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requests toolbelt

This is just a collection of utilities for python-requests, but don't really belong in requests proper. The minimum tested requests version is 2.1.0. In reality, the toolbelt should work with 2.0.1 as well, but some idiosyncracies prevent effective or sane testing on that version.

multipart/form-data Encoder

The main attraction is a streaming multipart form-data object, MultipartEncoder. Its API looks like this:

from requests_toolbelt import MultipartEncoder
import requests

m = MultipartEncoder(
    fields={'field0': 'value', 'field1': 'value',
            'field2': ('filename', open('file.py', 'rb'), 'text/plain')}
    )

r = requests.post('http://httpbin.org/post', data=m,
                  headers={'Content-Type': m.content_type})

You can also use multipart/form-data encoding for requests that don't require files:

from requests_toolbelt import MultipartEncoder
import requests

m = MultipartEncoder(fields={'field0': 'value', 'field1': 'value'})

r = requests.post('http://httpbin.org/post', data=m,
                  headers={'Content-Type': m.content_type})

Or, you can just create the string and examine the data:

# Assuming `m` is one of the above
m.to_string()  # Always returns unicode

User-Agent constructor

You can easily construct a requests-style User-Agent string:

from requests_toolbelt import user_agent

headers = {
    'User-Agent': user_agent('my_package', '0.0.1')
    }

r = requests.get('https://api.github.com/users', headers=headers)

SSLAdapter

The SSLAdapter was originally published on Cory Benfield's blog. This adapter allows the user to choose one of the SSL protocols made available in Python's ssl module for outgoing HTTPS connections:

from requests_toolbelt import SSLAdapter
import requests
import ssl

s = requests.Session()
s.mount('https://', SSLAdapter(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLSv1))

Known Issues

On Python 3.3.0 and 3.3.1, the standard library's http module will fail when passing an instance of the MultipartEncoder. This is fixed in later minor releases of Python 3.3. Please consider upgrading to a later minor version or Python 3.4. There is absolutely nothing this library can do to work around that bug.