I am trying to hit the Bitbucket API for my account, and a successful attempt looks like:
curl --user screename:mypassword
https://api.bitbucket.org/1.0/user/repositories
in the command line. In python, I try:
import requests
s = requests.session()
url = 'https://api.bitbucket.org/1.0/user/repositories'
then
r = requests.post(url, data={'username': myscreename, 'password':mypassword})
and
r = requests.post(url, data="myscreename:mypassword")
and
r = requests.post(url, data={"user": "myscreename:mypassword"})
all get 405 error. The API is https://confluence.atlassian.com/display/BITBUCKET/Use+the+Bitbucket+REST+APIs
I wonder:
What am I doing wrong in the requests version, they all look similar to my curl attempt
What is the difference between requesting with curl and python requests module? What general pattern can I recognize when reading an API with a curl example and then writing it in python?
Thank you
ANSWER:
it required the right headers
https://answers.atlassian.com/questions/18451025/answers/18451117?flashId=-982194107
UPDATE:
# ===============
# get user
# ===============
import requests
import json
# [BITBUCKET-BASE-URL], i.e.: https://bitbucket.org/
url = '[BITBUCKET-BASE-URL]/api/1.0/user/'
headers = {'Content-Type': 'application/json'}
# get user
# [USERNAME], i.e.: myuser
# [PASSWORD], i.e.: itspassword
r = requests.get(url, auth=('[USERNAME]', '[PASSWORD]'), headers=headers)
print(r.status_code)
print(r.text)
#print(r.content)
Here's a way to do basic HTTP auth with Python's requests module:
With the other way you're passing the user/pass through the request's payload, which is not desired since HTTP basic auth has its own place in the HTTP protocol.
If you want to "see" what's happening under the hood with your request I recommend using httpbin:
And with curl:
Notice the resemblance between the last python example and the cURL one.
Now, getting right the API's format is another story, check out this link: https://answers.atlassian.com/questions/94245/can-i-create-a-bitbucket-repository-using-rest-api
The python way should be something like this: