Reputation: 213
I'm trying to convert the following working request in curl to a python request (using Requests).
curl --data 'query={"tags":["test1","test2"]}' http://www.test.com/match
(I've used a fake url but the command does work with the real url)
The receiving end (ran in Flask) does this:
@app.route("/match", methods=['POST'])
def tagmatch():
query = json.loads(request.form['query'])
tags = query.get('tags')
# ... does stuff ...
return json.dump(stuff)
In curl (7.30), ran on Mac OS X (10.9) the command above properly returns a JSON list that's filtered using the tag query.
My Python script is as follows, it returns a 400 Bad Request error.
import requests
payload = {"tags":["test1", "test2"]}
# also tried payload = 'query={"tags":["test1","test2"]}'
url = 'http://www.test.com/match'
r = requests.post(url, data=payload)
if __name__=='__main__':
print(r.text)
Upvotes: 21
Views: 45526
Reputation: 12878
There is an open source cURL to Python Requests conversion helper at https://curlconverter.com/. It isn't perfect, but helps out a lot of the time. Especially for converting Chrome "Copy as cURL" commands. There is also a node library if you need to do the conversions programmatically
Upvotes: 41
Reputation: 20921
Try to use uncurl library. It is pretty nice to do its job. I've tried it.
u = uncurl.parse(
"curl -X GET 'https://mytesturl.com/' -H 'accept: application/json' -H 'Authorization: 1234567890'")
print(u)
It prints,
requests.get("https://mytesturl.com/",
headers={
"Authorization": "1234567890",
"accept": "application/json"
},
cookies={},
)
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 593
Save your life
A simpler approach would be:
Hope this helps!
credit: Onkaar Singh
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 1593
try this:
https://github.com/spulec/uncurl
import uncurl
print uncurl.parse("curl 'https://pypi.python.org/pypi/uncurl' -H
'Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate,sdch'")
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 499
I wrote an HTTP client plugin for Sublime Text called Requester, and one of its features is to convert calls to cURL to Requests, and vice versa.
If you're using Sublime Text this is probably your fastest, easiest option. If not, here's the code that actually handles the conversion from cURL to Requests. It's based uncurl, but with various improvements and bug fixes.
import argparse
import json
try:
from urllib.parse import urlencode, parse_qsl
except ImportError: # works for Python 2 and 3
from urllib import urlencode
from urlparse import parse_qsl
if __name__ == "__main__":
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('command')
parser.add_argument('url')
parser.add_argument('-X', '--request', default=None)
parser.add_argument('-d', '--data', default=None)
parser.add_argument('-G', '--get', action='store_true', default=False)
parser.add_argument('-b', '--cookie', default=None)
parser.add_argument('-H', '--header', action='append', default=[])
parser.add_argument('-A', '--user-agent', default=None)
parser.add_argument('--data-binary', default=None)
parser.add_argument('--compressed', action='store_true')
parsed_args = parser.parse_args()
method = 'get'
if parsed_args.request:
method = parsed_args.request
base_indent = ' ' * 4
post_data = parsed_args.data or parsed_args.data_binary or ''
if post_data:
if not parsed_args.request:
method = 'post'
try:
post_data = json.loads(post_data)
except ValueError:
try:
post_data = dict(parse_qsl(post_data))
except:
pass
cookies_dict = {}
if parsed_args.cookie:
cookies = parsed_args.cookie.split(';')
for cookie in cookies:
key, value = cookie.strip().split('=')
cookies_dict[key] = value
data_arg = 'data'
headers_dict = {}
for header in parsed_args.header:
key, value = header.split(':', 1)
if key.lower().strip() == 'content-type' and value.lower().strip() == 'application/json':
data_arg = 'json'
if key.lower() == 'cookie':
cookies = value.split(';')
for cookie in cookies:
key, value = cookie.strip().split('=')
cookies_dict[key] = value
else:
headers_dict[key] = value.strip()
if parsed_args.user_agent:
headers_dict['User-Agent'] = parsed_args.user_agent
qs = ''
if parsed_args.get:
method = 'get'
try:
qs = '?{}'.format(urlencode(post_data))
except:
qs = '?{}'.format(str(post_data))
print(post_data)
post_data = {}
result = """requests.{method}('{url}{qs}',{data}\n{headers},\n{cookies},\n)""".format(
method=method.lower(),
url=parsed_args.url,
qs=qs,
data='\n{}{}={},'.format(base_indent, data_arg, post_data) if post_data else '',
headers='{}headers={}'.format(base_indent, headers_dict),
cookies='{}cookies={}'.format(base_indent, cookies_dict),
)
print(result)
You could make a script with this code, e.g. curl_to_request.py
, and call this script from the command line like so. It will work for both Python 2 and Python 3.
python curl_to_request.py curl -X POST -d 'key2=value2&key1=value1' 'http://httpbin.org/post'
python curl_to_request.py curl -X POST -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '{"key2": "value2", "key1": "value1"}' 'http://httpbin.org/post'
python curl_to_request.py curl -X POST -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '[1, 2, 3]' 'http://httpbin.org/post'
python curl_to_request.py curl -X POST -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '{"name": "Jimbo", "age": 35, "married": false, "hobbies": ["wiki", "pedia"]}' 'http://httpbin.org/post'
python curl_to_request.py curl -X GET 'http://httpbin.org/get?key2=value2&key1=value1'
python curl_to_request.py curl -X GET -H 'key1: value1' -H 'key2: value2' 'http://httpbin.org/headers'
python curl_to_request.py curl -X GET -b 'key1=value1;key2=value2' 'http://httpbin.org/cookies'
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 15558
Your server is expecting JSON, but you aren't sending it. Try this:
import requests
import json
payload = {'query': json.dumps({"tags":["test1", "test2"]})}
url = 'http://www.test.com/match'
r = requests.post(url, data=payload)
if __name__=='__main__':
print r.text
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 9826
From your code using requests
and in Flask, it seems like you don't post the right data format. The payload should be like this:
payload = {'query': {'tags': ['test1', 'test2']},}
This seems not normal as post data when using requests.post()
. So if you have posted the html form here, it may have been more clear to solve the problem.
Here is another similar question: Using Python Requests to pass through a login/password
Upvotes: 0