Configure proxy settings for requests encapsulated by cs in Python
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
incorporatesrequests
!
How to tell the encapsulated requests
to to use proxy?
python python-requests encapsulation
add a comment |
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
incorporatesrequests
!
How to tell the encapsulated requests
to to use proxy?
python python-requests encapsulation
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 havexxxx
i.e. a valid DNS name. I tried to create a global Python variableproxies
following your example but it does not work either.
– J. Doe
Nov 24 '18 at 4:44
add a comment |
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
incorporatesrequests
!
How to tell the encapsulated requests
to to use proxy?
python python-requests encapsulation
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
incorporatesrequests
!
How to tell the encapsulated requests
to to use proxy?
python python-requests encapsulation
python python-requests encapsulation
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 havexxxx
i.e. a valid DNS name. I tried to create a global Python variableproxies
following your example but it does not work either.
– J. Doe
Nov 24 '18 at 4:44
add a comment |
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 havexxxx
i.e. a valid DNS name. I tried to create a global Python variableproxies
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
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
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'}
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
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oldest
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votes
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'}
add a comment |
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'}
add a comment |
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'}
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'}
answered Nov 28 '18 at 5:38
J. DoeJ. Doe
281114
281114
add a comment |
add a comment |
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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 havexxxx
i.e. a valid DNS name. I tried to create a global Python variableproxies
following your example but it does not work either.– J. Doe
Nov 24 '18 at 4:44