTTP request. This is the
- lowest level call for making a request, so you'll need to specify all
- the raw details.
-
- .. note::
-
- More commonly, it's appropriate to use a convenience method provided
- by :class:`.RequestMethods`, such as :meth:`request`.
-
- .. note::
-
- `release_conn` will only behave as expected if
- `preload_content=False` because we want to make
- `preload_content=False` the default behaviour someday soon without
- breaking backwards compatibility.
-
- :param method:
- HTTP request method (such as GET, POST, PUT, etc.)
-
- :param body:
- Data to send in the request body (useful for creating
- POST requests, see HTTPConnectionPool.post_url for
- more convenience).
-
- :param headers:
- Dictionary of custom headers to send, such as User-Agent,
- If-None-Match, etc. If None, pool headers are used. If provided,
- these headers completely replace any pool-specific headers.
-
- :param retries:
- Configure the number of retries to allow before raising a
- :class:`~urllib3.exceptions.MaxRetryError` exception.
-
- Pass ``None`` to retry until you receive a response. Pass a
- :class:`~urllib3.util.retry.Retry` object for fine-grained control
- over different types of retries.
- Pass an integer number to retry connection errors that many times,
- but no other types of errors. Pass zero to never retry.
-
- If ``False``, then retries are disabled and any exception is raised
- immediately. Also, instead of raising a MaxRetryError on redirects,
- the redirect response will be returned.
-
- :type retries: :class:`~urllib3.util.retry.Retry`, False, or an int.
-
- :param redirect:
- If True, automatically handle redirects (status codes 301, 302,
- 303, 307, 308). Each redirect counts as a retry. Disabling retries
- will disable redirect, too.
-
- :param assert_same_host:
- If ``True``, will make sure that the host of the pool requests is
- consistent else will raise HostChangedError. When False, you can
- use the pool on an HTTP proxy and request foreign hosts.
-
- :param timeout:
- If specified, overrides the default timeout for this one
- request. It may be a float (in seconds) or an instance of
- :class:`urllib3.util.Timeout`.
-
- :param pool_timeout:
- If set and the pool is set to block=True, then this method will
- block for ``pool_timeout`` seconds and raise EmptyPoolError if no
- connection is available within the time period.
-
- :param release_conn:
- If False, then the urlopen call will not release the connection
- back into the pool once a response is received (but will release if
- you read the entire contents of the response such as when
- `preload_content=True`). This is useful if you're not preloading
- the response's content immediately. You will need to call
- ``r.release_conn()`` on the response ``r`` to return the connection
- back into the pool. If None, it takes the value of
- ``response_kw.get('preload_content', True)``.
-
- :param chunked:
- If True, urllib3 will send the body using chunked transfer
- encoding. Otherwise, urllib3 will send the body using the standard
- content-length form. Defaults to False.
-
- :param int body_pos:
- Position to seek to in file-like body in the event of a retry or
- redirect. Typically this won't need to be set because urllib3 will
- auto-populate the value when needed.
-
- :param \\**response_kw:
- Additional parameters are passed to
- :meth:`urllib3.response.HTTPResponse.from_httplib`
- """
- if headers is None:
- headers = self.headers
-
- if not isinstance(retries, Retry):
- retries = Retry.from_int(retries, redirect=redirect, default=self.retries)
-
- if release_conn is None:
- release_conn = response_kw.get('preload_content', True)
-
- # Check host
- if assert_same_host and not self.is_same_host(url):
- raise HostChangedError(self, url, retries)
-
- conn = None
-
- # Track whether `conn` needs to be released before
- # returning/raising/recursing. Update this variable if necessary, and
- # leave `release_conn` constant throughout the function. That way, if
- # the function recurses, the original value of `release_conn` will be
- # passed down into the recursive call, and its value will be respected.
- #
- # See issue #651 [1] for details.
- #
- # [1] <https://github.com/shazow/urllib3/issues/651>
- release_this_conn = release_conn
-
- # Merge the proxy headers. Only do this in HTTP. We have to copy the
- # headers dict so we can safely change it without those changes being
- # reflected in anyone else's copy.
- if self.scheme == 'http':
- headers = headers.copy()
- headers.update(self.proxy_headers)
-
- # Must keep the exception bound to a separate variable or else Python 3
- # complains about UnboundLocalError.
- err = None
-
- # Keep track of whether we cleanly exited the except block. This
- # ensures we do proper cleanup in finally.
- clean_exit = False
-
- # Rewind body position, if needed. Record current position
- # for future rewinds in the event of a redirect/retry.
- body_pos = set_file_position(body, body_pos)
-
- try:
- # Request a connection from the queue.
- timeout_obj = self._get_timeout(timeout)
- conn = self._get_conn(timeout=pool_timeout)
-
- conn.timeout = timeout_obj.connect_timeout
-
- is_new_proxy_conn = self.proxy is not None and not getattr(conn, 'sock', None)
- if is_new_proxy_conn:
- self._prepare_proxy(conn)
-
- # Make the request on the httplib connection object.
- httplib_response = self._make_request(conn, method, url,
- timeout=timeout_obj,
- body=body, headers=headers,
- chunked=chunked)
-
- # If we're going to release the connection in ``finally:``, then
- # the response doesn't need to know about the connection. Otherwise
- # it will also try to release it and we'll have a double-release
- # mess.
- response_conn = conn if not release_conn else None
-
- # Pass method to Response for length checking
- response_kw['request_method'] = method
-
- # Import httplib's response into our own wrapper object
- response = self.ResponseCls.from_httplib(httplib_response,
- pool=self,
- connection=response_conn,
- retries=retries,
- **response_kw)
-
- # Everything went great!
- clean_exit = True
-
- except queue.Empty:
- # Timed out by queue.
- raise EmptyPoolError(self, "No pool connections are available.")
-
- except (TimeoutError, HTTPException, SocketError, ProtocolError,
- BaseSSLError, SSLError, CertificateError) as e:
- # Discard the connection for these exceptions. It will be
- # replaced during the next _get_conn() call.
- clean_exit = False
- if isinstance(e, (BaseSSLError, CertificateError)):
- e = SSLError(e)
- elif isinstance(e, (SocketError, NewConnectionError)) and self.proxy:
- e = ProxyError('Cannot connect to proxy.', e)
- elif isinstance(e, (SocketError, HTTPException)):
- e = ProtocolError('Connection aborted.', e)
-
- retries = retries.increment(method, url, error=e, _pool=self,
- _stacktrace=sys.exc_info()[2])
- retries.sleep()
-
- # Keep track of the error for the retry warning.
- err = e
-
- finally:
- if not clean_exit:
- # We hit some kind of exception, handled or otherwise. We need
- # to throw the connection away unless explicitly told not to.
- # Close the connection, set the variable to None, and make sure
- # we put the None back in the pool to avoid leaking it.
- conn = conn and conn.close()
- release_this_conn = True
-
- if release_this_conn:
- # Put the connection back to be reused. If the connection is
- # expired then it will be None, which will get replaced with a
- # fresh connection during _get_conn.
- self._put_conn(conn)
-
- if not conn:
- # Try again
- log.warning("Retrying (%r) after connection "
- "broken by '%r': %s", retries, err, url)
- return self.urlopen(method, url, body, headers, retries,
- redirect, assert_same_host,
- timeout=timeout, pool_timeout=pool_timeout,
- release_conn=release_conn, body_pos=body_pos,
- **response_kw)
-
- def drain_and_release_conn(response):
- try:
- # discard any remaining response body, the connection will be
- # released back to the pool once the entire response is read
- response.read()
- except (TimeoutError, HTTPException, SocketError, ProtocolError,
- BaseSSLError, SSLError) as e:
- pass
-
- # Handle redirect?
- redirect_location = redirect and response.get_redirect_location()
- if redirect_location:
- if response.status == 303:
- method = 'GET'
-
- try:
- retries = retries.increment(method, url, response=response, _pool=self)
- except MaxRetryError:
- if retries.raise_on_redirect:
- # Drain and release the connection for this response, since
- # we're not returning it to be released manually.
- drain_and_release_conn(response)
- raise
- return response
-
- # drain and return the connection to the pool before recursing
- drain_and_release_conn(response)
-
- retries.sleep_for_retry(response)
- log.debug("Redirecting %s -> %s", url, redirect_location)
- return self.urlopen(
- method, redirect_location, body, headers,
- retries=retries, redirect=redirect,
- assert_same_host=assert_same_host,
- timeout=timeout, pool_timeout=pool_timeout,
- release_conn=release_conn, body_pos=body_pos,
- **response_kw)
-
- # Check if we should retry the HTTP response.
- has_retry_after = bool(response.getheader('Retry-After'))
- if retries.is_retry(method, response.status, has_retry_after):
- try:
- retries = retries.increment(method, url, response=response, _pool=self)
- except MaxRetryError:
- if retries.raise_on_status:
- # Drain and release the connection for this response, since
- # we're not returning it to be released manually.
- drain_and_release_conn(response)
- raise
- return response
-
- # drain and return the connection to the pool before recursing
- drain_and_release_conn(response)
-
- retries.sleep(response)
- log.debug("Retry: %s", url)
- return self.urlopen(
- method, url, body, headers,
- retries=retries, redirect=redirect,
- assert_same_host=assert_same_host,
- timeout=timeout, pool_timeout=pool_timeout,
- release_conn=release_conn,
- body_pos=body_pos, **response_kw)
-
- return response
-
-
- class HTTPSConnectionPool(HTTPConnectionPool):
- """
- Same as :class:`.HTTPConnectionPool`, but HTTPS.
-
- When Python is compiled with the :mod:`ssl` module, then
- :class:`.VerifiedHTTPSConnection` is used, which *can* verify certificates,
- instead of :class:`.HTTPSConnection`.
-
- :class:`.VerifiedHTTPSConnection` uses one of ``assert_fingerprint``,
- ``assert_hostname`` and ``host`` in this order to verify connections.
- If ``assert_hostname`` is False, no verification is done.
-
- The ``key_file``, ``cert_file``, ``cert_reqs``, ``ca_certs``,
- ``ca_cert_dir``, and ``ssl_version`` are only used if :mod:`ssl` is
- available and are fed into :meth:`urllib3.util.ssl_wrap_socket` to upgrade
- the connection socket into an SSL socket.
- """
-
- scheme = 'https'
- ConnectionCls = HTTPSConnection
-
- def __init__(self, host, port=None,
- strict=False, timeout=Timeout.DEFAULT_TIMEOUT, maxsize=1,
- block=False, headers=None, retries=None,
- _proxy=None, _proxy_headers=None,
- key_file=None, cert_file=None, cert_reqs=None,
- ca_certs=None, ssl_version=None,
- assert_hostname=None, assert_fingerprint=None,
- ca_cert_dir=None, **conn_kw):
-
- HTTPConnectionPool.__init__(self, host, port, strict, timeout, maxsize,
- block, headers, retries, _proxy, _proxy_headers,
- **conn_kw)
-
- if ca_certs and cert_reqs is None:
- cert_reqs = 'CERT_REQUIRED'
-
- self.key_file = key_file
- self.cert_file = cert_file
- self.cert_reqs = cert_reqs
- self.ca_certs = ca_certs
- self.ca_cert_dir = ca_cert_dir
- self.ssl_version = ssl_version
- self.assert_hostname = assert_hostname
- self.assert_fingerprint = assert_fingerprint
-
- def _prepare_conn(self, conn):
- """
- Prepare the ``connection`` for :meth:`urllib3.util.ssl_wrap_socket`
- and establish the tunnel if proxy is used.
- """
-
- if isinstance(conn, VerifiedHTTPSConnection):
- conn.set_cert(key_file=self.key_file,
- cert_file=self.cert_file,
- cert_reqs=self.cert_reqs,
- ca_certs=self.ca_certs,
- ca_cert_dir=self.ca_cert_dir,
- assert_hostname=self.assert_hostname,
- assert_fingerprint=self.assert_fingerprint)
- conn.ssl_version = self.ssl_version
- return conn
-
- def _prepare_proxy(self, conn):
- """
- Establish tunnel connection early, because otherwise httplib
- would improperly set Host: header to proxy's IP:port.
- """
- conn.set_tunnel(self._proxy_host, self.port, self.proxy_headers)
- conn.connect()
-
- def _new_conn(self):
- """
- Return a fresh :class:`httplib.HTTPSConnection`.
- """
- self.num_connections += 1
- log.debug("Starting new HTTPS connection (%d): %s:%s",
- self.num_connections, self.host, self.port or "443")
-
- if not self.ConnectionCls or self.ConnectionCls is DummyConnection:
- raise SSLError("Can't connect to HTTPS URL because the SSL "
- "module is not available.")
-
- actual_host = self.host
- actual_port = self.port
- if self.proxy is not None:
- actual_host = self.proxy.host
- actual_port = self.proxy.port
-
- conn = self.ConnectionCls(host=actual_host, port=actual_port,
- timeout=self.timeout.connect_timeout,
- strict=self.strict, **self.conn_kw)
-
- return self._prepare_conn(conn)
-
- def _validate_conn(self, conn):
- """
- Called right before a request is made, after the socket is created.
- """
- super(HTTPSConnectionPool, self)._validate_conn(conn)
-
- # Force connect early to allow us to validate the connection.
- if not getattr(conn, 'sock', None): # AppEngine might not have `.sock`
- conn.connect()
-
- if not conn.is_verified:
- warnings.warn((
- 'Unverified HTTPS request is being made. '
- 'Adding certificate verification is strongly advised. See: '
- 'https://urllib3.readthedocs.io/en/latest/advanced-usage.html'
- '#ssl-warnings'),
- InsecureRequestWarning)
-
-
- def connection_from_url(url, **kw):
- """
- Given a url, return an :class:`.ConnectionPool` instance of its host.
-
- This is a shortcut for not having to parse out the scheme, host, and port
- of the url before creating an :class:`.ConnectionPool` instance.
-
- :param url:
- Absolute URL string that must include the scheme. Port is optional.
-
- :param \\**kw:
- Passes additional parameters to the constructor of the appropriate
- :class:`.ConnectionPool`. Useful for specifying things like
- timeout, maxsize, headers, etc.
-
- Example::
-
- >>> conn = connection_from_url('http://google.com/')
- >>> r = conn.request('GET', '/')
- """
- scheme, host, port = get_host(url)
- port = port or port_by_scheme.get(scheme, 80)
- if scheme == 'https':
- return HTTPSConnectionPool(host, port=port, **kw)
- else:
- return HTTPConnectionPool(host, port=port, **kw)
-
-
- def _ipv6_host(host, scheme):
- """
- Process IPv6 address literals
- """
-
- # httplib doesn't like it when we include brackets in IPv6 addresses
- # Specifically, if we include brackets but also pass the port then
- # httplib crazily doubles up the square brackets on the Host header.
- # Instead, we need to make sure we never pass ``None`` as the port.
- # However, for backward compatibility reasons we can't actually
- # *assert* that. See http://bugs.python.org/issue28539
- #
- # Also if an IPv6 address literal has a zone identifier, the
- # percent sign might be URIencoded, convert it back into ASCII
- if host.startswith('[') and host.endswith(']'):
- host = host.replace('%25', '%').strip('[]')
- if scheme in NORMALIZABLE_SCHEMES:
- host = host.lower()
- return host
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