hip.util package

Useful methods for working with httplib, completely decoupled from code specific to Hip.

At the very core, just like its predecessors, hip is built on top of httplib – the lowest level HTTP library included in the Python standard library.

To aid the limited functionality of the httplib module, hip provides various helper methods which are used with the higher level components but can also be used independently.

hip.util.connection module

hip.util.connection.is_connection_dropped(conn)

Returns True if the connection is dropped and should be closed.

hip.util.connection.create_connection(address, timeout=<object object>, source_address=None, socket_options=None)

Connect to address and return the socket object.

Convenience function. Connect to address (a 2-tuple (host, port)) and return the socket object. Passing the optional timeout parameter will set the timeout on the socket instance before attempting to connect. If no timeout is supplied, the global default timeout setting returned by getdefaulttimeout() is used. If source_address is set it must be a tuple of (host, port) for the socket to bind as a source address before making the connection. An host of ‘’ or port 0 tells the OS to use the default.

hip.util.connection.allowed_gai_family()

This function is designed to work in the context of getaddrinfo, where family=socket.AF_UNSPEC is the default and will perform a DNS search for both IPv6 and IPv4 records.

hip.util.request module

hip.util.request.make_headers(keep_alive=None, accept_encoding=None, user_agent=None, basic_auth=None, proxy_basic_auth=None, disable_cache=None)

Shortcuts for generating request headers.

Parameters:
  • keep_alive – If True, adds ‘connection: keep-alive’ header.
  • accept_encoding – Can be a boolean, list, or string. True translates to ‘gzip,deflate’. List will get joined by comma. String will be used as provided.
  • user_agent – String representing the user-agent you want, such as “python-hip/0.6”
  • basic_auth – Colon-separated username:password string for ‘authorization: basic …’ auth header.
  • proxy_basic_auth – Colon-separated username:password string for ‘proxy-authorization: basic …’ auth header.
  • disable_cache – If True, adds ‘cache-control: no-cache’ header.

Example:

>>> make_headers(keep_alive=True, user_agent="Batman/1.0")
{'connection': 'keep-alive', 'user-agent': 'Batman/1.0'}
>>> make_headers(accept_encoding=True)
{'accept-encoding': 'gzip,deflate'}
hip.util.request.set_file_position(body, pos)

If a position is provided, move file to that point. Otherwise, we’ll attempt to record a position for future use.

hip.util.request.rewind_body(body, body_pos)

Attempt to rewind body to a certain position. Primarily used for request redirects and retries.

Parameters:
  • body – File-like object that supports seek.
  • pos (int) – Position to seek to in file.

hip.util.retry module

class hip.util.retry.RequestHistory(method, url, error, status, redirect_location)

Bases: tuple

error

Alias for field number 2

method

Alias for field number 0

redirect_location

Alias for field number 4

status

Alias for field number 3

url

Alias for field number 1

class hip.util.retry.Retry(total=10, connect=None, read=None, redirect=None, status=None, method_whitelist=frozenset({'GET', 'TRACE', 'HEAD', 'OPTIONS', 'PUT', 'DELETE'}), status_forcelist=None, backoff_factor=0, raise_on_redirect=True, raise_on_status=True, history=None, respect_retry_after_header=True, remove_headers_on_redirect=frozenset({'Authorization'}))

Bases: object

Retry configuration.

Each retry attempt will create a new Retry object with updated values, so they can be safely reused.

Retries can be defined as a default for a pool:

retries = Retry(connect=5, read=2, redirect=5)
http = PoolManager(retries=retries)
response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/')

Or per-request (which overrides the default for the pool):

response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/', retries=Retry(10))

Retries can be disabled by passing False:

response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/', retries=False)

Errors will be wrapped in MaxRetryError unless retries are disabled, in which case the causing exception will be raised.

Parameters:
  • total (int) –

    Total number of retries to allow. Takes precedence over other counts.

    Set to None to remove this constraint and fall back on other counts. It’s a good idea to set this to some sensibly-high value to account for unexpected edge cases and avoid infinite retry loops.

    Set to 0 to fail on the first retry.

    Set to False to disable and imply raise_on_redirect=False.

  • connect (int) –

    How many connection-related errors to retry on.

    These are errors raised before the request is sent to the remote server, which we assume has not triggered the server to process the request.

    Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type.

  • read (int) –

    How many times to retry on read errors.

    These errors are raised after the request was sent to the server, so the request may have side-effects.

    Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type.

  • redirect (int) –

    How many redirects to perform. Limit this to avoid infinite redirect loops.

    A redirect is a HTTP response with a status code 301, 302, 303, 307 or 308.

    Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type.

    Set to False to disable and imply raise_on_redirect=False.

  • status (int) –

    How many times to retry on bad status codes.

    These are retries made on responses, where status code matches status_forcelist.

    Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type.

  • method_whitelist (iterable) –

    Set of uppercased HTTP method verbs that we should retry on.

    By default, we only retry on methods which are considered to be idempotent (multiple requests with the same parameters end with the same state). See Retry.DEFAULT_METHOD_WHITELIST.

    Set to a False value to retry on any verb.

  • status_forcelist (iterable) –

    A set of integer HTTP status codes that we should force a retry on. A retry is initiated if the request method is in method_whitelist and the response status code is in status_forcelist.

    By default, this is disabled with None.

  • backoff_factor (float) –

    A backoff factor to apply between attempts after the second try (most errors are resolved immediately by a second try without a delay). Hip will sleep for:

    {backoff factor} * (2 ** ({number of total retries} - 1))
    

    seconds. If the backoff_factor is 0.1, then sleep() will sleep for [0.0s, 0.2s, 0.4s, …] between retries. It will never be longer than Retry.BACKOFF_MAX.

    By default, backoff is disabled (set to 0).

  • raise_on_redirect (bool) – Whether, if the number of redirects is exhausted, to raise a MaxRetryError, or to return a response with a response code in the 3xx range.
  • raise_on_status (bool) – Similar meaning to raise_on_redirect: whether we should raise an exception, or return a response, if status falls in status_forcelist range and retries have been exhausted.
  • history (tuple) – The history of the request encountered during each call to increment(). The list is in the order the requests occurred. Each list item is of class RequestHistory.
  • respect_retry_after_header (bool) – Whether to respect Retry-After header on status codes defined as Retry.RETRY_AFTER_STATUS_CODES or not.
  • remove_headers_on_redirect (iterable) – Sequence of headers to remove from the request when a response indicating a redirect is returned before firing off the redirected request.
DEFAULT_METHOD_WHITELIST = frozenset({'GET', 'TRACE', 'HEAD', 'OPTIONS', 'PUT', 'DELETE'})
RETRY_AFTER_STATUS_CODES = frozenset({503, 413, 429})
DEFAULT_REDIRECT_HEADERS_BLACKLIST = frozenset({'Authorization'})
BACKOFF_MAX = 120

Maximum backoff time.

new(**kw)
classmethod from_int(retries, redirect=True, default=None)

Backwards-compatibility for the old retries format.

get_backoff_time()

Formula for computing the current backoff

Return type:float
parse_retry_after(retry_after)
get_retry_after(response)

Get the value of Retry-After in seconds.

sleep_for_retry(response=None)
sleep(response=None)

Sleep between retry attempts.

This method will respect a server’s Retry-After response header and sleep the duration of the time requested. If that is not present, it will use an exponential backoff. By default, the backoff factor is 0 and this method will return immediately.

is_retry(method, status_code, has_retry_after=False)

Is this method/status code retryable? (Based on whitelists and control variables such as the number of total retries to allow, whether to respect the Retry-After header, whether this header is present, and whether the returned status code is on the list of status codes to be retried upon on the presence of the aforementioned header)

is_exhausted()

Are we out of retries?

increment(method=None, url=None, response=None, error=None, _pool=None, _stacktrace=None)

Return a new Retry object with incremented retry counters.

Parameters:
  • response (HTTPResponse) – A response object, or None, if the server did not return a response.
  • error (Exception) – An error encountered during the request, or None if the response was received successfully.
Returns:

A new Retry object.

DEFAULT = Retry(total=3, connect=None, read=None, redirect=None, status=None)

hip.util.timeout module

class hip.util.timeout.Timeout(total=None, connect=<object object>, read=<object object>)

Bases: object

Timeout configuration.

Timeouts can be defined as a default for a pool:

timeout = Timeout(connect=2.0, read=7.0)
http = PoolManager(timeout=timeout)
response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/')

Or per-request (which overrides the default for the pool):

response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/', timeout=Timeout(10))

Timeouts can be disabled by setting all the parameters to None:

no_timeout = Timeout(connect=None, read=None)
response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/, timeout=no_timeout)
Parameters:
  • total (integer, float, or None) –

    This combines the connect and read timeouts into one; the read timeout will be set to the time leftover from the connect attempt. In the event that both a connect timeout and a total are specified, or a read timeout and a total are specified, the shorter timeout will be applied.

    Defaults to None.

  • connect (integer, float, or None) – The maximum amount of time (in seconds) to wait for a connection attempt to a server to succeed. Omitting the parameter will default the connect timeout to the system default, probably the global default timeout in socket.py. None will set an infinite timeout for connection attempts.
  • read (integer, float, or None) –

    The maximum amount of time (in seconds) to wait between consecutive read operations for a response from the server. Omitting the parameter will default the read timeout to the system default, probably the global default timeout in socket.py. None will set an infinite timeout.

Note

Many factors can affect the total amount of time for Hip to return an HTTP response.

For example, Python’s DNS resolver does not obey the timeout specified on the socket. Other factors that can affect total request time include high CPU load, high swap, the program running at a low priority level, or other behaviors.

In addition, the read and total timeouts only measure the time between read operations on the socket connecting the client and the server, not the total amount of time for the request to return a complete response. For most requests, the timeout is raised because the server has not sent the first byte in the specified time. This is not always the case; if a server streams one byte every fifteen seconds, a timeout of 20 seconds will not trigger, even though the request will take several minutes to complete.

If your goal is to cut off any request after a set amount of wall clock time, consider having a second “watcher” thread to cut off a slow request.

DEFAULT_TIMEOUT = <object object>

A sentinel object representing the default timeout value

classmethod from_float(timeout)

Create a new Timeout from a legacy timeout value.

The timeout value used by httplib.py sets the same timeout on the connect(), and recv() socket requests. This creates a Timeout object that sets the individual timeouts to the timeout value passed to this function.

Parameters:timeout (integer, float, sentinel default object, or None) – The legacy timeout value.
Returns:Timeout object
Return type:Timeout
clone()

Create a copy of the timeout object

Timeout properties are stored per-pool but each request needs a fresh Timeout object to ensure each one has its own start/stop configured.

Returns:a copy of the timeout object
Return type:Timeout
start_connect()

Start the timeout clock, used during a connect() attempt

Raises:hip.exceptions.TimeoutStateError – if you attempt to start a timer that has been started already.
get_connect_duration()

Gets the time elapsed since the call to start_connect().

Returns:Elapsed time in seconds.
Return type:float
Raises:hip.exceptions.TimeoutStateError – if you attempt to get duration for a timer that hasn’t been started.
connect_timeout

Get the value to use when setting a connection timeout.

This will be a positive float or integer, the value None (never timeout), or the default system timeout.

Returns:Connect timeout.
Return type:int, float, Timeout.DEFAULT_TIMEOUT or None
read_timeout

Get the value for the read timeout.

This assumes some time has elapsed in the connection timeout and computes the read timeout appropriately.

If self.total is set, the read timeout is dependent on the amount of time taken by the connect timeout. If the connection time has not been established, a TimeoutStateError will be raised.

Returns:Value to use for the read timeout.
Return type:int, float, Timeout.DEFAULT_TIMEOUT or None
Raises:hip.exceptions.TimeoutStateError – If start_connect() has not yet been called on this object.

hip.util.url module

class hip.util.url.Url

Bases: hip.util.url.Url

Data structure for representing an HTTP URL. Used as a return value for parse_url(). Both the scheme and host are normalized as they are both case-insensitive according to RFC 3986.

hostname

For backwards-compatibility with urlparse. We’re nice like that.

request_uri

Absolute path including the query string.

netloc

Network location including host and port

url

Convert self into a url

This function should more or less round-trip with parse_url(). The returned url may not be exactly the same as the url inputted to parse_url(), but it should be equivalent by the RFC (e.g., urls with a blank port will have : removed).

Example:

>>> U = parse_url('http://google.com/mail/')
>>> U.url
'http://google.com/mail/'
>>> Url('http', 'username:password', 'host.com', 80,
... '/path', 'query', 'fragment').url
'http://username:password@host.com:80/path?query#fragment'
hip.util.url.split_first(s, delims)

Deprecated since version 1.25.

Given a string and an iterable of delimiters, split on the first found delimiter. Return two split parts and the matched delimiter.

If not found, then the first part is the full input string.

Example:

>>> split_first('foo/bar?baz', '?/=')
('foo', 'bar?baz', '/')
>>> split_first('foo/bar?baz', '123')
('foo/bar?baz', '', None)

Scales linearly with number of delims. Not ideal for large number of delims.

hip.util.url.parse_url(url)

Given a url, return a parsed Url namedtuple. Best-effort is performed to parse incomplete urls. Fields not provided will be None. This parser is RFC 3986 compliant.

The parser logic and helper functions are based heavily on work done in the rfc3986 module.

Parameters:url (str) – URL to parse into a Url namedtuple.

Partly backwards-compatible with urlparse.

Example:

>>> parse_url('http://google.com/mail/')
Url(scheme='http', host='google.com', port=None, path='/mail/', ...)
>>> parse_url('google.com:80')
Url(scheme=None, host='google.com', port=80, path=None, ...)
>>> parse_url('/foo?bar')
Url(scheme=None, host=None, port=None, path='/foo', query='bar', ...)
hip.util.url.get_host(url)

Deprecated. Use parse_url() instead.

Module contents

class hip.util.SSLContext

Bases: _ssl._SSLContext

An SSLContext holds various SSL-related configuration options and data, such as certificates and possibly a private key.

sslsocket_class

alias of SSLSocket

sslobject_class

alias of SSLObject

wrap_socket(sock, server_side=False, do_handshake_on_connect=True, suppress_ragged_eofs=True, server_hostname=None, session=None)
wrap_bio(incoming, outgoing, server_side=False, server_hostname=None, session=None)
set_npn_protocols(npn_protocols)
set_servername_callback(server_name_callback)
set_alpn_protocols(alpn_protocols)
load_default_certs(purpose=<Purpose.SERVER_AUTH: _ASN1Object(nid=129, shortname='serverAuth', longname='TLS Web Server Authentication', oid='1.3.6.1.5.5.7.3.1')>)
options
hostname_checks_common_name
protocol
verify_flags
verify_mode
class hip.util.Retry(total=10, connect=None, read=None, redirect=None, status=None, method_whitelist=frozenset({'GET', 'TRACE', 'HEAD', 'OPTIONS', 'PUT', 'DELETE'}), status_forcelist=None, backoff_factor=0, raise_on_redirect=True, raise_on_status=True, history=None, respect_retry_after_header=True, remove_headers_on_redirect=frozenset({'Authorization'}))

Bases: object

Retry configuration.

Each retry attempt will create a new Retry object with updated values, so they can be safely reused.

Retries can be defined as a default for a pool:

retries = Retry(connect=5, read=2, redirect=5)
http = PoolManager(retries=retries)
response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/')

Or per-request (which overrides the default for the pool):

response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/', retries=Retry(10))

Retries can be disabled by passing False:

response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/', retries=False)

Errors will be wrapped in MaxRetryError unless retries are disabled, in which case the causing exception will be raised.

Parameters:
  • total (int) –

    Total number of retries to allow. Takes precedence over other counts.

    Set to None to remove this constraint and fall back on other counts. It’s a good idea to set this to some sensibly-high value to account for unexpected edge cases and avoid infinite retry loops.

    Set to 0 to fail on the first retry.

    Set to False to disable and imply raise_on_redirect=False.

  • connect (int) –

    How many connection-related errors to retry on.

    These are errors raised before the request is sent to the remote server, which we assume has not triggered the server to process the request.

    Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type.

  • read (int) –

    How many times to retry on read errors.

    These errors are raised after the request was sent to the server, so the request may have side-effects.

    Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type.

  • redirect (int) –

    How many redirects to perform. Limit this to avoid infinite redirect loops.

    A redirect is a HTTP response with a status code 301, 302, 303, 307 or 308.

    Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type.

    Set to False to disable and imply raise_on_redirect=False.

  • status (int) –

    How many times to retry on bad status codes.

    These are retries made on responses, where status code matches status_forcelist.

    Set to 0 to fail on the first retry of this type.

  • method_whitelist (iterable) –

    Set of uppercased HTTP method verbs that we should retry on.

    By default, we only retry on methods which are considered to be idempotent (multiple requests with the same parameters end with the same state). See Retry.DEFAULT_METHOD_WHITELIST.

    Set to a False value to retry on any verb.

  • status_forcelist (iterable) –

    A set of integer HTTP status codes that we should force a retry on. A retry is initiated if the request method is in method_whitelist and the response status code is in status_forcelist.

    By default, this is disabled with None.

  • backoff_factor (float) –

    A backoff factor to apply between attempts after the second try (most errors are resolved immediately by a second try without a delay). Hip will sleep for:

    {backoff factor} * (2 ** ({number of total retries} - 1))
    

    seconds. If the backoff_factor is 0.1, then sleep() will sleep for [0.0s, 0.2s, 0.4s, …] between retries. It will never be longer than Retry.BACKOFF_MAX.

    By default, backoff is disabled (set to 0).

  • raise_on_redirect (bool) – Whether, if the number of redirects is exhausted, to raise a MaxRetryError, or to return a response with a response code in the 3xx range.
  • raise_on_status (bool) – Similar meaning to raise_on_redirect: whether we should raise an exception, or return a response, if status falls in status_forcelist range and retries have been exhausted.
  • history (tuple) – The history of the request encountered during each call to increment(). The list is in the order the requests occurred. Each list item is of class RequestHistory.
  • respect_retry_after_header (bool) – Whether to respect Retry-After header on status codes defined as Retry.RETRY_AFTER_STATUS_CODES or not.
  • remove_headers_on_redirect (iterable) – Sequence of headers to remove from the request when a response indicating a redirect is returned before firing off the redirected request.
DEFAULT_METHOD_WHITELIST = frozenset({'GET', 'TRACE', 'HEAD', 'OPTIONS', 'PUT', 'DELETE'})
RETRY_AFTER_STATUS_CODES = frozenset({503, 413, 429})
DEFAULT_REDIRECT_HEADERS_BLACKLIST = frozenset({'Authorization'})
BACKOFF_MAX = 120

Maximum backoff time.

new(**kw)
classmethod from_int(retries, redirect=True, default=None)

Backwards-compatibility for the old retries format.

get_backoff_time()

Formula for computing the current backoff

Return type:float
parse_retry_after(retry_after)
get_retry_after(response)

Get the value of Retry-After in seconds.

sleep_for_retry(response=None)
sleep(response=None)

Sleep between retry attempts.

This method will respect a server’s Retry-After response header and sleep the duration of the time requested. If that is not present, it will use an exponential backoff. By default, the backoff factor is 0 and this method will return immediately.

is_retry(method, status_code, has_retry_after=False)

Is this method/status code retryable? (Based on whitelists and control variables such as the number of total retries to allow, whether to respect the Retry-After header, whether this header is present, and whether the returned status code is on the list of status codes to be retried upon on the presence of the aforementioned header)

is_exhausted()

Are we out of retries?

increment(method=None, url=None, response=None, error=None, _pool=None, _stacktrace=None)

Return a new Retry object with incremented retry counters.

Parameters:
  • response (HTTPResponse) – A response object, or None, if the server did not return a response.
  • error (Exception) – An error encountered during the request, or None if the response was received successfully.
Returns:

A new Retry object.

DEFAULT = Retry(total=3, connect=None, read=None, redirect=None, status=None)
class hip.util.Timeout(total=None, connect=<object object>, read=<object object>)

Bases: object

Timeout configuration.

Timeouts can be defined as a default for a pool:

timeout = Timeout(connect=2.0, read=7.0)
http = PoolManager(timeout=timeout)
response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/')

Or per-request (which overrides the default for the pool):

response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/', timeout=Timeout(10))

Timeouts can be disabled by setting all the parameters to None:

no_timeout = Timeout(connect=None, read=None)
response = http.request('GET', 'http://example.com/, timeout=no_timeout)
Parameters:
  • total (integer, float, or None) –

    This combines the connect and read timeouts into one; the read timeout will be set to the time leftover from the connect attempt. In the event that both a connect timeout and a total are specified, or a read timeout and a total are specified, the shorter timeout will be applied.

    Defaults to None.

  • connect (integer, float, or None) –

    The maximum amount of time (in seconds) to wait for a connection attempt to a server to succeed. Omitting the parameter will default the connect timeout to the system default, probably the global default timeout in socket.py. None will set an infinite timeout for connection attempts.

  • read (integer, float, or None) –

    The maximum amount of time (in seconds) to wait between consecutive read operations for a response from the server. Omitting the parameter will default the read timeout to the system default, probably the global default timeout in socket.py. None will set an infinite timeout.

Note

Many factors can affect the total amount of time for Hip to return an HTTP response.

For example, Python’s DNS resolver does not obey the timeout specified on the socket. Other factors that can affect total request time include high CPU load, high swap, the program running at a low priority level, or other behaviors.

In addition, the read and total timeouts only measure the time between read operations on the socket connecting the client and the server, not the total amount of time for the request to return a complete response. For most requests, the timeout is raised because the server has not sent the first byte in the specified time. This is not always the case; if a server streams one byte every fifteen seconds, a timeout of 20 seconds will not trigger, even though the request will take several minutes to complete.

If your goal is to cut off any request after a set amount of wall clock time, consider having a second “watcher” thread to cut off a slow request.

DEFAULT_TIMEOUT = <object object>

A sentinel object representing the default timeout value

classmethod from_float(timeout)

Create a new Timeout from a legacy timeout value.

The timeout value used by httplib.py sets the same timeout on the connect(), and recv() socket requests. This creates a Timeout object that sets the individual timeouts to the timeout value passed to this function.

Parameters:timeout (integer, float, sentinel default object, or None) – The legacy timeout value.
Returns:Timeout object
Return type:Timeout
clone()

Create a copy of the timeout object

Timeout properties are stored per-pool but each request needs a fresh Timeout object to ensure each one has its own start/stop configured.

Returns:a copy of the timeout object
Return type:Timeout
start_connect()

Start the timeout clock, used during a connect() attempt

Raises:hip.exceptions.TimeoutStateError – if you attempt to start a timer that has been started already.
get_connect_duration()

Gets the time elapsed since the call to start_connect().

Returns:Elapsed time in seconds.
Return type:float
Raises:hip.exceptions.TimeoutStateError – if you attempt to get duration for a timer that hasn’t been started.
connect_timeout

Get the value to use when setting a connection timeout.

This will be a positive float or integer, the value None (never timeout), or the default system timeout.

Returns:Connect timeout.
Return type:int, float, Timeout.DEFAULT_TIMEOUT or None
read_timeout

Get the value for the read timeout.

This assumes some time has elapsed in the connection timeout and computes the read timeout appropriately.

If self.total is set, the read timeout is dependent on the amount of time taken by the connect timeout. If the connection time has not been established, a TimeoutStateError will be raised.

Returns:Value to use for the read timeout.
Return type:int, float, Timeout.DEFAULT_TIMEOUT or None
Raises:hip.exceptions.TimeoutStateError – If start_connect() has not yet been called on this object.
class hip.util.Url

Bases: hip.util.url.Url

Data structure for representing an HTTP URL. Used as a return value for parse_url(). Both the scheme and host are normalized as they are both case-insensitive according to RFC 3986.

hostname

For backwards-compatibility with urlparse. We’re nice like that.

request_uri

Absolute path including the query string.

netloc

Network location including host and port

url

Convert self into a url

This function should more or less round-trip with parse_url(). The returned url may not be exactly the same as the url inputted to parse_url(), but it should be equivalent by the RFC (e.g., urls with a blank port will have : removed).

Example:

>>> U = parse_url('http://google.com/mail/')
>>> U.url
'http://google.com/mail/'
>>> Url('http', 'username:password', 'host.com', 80,
... '/path', 'query', 'fragment').url
'http://username:password@host.com:80/path?query#fragment'
hip.util.assert_fingerprint(cert, fingerprint)

Checks if given fingerprint matches the supplied certificate.

Parameters:
  • cert – Certificate as bytes object.
  • fingerprint – Fingerprint as string of hexdigits, can be interspersed by colons.
hip.util.current_time()

monotonic() -> float

Monotonic clock, cannot go backward.

hip.util.is_connection_dropped(conn)

Returns True if the connection is dropped and should be closed.

hip.util.get_host(url)

Deprecated. Use parse_url() instead.

hip.util.parse_url(url)

Given a url, return a parsed Url namedtuple. Best-effort is performed to parse incomplete urls. Fields not provided will be None. This parser is RFC 3986 compliant.

The parser logic and helper functions are based heavily on work done in the rfc3986 module.

Parameters:url (str) – URL to parse into a Url namedtuple.

Partly backwards-compatible with urlparse.

Example:

>>> parse_url('http://google.com/mail/')
Url(scheme='http', host='google.com', port=None, path='/mail/', ...)
>>> parse_url('google.com:80')
Url(scheme=None, host='google.com', port=80, path=None, ...)
>>> parse_url('/foo?bar')
Url(scheme=None, host=None, port=None, path='/foo', query='bar', ...)
hip.util.make_headers(keep_alive=None, accept_encoding=None, user_agent=None, basic_auth=None, proxy_basic_auth=None, disable_cache=None)

Shortcuts for generating request headers.

Parameters:
  • keep_alive – If True, adds ‘connection: keep-alive’ header.
  • accept_encoding – Can be a boolean, list, or string. True translates to ‘gzip,deflate’. List will get joined by comma. String will be used as provided.
  • user_agent – String representing the user-agent you want, such as “python-hip/0.6”
  • basic_auth – Colon-separated username:password string for ‘authorization: basic …’ auth header.
  • proxy_basic_auth – Colon-separated username:password string for ‘proxy-authorization: basic …’ auth header.
  • disable_cache – If True, adds ‘cache-control: no-cache’ header.

Example:

>>> make_headers(keep_alive=True, user_agent="Batman/1.0")
{'connection': 'keep-alive', 'user-agent': 'Batman/1.0'}
>>> make_headers(accept_encoding=True)
{'accept-encoding': 'gzip,deflate'}
hip.util.resolve_cert_reqs(candidate)

Resolves the argument to a numeric constant, which can be passed to the wrap_socket function/method from the ssl module. Defaults to ssl.CERT_NONE. If given a string it is assumed to be the name of the constant in the ssl module or its abbreviation. (So you can specify REQUIRED instead of CERT_REQUIRED. If it’s neither None nor a string we assume it is already the numeric constant which can directly be passed to wrap_socket.

hip.util.resolve_ssl_version(candidate)

like resolve_cert_reqs

hip.util.split_first(s, delims)

Deprecated since version 1.25.

Given a string and an iterable of delimiters, split on the first found delimiter. Return two split parts and the matched delimiter.

If not found, then the first part is the full input string.

Example:

>>> split_first('foo/bar?baz', '?/=')
('foo', 'bar?baz', '/')
>>> split_first('foo/bar?baz', '123')
('foo/bar?baz', '', None)

Scales linearly with number of delims. Not ideal for large number of delims.

hip.util.ssl_wrap_socket(sock, keyfile=None, certfile=None, cert_reqs=None, ca_certs=None, server_hostname=None, ssl_version=None, ciphers=None, ssl_context=None, ca_cert_dir=None, key_password=None)

All arguments except for server_hostname, ssl_context, and ca_cert_dir have the same meaning as they do when using ssl.wrap_socket().

Parameters:
  • server_hostname – When SNI is supported, the expected hostname of the certificate
  • ssl_context – A pre-made SSLContext object. If none is provided, one will be created using create_ssl_context().
  • ciphers – A string of ciphers we wish the client to support.
  • ca_cert_dir – A directory containing CA certificates in multiple separate files, as supported by OpenSSL’s -CApath flag or the capath argument to SSLContext.load_verify_locations().
  • key_password – Optional password if the keyfile is encrypted.
hip.util.wait_for_read(sock, timeout=None)

Waits for reading to be available on a given socket. Returns True if the socket is readable, or False if the timeout expired.

hip.util.wait_for_write(sock, timeout=None)

Waits for writing to be available on a given socket. Returns True if the socket is readable, or False if the timeout expired.

hip.util.wait_for_socket(*args, **kwargs)
exception hip.util.SSLWantReadError

Bases: ssl.SSLError

Non-blocking SSL socket needs to read more data before the requested operation can be completed.

exception hip.util.SSLWantWriteError

Bases: ssl.SSLError

Non-blocking SSL socket needs to write more data before the requested operation can be completed.