Configure proxy settings for requests encapsulated by cs in Python












0















For example in the requests library you can set proxy configuration explicitely.



With exoscale/cs (a Python client for Apache Cloud Stack) it does not work for me.



Environment variables are set correctly to locally meaningful values accepted locally in other contexts:



'http_proxy': 'x.x.x.x:nnn'


Error:



requests.exceptions.ProxyError: HTTPSConnectionPool(host='yyyy', port=443): 
Max retries exceeded with url: /portal/client


Observations so far:




  • Host to connect is yyyy:443

  • Proxy is xxxx:nnn (xxxxx is a valid DNS name)

  • Requests' error is a ProxyError but as message might be read, tries to connect to target hosts directly?

  • Wait, it seems like cs incorporates requests!


How to tell the encapsulated requests to to use proxy?










share|improve this question

























  • your code is same as this? proxies ={"https":"x.x.x.x:yyy"}

    – kcorlidy
    Nov 24 '18 at 4:02













  • how do you mean @kcorlidy? x.x.x.x in your example suggests to take an IP address; I have xxxx i.e. a valid DNS name. I tried to create a global Python variable proxies following your example but it does not work either.

    – J. Doe
    Nov 24 '18 at 4:44
















0















For example in the requests library you can set proxy configuration explicitely.



With exoscale/cs (a Python client for Apache Cloud Stack) it does not work for me.



Environment variables are set correctly to locally meaningful values accepted locally in other contexts:



'http_proxy': 'x.x.x.x:nnn'


Error:



requests.exceptions.ProxyError: HTTPSConnectionPool(host='yyyy', port=443): 
Max retries exceeded with url: /portal/client


Observations so far:




  • Host to connect is yyyy:443

  • Proxy is xxxx:nnn (xxxxx is a valid DNS name)

  • Requests' error is a ProxyError but as message might be read, tries to connect to target hosts directly?

  • Wait, it seems like cs incorporates requests!


How to tell the encapsulated requests to to use proxy?










share|improve this question

























  • your code is same as this? proxies ={"https":"x.x.x.x:yyy"}

    – kcorlidy
    Nov 24 '18 at 4:02













  • how do you mean @kcorlidy? x.x.x.x in your example suggests to take an IP address; I have xxxx i.e. a valid DNS name. I tried to create a global Python variable proxies following your example but it does not work either.

    – J. Doe
    Nov 24 '18 at 4:44














0












0








0








For example in the requests library you can set proxy configuration explicitely.



With exoscale/cs (a Python client for Apache Cloud Stack) it does not work for me.



Environment variables are set correctly to locally meaningful values accepted locally in other contexts:



'http_proxy': 'x.x.x.x:nnn'


Error:



requests.exceptions.ProxyError: HTTPSConnectionPool(host='yyyy', port=443): 
Max retries exceeded with url: /portal/client


Observations so far:




  • Host to connect is yyyy:443

  • Proxy is xxxx:nnn (xxxxx is a valid DNS name)

  • Requests' error is a ProxyError but as message might be read, tries to connect to target hosts directly?

  • Wait, it seems like cs incorporates requests!


How to tell the encapsulated requests to to use proxy?










share|improve this question
















For example in the requests library you can set proxy configuration explicitely.



With exoscale/cs (a Python client for Apache Cloud Stack) it does not work for me.



Environment variables are set correctly to locally meaningful values accepted locally in other contexts:



'http_proxy': 'x.x.x.x:nnn'


Error:



requests.exceptions.ProxyError: HTTPSConnectionPool(host='yyyy', port=443): 
Max retries exceeded with url: /portal/client


Observations so far:




  • Host to connect is yyyy:443

  • Proxy is xxxx:nnn (xxxxx is a valid DNS name)

  • Requests' error is a ProxyError but as message might be read, tries to connect to target hosts directly?

  • Wait, it seems like cs incorporates requests!


How to tell the encapsulated requests to to use proxy?







python python-requests encapsulation






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 24 '18 at 4:42







J. Doe

















asked Nov 24 '18 at 3:42









J. DoeJ. Doe

281114




281114













  • your code is same as this? proxies ={"https":"x.x.x.x:yyy"}

    – kcorlidy
    Nov 24 '18 at 4:02













  • how do you mean @kcorlidy? x.x.x.x in your example suggests to take an IP address; I have xxxx i.e. a valid DNS name. I tried to create a global Python variable proxies following your example but it does not work either.

    – J. Doe
    Nov 24 '18 at 4:44



















  • your code is same as this? proxies ={"https":"x.x.x.x:yyy"}

    – kcorlidy
    Nov 24 '18 at 4:02













  • how do you mean @kcorlidy? x.x.x.x in your example suggests to take an IP address; I have xxxx i.e. a valid DNS name. I tried to create a global Python variable proxies following your example but it does not work either.

    – J. Doe
    Nov 24 '18 at 4:44

















your code is same as this? proxies ={"https":"x.x.x.x:yyy"}

– kcorlidy
Nov 24 '18 at 4:02







your code is same as this? proxies ={"https":"x.x.x.x:yyy"}

– kcorlidy
Nov 24 '18 at 4:02















how do you mean @kcorlidy? x.x.x.x in your example suggests to take an IP address; I have xxxx i.e. a valid DNS name. I tried to create a global Python variable proxies following your example but it does not work either.

– J. Doe
Nov 24 '18 at 4:44





how do you mean @kcorlidy? x.x.x.x in your example suggests to take an IP address; I have xxxx i.e. a valid DNS name. I tried to create a global Python variable proxies following your example but it does not work either.

– J. Doe
Nov 24 '18 at 4:44












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As it seems, requesrts does parse OS environment variables.



% export http_proxy="http://hello.test"                                
% python -c "import urllib.request; print(urllib.request.getproxies())"
{'http': 'http://hello.test'}





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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
    1






    active

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    active

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    As it seems, requesrts does parse OS environment variables.



    % export http_proxy="http://hello.test"                                
    % python -c "import urllib.request; print(urllib.request.getproxies())"
    {'http': 'http://hello.test'}





    share|improve this answer




























      0














      As it seems, requesrts does parse OS environment variables.



      % export http_proxy="http://hello.test"                                
      % python -c "import urllib.request; print(urllib.request.getproxies())"
      {'http': 'http://hello.test'}





      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        As it seems, requesrts does parse OS environment variables.



        % export http_proxy="http://hello.test"                                
        % python -c "import urllib.request; print(urllib.request.getproxies())"
        {'http': 'http://hello.test'}





        share|improve this answer













        As it seems, requesrts does parse OS environment variables.



        % export http_proxy="http://hello.test"                                
        % python -c "import urllib.request; print(urllib.request.getproxies())"
        {'http': 'http://hello.test'}






        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 28 '18 at 5:38









        J. DoeJ. Doe

        281114




        281114
































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