I've implemented a Pivotal Tracker API module in Python 2.7. The Pivotal Tracker API expects POST data to be an XML document and "application/xml" to be the content type.
My code uses urlib/httplib to post the document as shown:
request = urllib2.Request(self.url, xml_request.toxml('utf-8') if xml_request else None, self.headers)
obj = parse_xml(self.opener.open(request))
This yields an exception when the XML text contains non-ASCII characters:
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/httplib.py", line 951, in endheaders
self._send_output(message_body)
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/httplib.py", line 809, in _send_output
msg += message_body
exceptions.UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xc5 in position 89: ordinal not in range(128)
As near as I can see, httplib._send_output is creating an ASCII string for the message payload, presumably because it expects the data to be URL encoded (application/x-www-form-urlencoded). It works fine with application/xml as long as only ASCII characters are used.
Is there a straightforward way to post application/xml data containing non-ASCII characters or am I going to have to jump through hoops (e.g. using Twistd and a custom producer for the POST payload)?
You're mixing Unicode and bytestrings.
>>> msg = u'abc' # Unicode string
>>> message_body = b'\xc5' # bytestring
>>> msg += message_body
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<input>", line 1, in <module>
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xc5 in position 0: ordinal \
not in range(128)
To fix it, make sure that self.headers
content is properly encoded i.e., all keys, values in the headers
should be bytestrings:
self.headers = dict((k.encode('ascii') if isinstance(k, unicode) else k,
v.encode('ascii') if isinstance(v, unicode) else v)
for k,v in self.headers.items())
Note: character encoding of the headers has nothing to do with a character encoding of a body i.e., xml text can be encoded independently (it is just an octet stream from http message's point of view).
The same goes for self.url
—if it has the unicode
type; convert it to a bytestring (using 'ascii' character encoding).
HTTP message consists of a start-line, "headers", an empty line and possibly a message-body so self.headers
is used for headers, self.url
is used for start-line (http method goes here) and probably for Host
http header (if client is http/1.1), XML text goes to message body (as binary blob).
It is always safe to use ASCII encoding for self.url
(IDNA can be used for non-ascii domain names—the result is also ASCII).
Here's what rfc 7230 says about http headers character encoding:
Historically, HTTP has allowed field content with text in the
ISO-8859-1 charset [ISO-8859-1], supporting other charsets only
through use of [RFC2047] encoding. In practice, most HTTP header
field values use only a subset of the US-ASCII charset [USASCII].
Newly defined header fields SHOULD limit their field values to
US-ASCII octets. A recipient SHOULD treat other octets in field
content (obs-text) as opaque data.
To convert XML to a bytestring, see application/xml
encoding condsiderations:
The use of UTF-8, without a BOM, is RECOMMENDED for all XML MIME entities.
Check if the self.url
is unicode. If it is unicode, then httplib
will treat the data as unicode.
you could force encode self.url to unicode, then httplib will treat all data as unicode
Same as JF Sebastian answer, but I'm adding a new one so the code formatting works (and is more google-able)
Here's what happens if you're trying to tag on to the end of a mechanize form request:
br = mechanize.Browser()
br.select_form(nr=0)
br['form_thingy'] = u"Wonderful"
headers = dict((k.encode('ascii') if isinstance(k, unicode) else k, v.encode('ascii') if isinstance(v, unicode) else v) for k,v in br.request.headers.items())
br.addheaders = headers
req = br.submit()
There are 3 things to be covered here
- Non Unicode string + Unicode string, the result will be converted into a Unicode string automatically.
- Python 2.7 httplib, simply uses + to join header with body which I don't think is a good practice, we should not trust the automatic type converting. but Python 2.6 httplib is different.
- HTTP protocol standard suggests ISO-8859-1 encoding for header, but if you want to put non ISO-8859-1 characters, you have to encode it as rfc2047 described
The simple solution is to strictly encoding both header and body to utf-8 before sending out.