Related
I'm performing a simple task of uploading a file using Python requests library. I searched Stack Overflow and no one seemed to have the same problem, namely, that the file is not received by the server:
import requests
url='http://nesssi.cacr.caltech.edu/cgi-bin/getmulticonedb_release2.cgi/post'
files={'files': open('file.txt','rb')}
values={'upload_file' : 'file.txt' , 'DB':'photcat' , 'OUT':'csv' , 'SHORT':'short'}
r=requests.post(url,files=files,data=values)
I'm filling the value of 'upload_file' keyword with my filename, because if I leave it blank, it says
Error - You must select a file to upload!
And now I get
File file.txt of size bytes is uploaded successfully!
Query service results: There were 0 lines.
Which comes up only if the file is empty. So I'm stuck as to how to send my file successfully. I know that the file works because if I go to this website and manually fill in the form it returns a nice list of matched objects, which is what I'm after. I'd really appreciate all hints.
Some other threads related (but not answering my problem):
Send file using POST from a Python script
http://docs.python-requests.org/en/latest/user/quickstart/#response-content
Uploading files using requests and send extra data
http://docs.python-requests.org/en/latest/user/advanced/#body-content-workflow
If upload_file is meant to be the file, use:
files = {'upload_file': open('file.txt','rb')}
values = {'DB': 'photcat', 'OUT': 'csv', 'SHORT': 'short'}
r = requests.post(url, files=files, data=values)
and requests will send a multi-part form POST body with the upload_file field set to the contents of the file.txt file.
The filename will be included in the mime header for the specific field:
>>> import requests
>>> open('file.txt', 'wb') # create an empty demo file
<_io.BufferedWriter name='file.txt'>
>>> files = {'upload_file': open('file.txt', 'rb')}
>>> print(requests.Request('POST', 'http://example.com', files=files).prepare().body.decode('ascii'))
--c226ce13d09842658ffbd31e0563c6bd
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="upload_file"; filename="file.txt"
--c226ce13d09842658ffbd31e0563c6bd--
Note the filename="file.txt" parameter.
You can use a tuple for the files mapping value, with between 2 and 4 elements, if you need more control. The first element is the filename, followed by the contents, and an optional content-type header value and an optional mapping of additional headers:
files = {'upload_file': ('foobar.txt', open('file.txt','rb'), 'text/x-spam')}
This sets an alternative filename and content type, leaving out the optional headers.
If you are meaning the whole POST body to be taken from a file (with no other fields specified), then don't use the files parameter, just post the file directly as data. You then may want to set a Content-Type header too, as none will be set otherwise. See Python requests - POST data from a file.
(2018) the new python requests library has simplified this process, we can use the 'files' variable to signal that we want to upload a multipart-encoded file
url = 'http://httpbin.org/post'
files = {'file': open('report.xls', 'rb')}
r = requests.post(url, files=files)
r.text
Client Upload
If you want to upload a single file with Python requests library, then requests lib supports streaming uploads, which allow you to send large files or streams without reading into memory.
with open('massive-body', 'rb') as f:
requests.post('http://some.url/streamed', data=f)
Server Side
Then store the file on the server.py side such that save the stream into file without loading into the memory. Following is an example with using Flask file uploads.
#app.route("/upload", methods=['POST'])
def upload_file():
from werkzeug.datastructures import FileStorage
FileStorage(request.stream).save(os.path.join(app.config['UPLOAD_FOLDER'], filename))
return 'OK', 200
Or use werkzeug Form Data Parsing as mentioned in a fix for the issue of "large file uploads eating up memory" in order to avoid using memory inefficiently on large files upload (s.t. 22 GiB file in ~60 seconds. Memory usage is constant at about 13 MiB.).
#app.route("/upload", methods=['POST'])
def upload_file():
def custom_stream_factory(total_content_length, filename, content_type, content_length=None):
import tempfile
tmpfile = tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile('wb+', prefix='flaskapp', suffix='.nc')
app.logger.info("start receiving file ... filename => " + str(tmpfile.name))
return tmpfile
import werkzeug, flask
stream, form, files = werkzeug.formparser.parse_form_data(flask.request.environ, stream_factory=custom_stream_factory)
for fil in files.values():
app.logger.info(" ".join(["saved form name", fil.name, "submitted as", fil.filename, "to temporary file", fil.stream.name]))
# Do whatever with stored file at `fil.stream.name`
return 'OK', 200
You can send any file via post api while calling the API just need to mention files={'any_key': fobj}
import requests
import json
url = "https://request-url.com"
headers = {"Content-Type": "application/json; charset=utf-8"}
with open(filepath, 'rb') as fobj:
response = requests.post(url, headers=headers, files={'file': fobj})
print("Status Code", response.status_code)
print("JSON Response ", response.json())
#martijn-pieters answer is correct, however I wanted to add a bit of context to data= and also to the other side, in the Flask server, in the case where you are trying to upload files and a JSON.
From the request side, this works as Martijn describes:
files = {'upload_file': open('file.txt','rb')}
values = {'DB': 'photcat', 'OUT': 'csv', 'SHORT': 'short'}
r = requests.post(url, files=files, data=values)
However, on the Flask side (the receiving webserver on the other side of this POST), I had to use form
#app.route("/sftp-upload", methods=["POST"])
def upload_file():
if request.method == "POST":
# the mimetype here isnt application/json
# see here: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20001229/how-to-get-posted-json-in-flask
body = request.form
print(body) # <- immutable dict
body = request.get_json() will return nothing. body = request.get_data() will return a blob containing lots of things like the filename etc.
Here's the bad part: on the client side, changing data={} to json={} results in this server not being able to read the KV pairs! As in, this will result in a {} body above:
r = requests.post(url, files=files, json=values). # No!
This is bad because the server does not have control over how the user formats the request; and json= is going to be the habbit of requests users.
Upload:
with open('file.txt', 'rb') as f:
files = {'upload_file': f.read()}
values = {'DB': 'photcat', 'OUT': 'csv', 'SHORT': 'short'}
r = requests.post(url, files=files, data=values)
Download (Django):
with open('file.txt', 'wb') as f:
f.write(request.FILES['upload_file'].file.read())
Regarding the answers given so far, there was always something missing that prevented it to work on my side. So let me show you what worked for me:
import json
import os
import requests
API_ENDPOINT = "http://localhost:80"
access_token = "sdfJHKsdfjJKHKJsdfJKHJKysdfJKHsdfJKHs" # TODO: get fresh Token here
def upload_engagement_file(filepath):
url = API_ENDPOINT + "/api/files" # add any URL parameters if needed
hdr = {"Authorization": "Bearer %s" % access_token}
with open(filepath, "rb") as fobj:
file_obj = fobj.read()
file_basename = os.path.basename(filepath)
file_to_upload = {"file": (str(file_basename), file_obj)}
finfo = {"fullPath": filepath}
upload_response = requests.post(url, headers=hdr, files=file_to_upload, data=finfo)
fobj.close()
# print("Status Code ", upload_response.status_code)
# print("JSON Response ", upload_response.json())
return upload_response
Note that requests.post(...) needs
a url parameter, containing the full URL of the API endpoint you're calling, using the API_ENDPOINT, assuming we have an http://localhost:8000/api/files endpoint to POST a file
a headers parameter, containing at least the authorization (bearer token)
a files parameter taking the name of the file plus the entire file content
a data parameter taking just the path and file name
Installation required (console):
pip install requests
What you get back from the function call is a response object containing a status code and also the full error message in JSON format. The commented print statements at the end of upload_engagement_file are showing you how you can access them.
Note: Some useful additional information about the requests library can be found here
Some may need to upload via a put request and this is slightly different that posting data. It is important to understand how the server expects the data in order to form a valid request. A frequent source of confusion is sending multipart-form data when it isn't accepted. This example uses basic auth and updates an image via a put request.
url = 'foobar.com/api/image-1'
basic = requests.auth.HTTPBasicAuth('someuser', 'password123')
# Setting the appropriate header is important and will vary based
# on what you upload
headers = {'Content-Type': 'image/png'}
with open('image-1.png', 'rb') as img_1:
r = requests.put(url, auth=basic, data=img_1, headers=headers)
While the requests library makes working with http requests a lot easier, some of its magic and convenience obscures just how to craft more nuanced requests.
In Ubuntu you can apply this way,
to save file at some location (temporary) and then open and send it to API
path = default_storage.save('static/tmp/' + f1.name, ContentFile(f1.read()))
path12 = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), "static/tmp/" + f1.name)
data={} #can be anything u want to pass along with File
file1 = open(path12, 'rb')
header = {"Content-Disposition": "attachment; filename=" + f1.name, "Authorization": "JWT " + token}
res= requests.post(url,data,header)
Python 3.6.7, Requests 2.21.0
I have an issue that gives me a new error at every solution.
What I want: To send a file with data in a POST command using the requests library.
url_upload = BASE_URL + "upload?action=save"
data = {'data':{'name':'test.txt','contenttype':'text/plain', 'size':37}}
files = {'file': open('/home/user/test.txt', 'rb')}
req = session.post(url=url_upload, files=files, data=data)
The end server is using Spring (I assume) and the response text contains this error:
"net.sf.json.JSONException: A JSONObject text must begin with \'{\' at character 1 of name"
So, I try
data = json.dumps(data)
But, of course requests doesn't want that:
ValueError: Data must not be a string.
If I add the headers:
headers = {'Content-type': 'multipart/form-data'}
org.apache.commons.fileupload.FileUploadException: the request was rejected because no multipart boundary was found
Help would be appreciated.
What I needed to do was:
req = session.post(url=url_upload, files=files, data={'data': json.dumps(data)})
That way I'm giving the function variable 'data' the form-data variable name 'data' which contains the variable that has the key 'data'...
http://www.trekmate.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/Data-star-trek-the-next-generation-31159191-1024-768.png
I'm trying to retrieve the response json data by a web site that I call.
The site is this:
WebSite DriveNow
On this page are shown on map some data. With browser debugger I can see the end point
end point
that sends response data json.
I have use this python to try scrape the json response data:
import requests
import json
headers = {
'Host': 'api2.drive-now.com',
'X-Api-Key': 'adf51226795afbc4e7575ccc124face7'
}
r = requests.get('https://api2.drive-now.com/cities/42756?expand=full', headers=headers)
json_obj = json.loads(r.content)
but I get this error:
hostname doesn't match either of 'activityharvester.com'
How I can retrieve this data?
Thanks
I have tried to call the endpoint that show json response using Postam, and passing into Header only Host and Api-Key. The result is the json that i want. But i i try the same call into python i recive the error hostname doesn't match either of 'activityharvester.com'
I don't understand your script, nor your question. Why two requests and three headers ? Did you mean something like this ?
import requests
import json
headers = {
'User-Agent': 'Mozilla/5.0',
'X-Api-Key':'adf51226795afbc4e7575ccc124face7',
}
res = requests.get('https://api2.drive-now.com/cities/4604?expand=full', headers=headers, allow_redirects=False)
print(res.status_code, res.reason)
json_obj = json.loads(res.content)
print(json_obj)
I'm performing a simple task of uploading a file using Python requests library. I searched Stack Overflow and no one seemed to have the same problem, namely, that the file is not received by the server:
import requests
url='http://nesssi.cacr.caltech.edu/cgi-bin/getmulticonedb_release2.cgi/post'
files={'files': open('file.txt','rb')}
values={'upload_file' : 'file.txt' , 'DB':'photcat' , 'OUT':'csv' , 'SHORT':'short'}
r=requests.post(url,files=files,data=values)
I'm filling the value of 'upload_file' keyword with my filename, because if I leave it blank, it says
Error - You must select a file to upload!
And now I get
File file.txt of size bytes is uploaded successfully!
Query service results: There were 0 lines.
Which comes up only if the file is empty. So I'm stuck as to how to send my file successfully. I know that the file works because if I go to this website and manually fill in the form it returns a nice list of matched objects, which is what I'm after. I'd really appreciate all hints.
Some other threads related (but not answering my problem):
Send file using POST from a Python script
http://docs.python-requests.org/en/latest/user/quickstart/#response-content
Uploading files using requests and send extra data
http://docs.python-requests.org/en/latest/user/advanced/#body-content-workflow
If upload_file is meant to be the file, use:
files = {'upload_file': open('file.txt','rb')}
values = {'DB': 'photcat', 'OUT': 'csv', 'SHORT': 'short'}
r = requests.post(url, files=files, data=values)
and requests will send a multi-part form POST body with the upload_file field set to the contents of the file.txt file.
The filename will be included in the mime header for the specific field:
>>> import requests
>>> open('file.txt', 'wb') # create an empty demo file
<_io.BufferedWriter name='file.txt'>
>>> files = {'upload_file': open('file.txt', 'rb')}
>>> print(requests.Request('POST', 'http://example.com', files=files).prepare().body.decode('ascii'))
--c226ce13d09842658ffbd31e0563c6bd
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="upload_file"; filename="file.txt"
--c226ce13d09842658ffbd31e0563c6bd--
Note the filename="file.txt" parameter.
You can use a tuple for the files mapping value, with between 2 and 4 elements, if you need more control. The first element is the filename, followed by the contents, and an optional content-type header value and an optional mapping of additional headers:
files = {'upload_file': ('foobar.txt', open('file.txt','rb'), 'text/x-spam')}
This sets an alternative filename and content type, leaving out the optional headers.
If you are meaning the whole POST body to be taken from a file (with no other fields specified), then don't use the files parameter, just post the file directly as data. You then may want to set a Content-Type header too, as none will be set otherwise. See Python requests - POST data from a file.
(2018) the new python requests library has simplified this process, we can use the 'files' variable to signal that we want to upload a multipart-encoded file
url = 'http://httpbin.org/post'
files = {'file': open('report.xls', 'rb')}
r = requests.post(url, files=files)
r.text
Client Upload
If you want to upload a single file with Python requests library, then requests lib supports streaming uploads, which allow you to send large files or streams without reading into memory.
with open('massive-body', 'rb') as f:
requests.post('http://some.url/streamed', data=f)
Server Side
Then store the file on the server.py side such that save the stream into file without loading into the memory. Following is an example with using Flask file uploads.
#app.route("/upload", methods=['POST'])
def upload_file():
from werkzeug.datastructures import FileStorage
FileStorage(request.stream).save(os.path.join(app.config['UPLOAD_FOLDER'], filename))
return 'OK', 200
Or use werkzeug Form Data Parsing as mentioned in a fix for the issue of "large file uploads eating up memory" in order to avoid using memory inefficiently on large files upload (s.t. 22 GiB file in ~60 seconds. Memory usage is constant at about 13 MiB.).
#app.route("/upload", methods=['POST'])
def upload_file():
def custom_stream_factory(total_content_length, filename, content_type, content_length=None):
import tempfile
tmpfile = tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile('wb+', prefix='flaskapp', suffix='.nc')
app.logger.info("start receiving file ... filename => " + str(tmpfile.name))
return tmpfile
import werkzeug, flask
stream, form, files = werkzeug.formparser.parse_form_data(flask.request.environ, stream_factory=custom_stream_factory)
for fil in files.values():
app.logger.info(" ".join(["saved form name", fil.name, "submitted as", fil.filename, "to temporary file", fil.stream.name]))
# Do whatever with stored file at `fil.stream.name`
return 'OK', 200
You can send any file via post api while calling the API just need to mention files={'any_key': fobj}
import requests
import json
url = "https://request-url.com"
headers = {"Content-Type": "application/json; charset=utf-8"}
with open(filepath, 'rb') as fobj:
response = requests.post(url, headers=headers, files={'file': fobj})
print("Status Code", response.status_code)
print("JSON Response ", response.json())
#martijn-pieters answer is correct, however I wanted to add a bit of context to data= and also to the other side, in the Flask server, in the case where you are trying to upload files and a JSON.
From the request side, this works as Martijn describes:
files = {'upload_file': open('file.txt','rb')}
values = {'DB': 'photcat', 'OUT': 'csv', 'SHORT': 'short'}
r = requests.post(url, files=files, data=values)
However, on the Flask side (the receiving webserver on the other side of this POST), I had to use form
#app.route("/sftp-upload", methods=["POST"])
def upload_file():
if request.method == "POST":
# the mimetype here isnt application/json
# see here: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20001229/how-to-get-posted-json-in-flask
body = request.form
print(body) # <- immutable dict
body = request.get_json() will return nothing. body = request.get_data() will return a blob containing lots of things like the filename etc.
Here's the bad part: on the client side, changing data={} to json={} results in this server not being able to read the KV pairs! As in, this will result in a {} body above:
r = requests.post(url, files=files, json=values). # No!
This is bad because the server does not have control over how the user formats the request; and json= is going to be the habbit of requests users.
Upload:
with open('file.txt', 'rb') as f:
files = {'upload_file': f.read()}
values = {'DB': 'photcat', 'OUT': 'csv', 'SHORT': 'short'}
r = requests.post(url, files=files, data=values)
Download (Django):
with open('file.txt', 'wb') as f:
f.write(request.FILES['upload_file'].file.read())
Regarding the answers given so far, there was always something missing that prevented it to work on my side. So let me show you what worked for me:
import json
import os
import requests
API_ENDPOINT = "http://localhost:80"
access_token = "sdfJHKsdfjJKHKJsdfJKHJKysdfJKHsdfJKHs" # TODO: get fresh Token here
def upload_engagement_file(filepath):
url = API_ENDPOINT + "/api/files" # add any URL parameters if needed
hdr = {"Authorization": "Bearer %s" % access_token}
with open(filepath, "rb") as fobj:
file_obj = fobj.read()
file_basename = os.path.basename(filepath)
file_to_upload = {"file": (str(file_basename), file_obj)}
finfo = {"fullPath": filepath}
upload_response = requests.post(url, headers=hdr, files=file_to_upload, data=finfo)
fobj.close()
# print("Status Code ", upload_response.status_code)
# print("JSON Response ", upload_response.json())
return upload_response
Note that requests.post(...) needs
a url parameter, containing the full URL of the API endpoint you're calling, using the API_ENDPOINT, assuming we have an http://localhost:8000/api/files endpoint to POST a file
a headers parameter, containing at least the authorization (bearer token)
a files parameter taking the name of the file plus the entire file content
a data parameter taking just the path and file name
Installation required (console):
pip install requests
What you get back from the function call is a response object containing a status code and also the full error message in JSON format. The commented print statements at the end of upload_engagement_file are showing you how you can access them.
Note: Some useful additional information about the requests library can be found here
Some may need to upload via a put request and this is slightly different that posting data. It is important to understand how the server expects the data in order to form a valid request. A frequent source of confusion is sending multipart-form data when it isn't accepted. This example uses basic auth and updates an image via a put request.
url = 'foobar.com/api/image-1'
basic = requests.auth.HTTPBasicAuth('someuser', 'password123')
# Setting the appropriate header is important and will vary based
# on what you upload
headers = {'Content-Type': 'image/png'}
with open('image-1.png', 'rb') as img_1:
r = requests.put(url, auth=basic, data=img_1, headers=headers)
While the requests library makes working with http requests a lot easier, some of its magic and convenience obscures just how to craft more nuanced requests.
In Ubuntu you can apply this way,
to save file at some location (temporary) and then open and send it to API
path = default_storage.save('static/tmp/' + f1.name, ContentFile(f1.read()))
path12 = os.path.join(os.getcwd(), "static/tmp/" + f1.name)
data={} #can be anything u want to pass along with File
file1 = open(path12, 'rb')
header = {"Content-Disposition": "attachment; filename=" + f1.name, "Authorization": "JWT " + token}
res= requests.post(url,data,header)
This question already has answers here:
Closed 12 years ago.
Possible Duplicate:
How do you send a HEAD HTTP request in Python?
I am using Python's urllib and urllib2 to do an automated login. I am also using HTTPCookieProcessor to automate the handling of the cookies. The code is somewhat like this:
o = urllib2.build_opener( urllib2.HTTPCookieProcessor() )
# assuming the site expects 'user' and 'pass' as query params
p = urllib.urlencode( { 'username': 'me', 'password': 'mypass' } )
# perform login with params
f = o.open( 'http://www.mysite.com/login/', p )
data = f.read()
f.close()
# second request
t = o.open( 'http://www.mysite.com/protected/area/' )
data = t.read()
t.close()
Now, the point is that I don't want to waste bandwidth in downloading the contents of http://www.mysite.com/login/, since all I want to do is receive the cookies (which are there in the Headers). Also, the site redirects me to http://www.mysite.com/userprofile when I first login (that is, the f.geturl() = http://www.mysite.com/userprofile).
So is there any way that I can avoid fetching the content in the first request?
P.S. Please don't ask me why am I avoiding the small network usage of transferring the content. Although the content is small, I still don't want to download it.
Just send a HEAD request instad of a GET request. You can use Python's httplib to do that.
Something like this:
import httplib, urllib
creds = urllib.urlencode({ 'username': 'me', 'password': 'mypass' });
connection = httplib.HTTPConnection("www.mysite.com")
connection.request("HEAD", "/login/", creds)
response = connection.getresponse()
print response.getheaders()