Reputation: 2881
I want to make an HTTPS request to a real-time stream and keep the connection open so that I can keep reading content from it and processing it.
I want to write the script in python. I am unsure how to keep the connection open in my script. I have tested the endpoint with curl which keeps the connection open successfully. But how do I do it in Python. Currently, I have the following code:
c = httplib.HTTPSConnection('userstream.twitter.com')
c.request("GET", "/2/user.json?" + req.to_postdata())
response = c.getresponse()
Where do I go from here?
Thanks!
Upvotes: 0
Views: 3505
Reputation: 28676
httplib2 supports this. (I'd have thought this the most mature option, didn't know urllib3 yet, so TokenMacGuy may still be right)
EDIT: while httplib2 does support persistent connections, I don't think you can really consume streams with it (ie. one long response vs. multiple requests over the same connection), which I now realise you may need.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 23479
It looks like your real-time stream is delivered as one endless HTTP GET response, yes? If so, you could just use python's built-in urllib2.urlopen(). It returns a file-like object, from which you can read as much as you want until the server hangs up on you.
f=urllib2.urlopen('https://encrypted.google.com/')
while True:
data = f.read(100)
print(data)
Keep in mind that although urllib2 speaks https, it doesn't validate server certificates, so you might want to try and add-on package like pycurl or urlgrabber for better security. (I'm not sure if urlgrabber supports https.)
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 156188
Connection keep-alive features are not available in any of the python standard libraries for https. The most mature option is probably urllib3
Upvotes: 1