.. _aiohttp-client-advanced: Advanced Client Usage ===================== .. currentmodule:: aiohttp .. _aiohttp-client-session: Client Session -------------- :class:`ClientSession` is the heart and the main entry point for all client API operations. Create the session first, use the instance for performing HTTP requests and initiating WebSocket connections. The session contains a cookie storage and connection pool, thus cookies and connections are shared between HTTP requests sent by the same session. Custom Request Headers ---------------------- If you need to add HTTP headers to a request, pass them in a :class:`dict` to the *headers* parameter. For example, if you want to specify the content-type directly:: url = 'http://example.com/image' payload = b'GIF89a\x01\x00\x01\x00\x00\xff\x00,\x00\x00' b'\x00\x00\x01\x00\x01\x00\x00\x02\x00;' headers = {'content-type': 'image/gif'} await session.post(url, data=payload, headers=headers) You also can set default headers for all session requests:: headers={"Authorization": "Basic bG9naW46cGFzcw=="} async with aiohttp.ClientSession(headers=headers) as session: async with session.get("http://httpbin.org/headers") as r: json_body = await r.json() assert json_body['headers']['Authorization'] == \ 'Basic bG9naW46cGFzcw==' Typical use case is sending JSON body. You can specify content type directly as shown above, but it is more convenient to use special keyword ``json``:: await session.post(url, json={'example': 'text'}) For *text/plain* :: await session.post(url, data='Привет, Мир!') .. note:: ``Authorization`` header will be removed if you get redirected to a different host or protocol. Custom Cookies -------------- To send your own cookies to the server, you can use the *cookies* parameter of :class:`ClientSession` constructor:: url = 'http://httpbin.org/cookies' cookies = {'cookies_are': 'working'} async with ClientSession(cookies=cookies) as session: async with session.get(url) as resp: assert await resp.json() == { "cookies": {"cookies_are": "working"}} .. note:: ``httpbin.org/cookies`` endpoint returns request cookies in JSON-encoded body. To access session cookies see :attr:`ClientSession.cookie_jar`. :class:`~aiohttp.ClientSession` may be used for sharing cookies between multiple requests:: async with aiohttp.ClientSession() as session: await session.get( 'http://httpbin.org/cookies/set?my_cookie=my_value') filtered = session.cookie_jar.filter_cookies( 'http://httpbin.org') assert filtered['my_cookie'].value == 'my_value' async with session.get('http://httpbin.org/cookies') as r: json_body = await r.json() assert json_body['cookies']['my_cookie'] == 'my_value' Response Headers and Cookies ---------------------------- We can view the server's response :attr:`ClientResponse.headers` using a :class:`~multidict.CIMultiDictProxy`:: assert resp.headers == { 'ACCESS-CONTROL-ALLOW-ORIGIN': '*', 'CONTENT-TYPE': 'application/json', 'DATE': 'Tue, 15 Jul 2014 16:49:51 GMT', 'SERVER': 'gunicorn/18.0', 'CONTENT-LENGTH': '331', 'CONNECTION': 'keep-alive'} The dictionary is special, though: it's made just for HTTP headers. According to `RFC 7230 `_, HTTP Header names are case-insensitive. It also supports multiple values for the same key as HTTP protocol does. So, we can access the headers using any capitalization we want:: assert resp.headers['Content-Type'] == 'application/json' assert resp.headers.get('content-type') == 'application/json' All headers are converted from binary data using UTF-8 with ``surrogateescape`` option. That works fine on most cases but sometimes unconverted data is needed if a server uses nonstandard encoding. While these headers are malformed from :rfc:`7230` perspective they may be retrieved by using :attr:`ClientResponse.raw_headers` property:: assert resp.raw_headers == ( (b'SERVER', b'nginx'), (b'DATE', b'Sat, 09 Jan 2016 20:28:40 GMT'), (b'CONTENT-TYPE', b'text/html; charset=utf-8'), (b'CONTENT-LENGTH', b'12150'), (b'CONNECTION', b'keep-alive')) If a response contains some *HTTP Cookies*, you can quickly access them:: url = 'http://example.com/some/cookie/setting/url' async with session.get(url) as resp: print(resp.cookies['example_cookie_name']) .. note:: Response cookies contain only values, that were in ``Set-Cookie`` headers of the **last** request in redirection chain. To gather cookies between all redirection requests please use :ref:`aiohttp.ClientSession ` object. Redirection History ------------------- If a request was redirected, it is possible to view previous responses using the :attr:`~ClientResponse.history` attribute:: resp = await session.get('http://example.com/some/redirect/') assert resp.status == 200 assert resp.url = URL('http://example.com/some/other/url/') assert len(resp.history) == 1 assert resp.history[0].status == 301 assert resp.history[0].url = URL( 'http://example.com/some/redirect/') If no redirects occurred or ``allow_redirects`` is set to ``False``, history will be an empty sequence. Cookie Jar ---------- .. _aiohttp-client-cookie-safety: Cookie Safety ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ By default :class:`~aiohttp.ClientSession` uses strict version of :class:`aiohttp.CookieJar`. :rfc:`2109` explicitly forbids cookie accepting from URLs with IP address instead of DNS name (e.g. ``http://127.0.0.1:80/cookie``). It's good but sometimes for testing we need to enable support for such cookies. It should be done by passing ``unsafe=True`` to :class:`aiohttp.CookieJar` constructor:: jar = aiohttp.CookieJar(unsafe=True) session = aiohttp.ClientSession(cookie_jar=jar) .. _aiohttp-client-cookie-quoting-routine: Cookie Quoting Routine ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The client uses the :class:`~aiohttp.SimpleCookie` quoting routines conform to the :rfc:`2109`, which in turn references the character definitions from :rfc:`2068`. They provide a two-way quoting algorithm where any non-text character is translated into a 4 character sequence: a forward-slash followed by the three-digit octal equivalent of the character. Any ``\`` or ``"`` is quoted with a preceding ``\`` slash. Because of the way browsers really handle cookies (as opposed to what the RFC says) we also encode ``,`` and ``;``. Some backend systems does not support quoted cookies. You can skip this quotation routine by passing ``quote_cookie=False`` to the :class:`~aiohttp.CookieJar` constructor:: jar = aiohttp.CookieJar(quote_cookie=False) session = aiohttp.ClientSession(cookie_jar=jar) .. _aiohttp-client-dummy-cookie-jar: Dummy Cookie Jar ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Sometimes cookie processing is not desirable. For this purpose it's possible to pass :class:`aiohttp.DummyCookieJar` instance into client session:: jar = aiohttp.DummyCookieJar() session = aiohttp.ClientSession(cookie_jar=jar) Uploading pre-compressed data ----------------------------- To upload data that is already compressed before passing it to aiohttp, call the request function with the used compression algorithm name (usually ``deflate`` or ``gzip``) as the value of the ``Content-Encoding`` header:: async def my_coroutine(session, headers, my_data): data = zlib.compress(my_data) headers = {'Content-Encoding': 'deflate'} async with session.post('http://httpbin.org/post', data=data, headers=headers) pass Disabling content type validation for JSON responses ---------------------------------------------------- The standard explicitly restricts JSON ``Content-Type`` HTTP header to ``application/json`` or any extended form, e.g. ``application/vnd.custom-type+json``. Unfortunately, some servers send a wrong type, like ``text/html``. This can be worked around in two ways: 1. Pass the expected type explicitly (in this case checking will be strict, without the extended form support, so ``custom/xxx+type`` won't be accepted): ``await resp.json(content_type='custom/type')``. 2. Disable the check entirely: ``await resp.json(content_type=None)``. .. _aiohttp-client-tracing: Client Tracing -------------- The execution flow of a specific request can be followed attaching listeners coroutines to the signals provided by the :class:`TraceConfig` instance, this instance will be used as a parameter for the :class:`ClientSession` constructor having as a result a client that triggers the different signals supported by the :class:`TraceConfig`. By default any instance of :class:`ClientSession` class comes with the signals ability disabled. The following snippet shows how the start and the end signals of a request flow can be followed:: async def on_request_start( session, trace_config_ctx, params): print("Starting request") async def on_request_end(session, trace_config_ctx, params): print("Ending request") trace_config = aiohttp.TraceConfig() trace_config.on_request_start.append(on_request_start) trace_config.on_request_end.append(on_request_end) async with aiohttp.ClientSession( trace_configs=[trace_config]) as client: client.get('http://example.com/some/redirect/') The ``trace_configs`` is a list that can contain instances of :class:`TraceConfig` class that allow run the signals handlers coming from different :class:`TraceConfig` instances. The following example shows how two different :class:`TraceConfig` that have a different nature are installed to perform their job in each signal handle:: from mylib.traceconfig import AuditRequest from mylib.traceconfig import XRay async with aiohttp.ClientSession( trace_configs=[AuditRequest(), XRay()]) as client: client.get('http://example.com/some/redirect/') All signals take as a parameters first, the :class:`ClientSession` instance used by the specific request related to that signals and second, a :class:`~types.SimpleNamespace` instance called ``trace_config_ctx``. The ``trace_config_ctx`` object can be used to share the state through to the different signals that belong to the same request and to the same :class:`TraceConfig` class, perhaps:: async def on_request_start( session, trace_config_ctx, params): trace_config_ctx.start = asyncio.get_event_loop().time() async def on_request_end(session, trace_config_ctx, params): elapsed = asyncio.get_event_loop().time() - trace_config_ctx.start print("Request took {}".format(elapsed)) The ``trace_config_ctx`` param is by default a :class:`~types.SimpleNamespace` that is initialized at the beginning of the request flow. However, the factory used to create this object can be overwritten using the ``trace_config_ctx_factory`` constructor param of the :class:`TraceConfig` class. The ``trace_request_ctx`` param can given at the beginning of the request execution, accepted by all of the HTTP verbs, and will be passed as a keyword argument for the ``trace_config_ctx_factory`` factory. This param is useful to pass data that is only available at request time, perhaps:: async def on_request_start( session, trace_config_ctx, params): print(trace_config_ctx.trace_request_ctx) session.get('http://example.com/some/redirect/', trace_request_ctx={'foo': 'bar'}) .. seealso:: :ref:`aiohttp-client-tracing-reference` section for more information about the different signals supported. Connectors ---------- To tweak or change *transport* layer of requests you can pass a custom *connector* to :class:`~aiohttp.ClientSession` and family. For example:: conn = aiohttp.TCPConnector() session = aiohttp.ClientSession(connector=conn) .. note:: By default *session* object takes the ownership of the connector, among other things closing the connections once the *session* is closed. If you are keen on share the same *connector* through different *session* instances you must give the *connector_owner* parameter as **False** for each *session* instance. .. seealso:: :ref:`aiohttp-client-reference-connectors` section for more information about different connector types and configuration options. Limiting connection pool size ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ To limit amount of simultaneously opened connections you can pass *limit* parameter to *connector*:: conn = aiohttp.TCPConnector(limit=30) The example limits total amount of parallel connections to `30`. The default is `100`. If you explicitly want not to have limits, pass `0`. For example:: conn = aiohttp.TCPConnector(limit=0) To limit amount of simultaneously opened connection to the same endpoint (``(host, port, is_ssl)`` triple) you can pass *limit_per_host* parameter to *connector*:: conn = aiohttp.TCPConnector(limit_per_host=30) The example limits amount of parallel connections to the same to `30`. The default is `0` (no limit on per host bases). Tuning the DNS cache ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ By default :class:`~aiohttp.TCPConnector` comes with the DNS cache table enabled, and resolutions will be cached by default for `10` seconds. This behavior can be changed either to change of the TTL for a resolution, as can be seen in the following example:: conn = aiohttp.TCPConnector(ttl_dns_cache=300) or disabling the use of the DNS cache table, meaning that all requests will end up making a DNS resolution, as the following example shows:: conn = aiohttp.TCPConnector(use_dns_cache=False) Resolving using custom nameservers ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ In order to specify the nameservers to when resolving the hostnames, :term:`aiodns` is required:: from aiohttp.resolver import AsyncResolver resolver = AsyncResolver(nameservers=["8.8.8.8", "8.8.4.4"]) conn = aiohttp.TCPConnector(resolver=resolver) Unix domain sockets ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If your HTTP server uses UNIX domain sockets you can use :class:`~aiohttp.UnixConnector`:: conn = aiohttp.UnixConnector(path='/path/to/socket') session = aiohttp.ClientSession(connector=conn) Named pipes in Windows ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If your HTTP server uses Named pipes you can use :class:`~aiohttp.NamedPipeConnector`:: conn = aiohttp.NamedPipeConnector(path=r'\\.\pipe\') session = aiohttp.ClientSession(connector=conn) It will only work with the ProactorEventLoop SSL control for TCP sockets --------------------------- By default *aiohttp* uses strict checks for HTTPS protocol. Certification checks can be relaxed by setting *ssl* to ``False``:: r = await session.get('https://example.com', ssl=False) If you need to setup custom ssl parameters (use own certification files for example) you can create a :class:`ssl.SSLContext` instance and pass it into the :meth:`ClientSession.request` methods or set it for the entire session with ``ClientSession(connector=TCPConnector(ssl=ssl_context))``. There are explicit errors when ssl verification fails :class:`aiohttp.ClientConnectorSSLError`:: try: await session.get('https://expired.badssl.com/') except aiohttp.ClientConnectorSSLError as e: assert isinstance(e, ssl.SSLError) :class:`aiohttp.ClientConnectorCertificateError`:: try: await session.get('https://wrong.host.badssl.com/') except aiohttp.ClientConnectorCertificateError as e: assert isinstance(e, ssl.CertificateError) If you need to skip both ssl related errors :class:`aiohttp.ClientSSLError`:: try: await session.get('https://expired.badssl.com/') except aiohttp.ClientSSLError as e: assert isinstance(e, ssl.SSLError) try: await session.get('https://wrong.host.badssl.com/') except aiohttp.ClientSSLError as e: assert isinstance(e, ssl.CertificateError) Example: Use certifi ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ By default, Python uses the system CA certificates. In rare cases, these may not be installed or Python is unable to find them, resulting in a error like `ssl.SSLCertVerificationError: [SSL: CERTIFICATE_VERIFY_FAILED] certificate verify failed: unable to get local issuer certificate` One way to work around this problem is to use the `certifi` package:: ssl_context = ssl.create_default_context(cafile=certifi.where()) async with ClientSession(connector=TCPConnector(ssl=ssl_context)) as sess: ... Example: Use self-signed certificate ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ If you need to verify *self-signed* certificates, you need to add a call to :meth:`ssl.SSLContext.load_cert_chain` with the key pair:: ssl_context = ssl.create_default_context() ssl_context.load_cert_chain("/path/to/client/public/device.pem", "/path/to/client/private/device.key") async with sess.get("https://example.com", ssl=ssl_context) as resp: ... Example: Verify certificate fingerprint ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ You may also verify certificates via *SHA256* fingerprint:: # Attempt to connect to https://www.python.org # with a pin to a bogus certificate: bad_fp = b'0'*64 exc = None try: r = await session.get('https://www.python.org', ssl=aiohttp.Fingerprint(bad_fp)) except aiohttp.FingerprintMismatch as e: exc = e assert exc is not None assert exc.expected == bad_fp # www.python.org cert's actual fingerprint assert exc.got == b'...' Note that this is the fingerprint of the DER-encoded certificate. If you have the certificate in PEM format, you can convert it to DER with e.g:: openssl x509 -in crt.pem -inform PEM -outform DER > crt.der .. note:: Tip: to convert from a hexadecimal digest to a binary byte-string, you can use :func:`binascii.unhexlify`. *ssl* parameter could be passed to :class:`TCPConnector` as default, the value from :meth:`ClientSession.get` and others override default. .. _aiohttp-client-proxy-support: Proxy support ------------- aiohttp supports plain HTTP proxies and HTTP proxies that can be upgraded to HTTPS via the HTTP CONNECT method. aiohttp has a limited support for proxies that must be connected to via ``https://`` — see the info box below for more details. To connect, use the *proxy* parameter:: async with aiohttp.ClientSession() as session: async with session.get("http://python.org", proxy="http://proxy.com") as resp: print(resp.status) It also supports proxy authorization:: async with aiohttp.ClientSession() as session: proxy_auth = aiohttp.BasicAuth('user', 'pass') async with session.get("http://python.org", proxy="http://proxy.com", proxy_auth=proxy_auth) as resp: print(resp.status) Authentication credentials can be passed in proxy URL:: session.get("http://python.org", proxy="http://user:pass@some.proxy.com") Contrary to the ``requests`` library, it won't read environment variables by default. But you can do so by passing ``trust_env=True`` into :class:`aiohttp.ClientSession` constructor.:: async with aiohttp.ClientSession(trust_env=True) as session: async with session.get("http://python.org") as resp: print(resp.status) .. note:: aiohttp uses :func:`urllib.request.getproxies` for reading the proxy configuration (e.g. from the *HTTP_PROXY* etc. environment variables) and applies them for the *HTTP*, *HTTPS*, *WS* and *WSS* schemes. Hosts defined in ``no_proxy`` will bypass the proxy. .. versionadded:: 3.8 *WS_PROXY* and *WSS_PROXY* are supported since aiohttp v3.8. Proxy credentials are given from ``~/.netrc`` file if present (see :class:`aiohttp.ClientSession` for more details). .. attention:: As of now (Python 3.10), support for TLS in TLS is disabled for the transports that :py:mod:`asyncio` uses. If the further release of Python (say v3.11) toggles one attribute, it'll *just work™*. aiohttp v3.8 and higher is ready for this to happen and has code in place supports TLS-in-TLS, hence sending HTTPS requests over HTTPS proxy tunnels. ⚠️ For as long as your Python runtime doesn't declare the support for TLS-in-TLS, please don't file bugs with aiohttp but rather try to help the CPython upstream enable this feature. Meanwhile, if you *really* need this to work, there's a patch that may help you make it happen, include it into your app's code base: https://github.com/aio-libs/aiohttp/discussions/6044#discussioncomment-1432443. .. important:: When supplying a custom :py:class:`ssl.SSLContext` instance, bear in mind that it will be used not only to establish a TLS session with the HTTPS endpoint you're hitting but also to establish a TLS tunnel to the HTTPS proxy. To avoid surprises, make sure to set up the trust chain that would recognize TLS certificates used by both the endpoint and the proxy. Graceful Shutdown ----------------- When :class:`ClientSession` closes at the end of an ``async with`` block (or through a direct :meth:`ClientSession.close()` call), the underlying connection remains open due to asyncio internal details. In practice, the underlying connection will close after a short while. However, if the event loop is stopped before the underlying connection is closed, a ``ResourceWarning: unclosed transport`` warning is emitted (when warnings are enabled). To avoid this situation, a small delay must be added before closing the event loop to allow any open underlying connections to close. For a :class:`ClientSession` without SSL, a simple zero-sleep (``await asyncio.sleep(0)``) will suffice:: async def read_website(): async with aiohttp.ClientSession() as session: async with session.get('http://example.org/') as resp: await resp.read() # Zero-sleep to allow underlying connections to close await asyncio.sleep(0) For a :class:`ClientSession` with SSL, the application must wait a short duration before closing:: ... # Wait 250 ms for the underlying SSL connections to close await asyncio.sleep(0.250) Note that the appropriate amount of time to wait will vary from application to application. All if this will eventually become obsolete when the asyncio internals are changed so that aiohttp itself can wait on the underlying connection to close. Please follow issue `#1925 `_ for the progress on this. Character Set Detection ----------------------- If you encounter a :exc:`UnicodeDecodeError` when using :meth:`ClientResponse.text()` this may be because the response does not include the charset needed to decode the body. If you know the correct encoding for a request, you can simply specify the encoding as a parameter (e.g. ``resp.text("windows-1252")``). Alternatively, :class:`ClientSession` accepts a ``fallback_charset_resolver`` parameter which can be used to introduce charset guessing functionality. When a charset is not found in the Content-Type header, this function will be called to get the charset encoding. For example, this can be used with the ``chardetng_py`` library.:: from chardetng_py import detect def charset_resolver(resp: ClientResponse, body: bytes) -> str: tld = resp.url.host.rsplit(".", maxsplit=1)[-1] return detect(body, allow_utf8=True, tld=tld.encode()) ClientSession(fallback_charset_resolver=charset_resolver) Or, if ``chardetng_py`` doesn't work for you, then ``charset-normalizer`` is another option:: from charset_normalizer import detect ClientSession(fallback_charset_resolver=lambda r, b: detect(b)["encoding"] or "utf-8")