http.server
— HTTP servers¶Source code: Lib/http/server.py
This module defines classes for implementing HTTP servers (Web servers).
One class, HTTPServer
, is a socketserver.TCPServer
subclass.
It creates and listens at the HTTP socket, dispatching the requests to a
handler. Code to create and run the server looks like this:
def run(server_class=HTTPServer, handler_class=BaseHTTPRequestHandler):
server_address = ('', 8000)
httpd = server_class(server_address, handler_class)
httpd.serve_forever()
http.server.
HTTPServer
(server_address, RequestHandlerClass)¶This class builds on the TCPServer
class by storing
the server address as instance variables named server_name
and
server_port
. The server is accessible by the handler, typically
through the handler’s server
instance variable.
The HTTPServer
must be given a RequestHandlerClass on instantiation,
of which this module provides three different variants:
http.server.
BaseHTTPRequestHandler
(request, client_address, server)¶This class is used to handle the HTTP requests that arrive at the server. By
itself, it cannot respond to any actual HTTP requests; it must be subclassed
to handle each request method (e.g. GET or POST).
BaseHTTPRequestHandler
provides a number of class and instance
variables, and methods for use by subclasses.
The handler will parse the request and the headers, then call a method
specific to the request type. The method name is constructed from the
request. For example, for the request method SPAM
, the do_SPAM()
method will be called with no arguments. All of the relevant information is
stored in instance variables of the handler. Subclasses should not need to
override or extend the __init__()
method.
BaseHTTPRequestHandler
has the following instance variables:
client_address
¶Contains a tuple of the form (host, port)
referring to the client’s
address.
server
¶Contains the server instance.
close_connection
¶Boolean that should be set before handle_one_request()
returns,
indicating if another request may be expected, or if the connection should
be shut down.
requestline
¶Contains the string representation of the HTTP request line. The
terminating CRLF is stripped. This attribute should be set by
handle_one_request()
. If no valid request line was processed, it
should be set to the empty string.
command
¶Contains the command (request type). For example, 'GET'
.
path
¶Contains the request path.
request_version
¶Contains the version string from the request. For example, 'HTTP/1.0'
.
headers
¶Holds an instance of the class specified by the MessageClass
class
variable. This instance parses and manages the headers in the HTTP
request. The parse_headers()
function from
http.client
is used to parse the headers and it requires that the
HTTP request provide a valid RFC 2822 style header.
rfile
¶An io.BufferedIOBase
input stream, ready to read from
the start of the optional input data.
wfile
¶Contains the output stream for writing a response back to the client. Proper adherence to the HTTP protocol must be used when writing to this stream.
Changed in version 3.6: This is an io.BufferedIOBase
stream.
BaseHTTPRequestHandler
has the following attributes:
server_version
¶Specifies the server software version. You may want to override this. The
format is multiple whitespace-separated strings, where each string is of
the form name[/version]. For example, 'BaseHTTP/0.2'
.
sys_version
¶Contains the Python system version, in a form usable by the
version_string
method and the server_version
class
variable. For example, 'Python/1.4'
.
error_message_format
¶Specifies a format string that should be used by send_error()
method
for building an error response to the client. The string is filled by
default with variables from responses
based on the status code
that passed to send_error()
.
error_content_type
¶Specifies the Content-Type HTTP header of error responses sent to the
client. The default value is 'text/html'
.
protocol_version
¶This specifies the HTTP protocol version used in responses. If set to
'HTTP/1.1'
, the server will permit HTTP persistent connections;
however, your server must then include an accurate Content-Length
header (using send_header()
) in all of its responses to clients.
For backwards compatibility, the setting defaults to 'HTTP/1.0'
.
MessageClass
¶Specifies an email.message.Message
-like class to parse HTTP
headers. Typically, this is not overridden, and it defaults to
http.client.HTTPMessage
.
responses
¶This attribute contains a mapping of error code integers to two-element tuples
containing a short and long message. For example, {code: (shortmessage,
longmessage)}
. The shortmessage is usually used as the message key in an
error response, and longmessage as the explain key. It is used by
send_response_only()
and send_error()
methods.
A BaseHTTPRequestHandler
instance has the following methods:
handle
()¶Calls handle_one_request()
once (or, if persistent connections are
enabled, multiple times) to handle incoming HTTP requests. You should
never need to override it; instead, implement appropriate do_*()
methods.
handle_one_request
()¶This method will parse and dispatch the request to the appropriate
do_*()
method. You should never need to override it.
handle_expect_100
()¶When a HTTP/1.1 compliant server receives an Expect: 100-continue
request header it responds back with a 100 Continue
followed by 200
OK
headers.
This method can be overridden to raise an error if the server does not
want the client to continue. For e.g. server can chose to send 417
Expectation Failed
as a response header and return False
.
New in version 3.2.
send_error
(code, message=None, explain=None)¶Sends and logs a complete error reply to the client. The numeric code
specifies the HTTP error code, with message as an optional, short, human
readable description of the error. The explain argument can be used to
provide more detailed information about the error; it will be formatted
using the error_message_format
attribute and emitted, after
a complete set of headers, as the response body. The responses
attribute holds the default values for message and explain that
will be used if no value is provided; for unknown codes the default value
for both is the string ???
. The body will be empty if the method is
HEAD or the response code is one of the following: 1xx
,
204 No Content
, 205 Reset Content
, 304 Not Modified
.
Changed in version 3.4: The error response includes a Content-Length header. Added the explain argument.
send_response
(code, message=None)¶Adds a response header to the headers buffer and logs the accepted
request. The HTTP response line is written to the internal buffer,
followed by Server and Date headers. The values for these two headers
are picked up from the version_string()
and
date_time_string()
methods, respectively. If the server does not
intend to send any other headers using the send_header()
method,
then send_response()
should be followed by an end_headers()
call.
Changed in version 3.3: Headers are stored to an internal buffer and end_headers()
needs to be called explicitly.
send_header
(keyword, value)¶Adds the HTTP header to an internal buffer which will be written to the
output stream when either end_headers()
or flush_headers()
is
invoked. keyword should specify the header keyword, with value
specifying its value. Note that, after the send_header calls are done,
end_headers()
MUST BE called in order to complete the operation.
Changed in version 3.2: Headers are stored in an internal buffer.
send_response_only
(code, message=None)¶Sends the response header only, used for the purposes when 100
Continue
response is sent by the server to the client. The headers not
buffered and sent directly the output stream.If the message is not
specified, the HTTP message corresponding the response code is sent.
New in version 3.2.
end_headers
()¶Adds a blank line
(indicating the end of the HTTP headers in the response)
to the headers buffer and calls flush_headers()
.
Changed in version 3.2: The buffered headers are written to the output stream.
flush_headers
()¶Finally send the headers to the output stream and flush the internal headers buffer.
New in version 3.3.
log_request
(code='-', size='-')¶Logs an accepted (successful) request. code should specify the numeric HTTP code associated with the response. If a size of the response is available, then it should be passed as the size parameter.
log_error
(...)¶Logs an error when a request cannot be fulfilled. By default, it passes
the message to log_message()
, so it takes the same arguments
(format and additional values).
log_message
(format, ...)¶Logs an arbitrary message to sys.stderr
. This is typically overridden
to create custom error logging mechanisms. The format argument is a
standard printf-style format string, where the additional arguments to
log_message()
are applied as inputs to the formatting. The client
ip address and current date and time are prefixed to every message logged.
version_string
()¶Returns the server software’s version string. This is a combination of the
server_version
and sys_version
attributes.
date_time_string
(timestamp=None)¶Returns the date and time given by timestamp (which must be None
or in
the format returned by time.time()
), formatted for a message
header. If timestamp is omitted, it uses the current date and time.
The result looks like 'Sun, 06 Nov 1994 08:49:37 GMT'
.
log_date_time_string
()¶Returns the current date and time, formatted for logging.
address_string
()¶Returns the client address.
Changed in version 3.3: Previously, a name lookup was performed. To avoid name resolution delays, it now always returns the IP address.
http.server.
SimpleHTTPRequestHandler
(request, client_address, server)¶This class serves files from the current directory and below, directly mapping the directory structure to HTTP requests.
A lot of the work, such as parsing the request, is done by the base class
BaseHTTPRequestHandler
. This class implements the do_GET()
and do_HEAD()
functions.
The following are defined as class-level attributes of
SimpleHTTPRequestHandler
:
server_version
¶This will be "SimpleHTTP/" + __version__
, where __version__
is
defined at the module level.
extensions_map
¶A dictionary mapping suffixes into MIME types. The default is
signified by an empty string, and is considered to be
application/octet-stream
. The mapping is used case-insensitively,
and so should contain only lower-cased keys.
The SimpleHTTPRequestHandler
class defines the following methods:
do_HEAD
()¶This method serves the 'HEAD'
request type: it sends the headers it
would send for the equivalent GET
request. See the do_GET()
method for a more complete explanation of the possible headers.
do_GET
()¶The request is mapped to a local file by interpreting the request as a path relative to the current working directory.
If the request was mapped to a directory, the directory is checked for a
file named index.html
or index.htm
(in that order). If found, the
file’s contents are returned; otherwise a directory listing is generated
by calling the list_directory()
method. This method uses
os.listdir()
to scan the directory, and returns a 404
error
response if the listdir()
fails.
If the request was mapped to a file, it is opened and the contents are
returned. Any OSError
exception in opening the requested file is
mapped to a 404
, 'File not found'
error. Otherwise, the content
type is guessed by calling the guess_type()
method, which in turn
uses the extensions_map variable.
A 'Content-type:'
header with the guessed content type is output,
followed by a 'Content-Length:'
header with the file’s size and a
'Last-Modified:'
header with the file’s modification time.
Then follows a blank line signifying the end of the headers, and then the
contents of the file are output. If the file’s MIME type starts with
text/
the file is opened in text mode; otherwise binary mode is used.
For example usage, see the implementation of the test()
function
invocation in the http.server
module.
The SimpleHTTPRequestHandler
class can be used in the following
manner in order to create a very basic webserver serving files relative to
the current directory:
import http.server
import socketserver
PORT = 8000
Handler = http.server.SimpleHTTPRequestHandler
with socketserver.TCPServer(("", PORT), Handler) as httpd:
print("serving at port", PORT)
httpd.serve_forever()
http.server
can also be invoked directly using the -m
switch of the interpreter with a port number
argument. Similar to
the previous example, this serves files relative to the current directory:
python -m http.server 8000
By default, server binds itself to all interfaces. The option -b/--bind
specifies a specific address to which it should bind. For example, the
following command causes the server to bind to localhost only:
python -m http.server 8000 --bind 127.0.0.1
New in version 3.4: --bind
argument was introduced.
http.server.
CGIHTTPRequestHandler
(request, client_address, server)¶This class is used to serve either files or output of CGI scripts from the
current directory and below. Note that mapping HTTP hierarchic structure to
local directory structure is exactly as in SimpleHTTPRequestHandler
.
Note
CGI scripts run by the CGIHTTPRequestHandler
class cannot execute
redirects (HTTP code 302), because code 200 (script output follows) is
sent prior to execution of the CGI script. This pre-empts the status
code.
The class will however, run the CGI script, instead of serving it as a file, if it guesses it to be a CGI script. Only directory-based CGI are used — the other common server configuration is to treat special extensions as denoting CGI scripts.
The do_GET()
and do_HEAD()
functions are modified to run CGI scripts
and serve the output, instead of serving files, if the request leads to
somewhere below the cgi_directories
path.
The CGIHTTPRequestHandler
defines the following data member:
cgi_directories
¶This defaults to ['/cgi-bin', '/htbin']
and describes directories to
treat as containing CGI scripts.
The CGIHTTPRequestHandler
defines the following method:
do_POST
()¶This method serves the 'POST'
request type, only allowed for CGI
scripts. Error 501, “Can only POST to CGI scripts”, is output when trying
to POST to a non-CGI url.
Note that CGI scripts will be run with UID of user nobody, for security reasons. Problems with the CGI script will be translated to error 403.
CGIHTTPRequestHandler
can be enabled in the command line by passing
the --cgi
option:
python -m http.server --cgi 8000