Skip to content

connection

DummyConnection

Bases: object

Used to detect a failed ConnectionCls import.

Source code in client/ayon_fusion/vendor/urllib3/connection.py
529
530
531
532
class DummyConnection(object):
    """Used to detect a failed ConnectionCls import."""

    pass

HTTPConnection

Bases: HTTPConnection, object

Based on :class:http.client.HTTPConnection but provides an extra constructor backwards-compatibility layer between older and newer Pythons.

Additional keyword parameters are used to configure attributes of the connection. Accepted parameters include:

  • strict: See the documentation on :class:urllib3.connectionpool.HTTPConnectionPool
  • source_address: Set the source address for the current connection.
  • socket_options: Set specific options on the underlying socket. If not specified, then defaults are loaded from HTTPConnection.default_socket_options which includes disabling Nagle's algorithm (sets TCP_NODELAY to 1) unless the connection is behind a proxy.

For example, if you wish to enable TCP Keep Alive in addition to the defaults, you might pass:

.. code-block:: python

 HTTPConnection.default_socket_options + [
     (socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_KEEPALIVE, 1),
 ]

Or you may want to disable the defaults by passing an empty list (e.g., []).

Source code in client/ayon_fusion/vendor/urllib3/connection.py
 75
 76
 77
 78
 79
 80
 81
 82
 83
 84
 85
 86
 87
 88
 89
 90
 91
 92
 93
 94
 95
 96
 97
 98
 99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
class HTTPConnection(_HTTPConnection, object):
    """
    Based on :class:`http.client.HTTPConnection` but provides an extra constructor
    backwards-compatibility layer between older and newer Pythons.

    Additional keyword parameters are used to configure attributes of the connection.
    Accepted parameters include:

    - ``strict``: See the documentation on :class:`urllib3.connectionpool.HTTPConnectionPool`
    - ``source_address``: Set the source address for the current connection.
    - ``socket_options``: Set specific options on the underlying socket. If not specified, then
      defaults are loaded from ``HTTPConnection.default_socket_options`` which includes disabling
      Nagle's algorithm (sets TCP_NODELAY to 1) unless the connection is behind a proxy.

      For example, if you wish to enable TCP Keep Alive in addition to the defaults,
      you might pass:

      .. code-block:: python

         HTTPConnection.default_socket_options + [
             (socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_KEEPALIVE, 1),
         ]

      Or you may want to disable the defaults by passing an empty list (e.g., ``[]``).
    """

    default_port = port_by_scheme["http"]

    #: Disable Nagle's algorithm by default.
    #: ``[(socket.IPPROTO_TCP, socket.TCP_NODELAY, 1)]``
    default_socket_options = [(socket.IPPROTO_TCP, socket.TCP_NODELAY, 1)]

    #: Whether this connection verifies the host's certificate.
    is_verified = False

    def __init__(self, *args, **kw):
        if not six.PY2:
            kw.pop("strict", None)

        # Pre-set source_address.
        self.source_address = kw.get("source_address")

        #: The socket options provided by the user. If no options are
        #: provided, we use the default options.
        self.socket_options = kw.pop("socket_options", self.default_socket_options)

        # Proxy options provided by the user.
        self.proxy = kw.pop("proxy", None)
        self.proxy_config = kw.pop("proxy_config", None)

        _HTTPConnection.__init__(self, *args, **kw)

    @property
    def host(self):
        """
        Getter method to remove any trailing dots that indicate the hostname is an FQDN.

        In general, SSL certificates don't include the trailing dot indicating a
        fully-qualified domain name, and thus, they don't validate properly when
        checked against a domain name that includes the dot. In addition, some
        servers may not expect to receive the trailing dot when provided.

        However, the hostname with trailing dot is critical to DNS resolution; doing a
        lookup with the trailing dot will properly only resolve the appropriate FQDN,
        whereas a lookup without a trailing dot will search the system's search domain
        list. Thus, it's important to keep the original host around for use only in
        those cases where it's appropriate (i.e., when doing DNS lookup to establish the
        actual TCP connection across which we're going to send HTTP requests).
        """
        return self._dns_host.rstrip(".")

    @host.setter
    def host(self, value):
        """
        Setter for the `host` property.

        We assume that only urllib3 uses the _dns_host attribute; httplib itself
        only uses `host`, and it seems reasonable that other libraries follow suit.
        """
        self._dns_host = value

    def _new_conn(self):
        """Establish a socket connection and set nodelay settings on it.

        :return: New socket connection.
        """
        extra_kw = {}
        if self.source_address:
            extra_kw["source_address"] = self.source_address

        if self.socket_options:
            extra_kw["socket_options"] = self.socket_options

        try:
            conn = connection.create_connection(
                (self._dns_host, self.port), self.timeout, **extra_kw
            )

        except SocketTimeout:
            raise ConnectTimeoutError(
                self,
                "Connection to %s timed out. (connect timeout=%s)"
                % (self.host, self.timeout),
            )

        except SocketError as e:
            raise NewConnectionError(
                self, "Failed to establish a new connection: %s" % e
            )

        return conn

    def _is_using_tunnel(self):
        # Google App Engine's httplib does not define _tunnel_host
        return getattr(self, "_tunnel_host", None)

    def _prepare_conn(self, conn):
        self.sock = conn
        if self._is_using_tunnel():
            # TODO: Fix tunnel so it doesn't depend on self.sock state.
            self._tunnel()
            # Mark this connection as not reusable
            self.auto_open = 0

    def connect(self):
        conn = self._new_conn()
        self._prepare_conn(conn)

    def putrequest(self, method, url, *args, **kwargs):
        """ """
        # Empty docstring because the indentation of CPython's implementation
        # is broken but we don't want this method in our documentation.
        match = _CONTAINS_CONTROL_CHAR_RE.search(method)
        if match:
            raise ValueError(
                "Method cannot contain non-token characters %r (found at least %r)"
                % (method, match.group())
            )

        return _HTTPConnection.putrequest(self, method, url, *args, **kwargs)

    def putheader(self, header, *values):
        """ """
        if not any(isinstance(v, str) and v == SKIP_HEADER for v in values):
            _HTTPConnection.putheader(self, header, *values)
        elif six.ensure_str(header.lower()) not in SKIPPABLE_HEADERS:
            raise ValueError(
                "urllib3.util.SKIP_HEADER only supports '%s'"
                % ("', '".join(map(str.title, sorted(SKIPPABLE_HEADERS))),)
            )

    def request(self, method, url, body=None, headers=None):
        if headers is None:
            headers = {}
        else:
            # Avoid modifying the headers passed into .request()
            headers = headers.copy()
        if "user-agent" not in (six.ensure_str(k.lower()) for k in headers):
            headers["User-Agent"] = _get_default_user_agent()
        super(HTTPConnection, self).request(method, url, body=body, headers=headers)

    def request_chunked(self, method, url, body=None, headers=None):
        """
        Alternative to the common request method, which sends the
        body with chunked encoding and not as one block
        """
        headers = headers or {}
        header_keys = set([six.ensure_str(k.lower()) for k in headers])
        skip_accept_encoding = "accept-encoding" in header_keys
        skip_host = "host" in header_keys
        self.putrequest(
            method, url, skip_accept_encoding=skip_accept_encoding, skip_host=skip_host
        )
        if "user-agent" not in header_keys:
            self.putheader("User-Agent", _get_default_user_agent())
        for header, value in headers.items():
            self.putheader(header, value)
        if "transfer-encoding" not in header_keys:
            self.putheader("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked")
        self.endheaders()

        if body is not None:
            stringish_types = six.string_types + (bytes,)
            if isinstance(body, stringish_types):
                body = (body,)
            for chunk in body:
                if not chunk:
                    continue
                if not isinstance(chunk, bytes):
                    chunk = chunk.encode("utf8")
                len_str = hex(len(chunk))[2:]
                to_send = bytearray(len_str.encode())
                to_send += b"\r\n"
                to_send += chunk
                to_send += b"\r\n"
                self.send(to_send)

        # After the if clause, to always have a closed body
        self.send(b"0\r\n\r\n")

host property writable

Getter method to remove any trailing dots that indicate the hostname is an FQDN.

In general, SSL certificates don't include the trailing dot indicating a fully-qualified domain name, and thus, they don't validate properly when checked against a domain name that includes the dot. In addition, some servers may not expect to receive the trailing dot when provided.

However, the hostname with trailing dot is critical to DNS resolution; doing a lookup with the trailing dot will properly only resolve the appropriate FQDN, whereas a lookup without a trailing dot will search the system's search domain list. Thus, it's important to keep the original host around for use only in those cases where it's appropriate (i.e., when doing DNS lookup to establish the actual TCP connection across which we're going to send HTTP requests).

putheader(header, *values)

Source code in client/ayon_fusion/vendor/urllib3/connection.py
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
def putheader(self, header, *values):
    """ """
    if not any(isinstance(v, str) and v == SKIP_HEADER for v in values):
        _HTTPConnection.putheader(self, header, *values)
    elif six.ensure_str(header.lower()) not in SKIPPABLE_HEADERS:
        raise ValueError(
            "urllib3.util.SKIP_HEADER only supports '%s'"
            % ("', '".join(map(str.title, sorted(SKIPPABLE_HEADERS))),)
        )

putrequest(method, url, *args, **kwargs)

Source code in client/ayon_fusion/vendor/urllib3/connection.py
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
def putrequest(self, method, url, *args, **kwargs):
    """ """
    # Empty docstring because the indentation of CPython's implementation
    # is broken but we don't want this method in our documentation.
    match = _CONTAINS_CONTROL_CHAR_RE.search(method)
    if match:
        raise ValueError(
            "Method cannot contain non-token characters %r (found at least %r)"
            % (method, match.group())
        )

    return _HTTPConnection.putrequest(self, method, url, *args, **kwargs)

request_chunked(method, url, body=None, headers=None)

Alternative to the common request method, which sends the body with chunked encoding and not as one block

Source code in client/ayon_fusion/vendor/urllib3/connection.py
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
def request_chunked(self, method, url, body=None, headers=None):
    """
    Alternative to the common request method, which sends the
    body with chunked encoding and not as one block
    """
    headers = headers or {}
    header_keys = set([six.ensure_str(k.lower()) for k in headers])
    skip_accept_encoding = "accept-encoding" in header_keys
    skip_host = "host" in header_keys
    self.putrequest(
        method, url, skip_accept_encoding=skip_accept_encoding, skip_host=skip_host
    )
    if "user-agent" not in header_keys:
        self.putheader("User-Agent", _get_default_user_agent())
    for header, value in headers.items():
        self.putheader(header, value)
    if "transfer-encoding" not in header_keys:
        self.putheader("Transfer-Encoding", "chunked")
    self.endheaders()

    if body is not None:
        stringish_types = six.string_types + (bytes,)
        if isinstance(body, stringish_types):
            body = (body,)
        for chunk in body:
            if not chunk:
                continue
            if not isinstance(chunk, bytes):
                chunk = chunk.encode("utf8")
            len_str = hex(len(chunk))[2:]
            to_send = bytearray(len_str.encode())
            to_send += b"\r\n"
            to_send += chunk
            to_send += b"\r\n"
            self.send(to_send)

    # After the if clause, to always have a closed body
    self.send(b"0\r\n\r\n")

HTTPSConnection

Bases: HTTPConnection

Many of the parameters to this constructor are passed to the underlying SSL socket by means of :py:func:urllib3.util.ssl_wrap_socket.

Source code in client/ayon_fusion/vendor/urllib3/connection.py
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
class HTTPSConnection(HTTPConnection):
    """
    Many of the parameters to this constructor are passed to the underlying SSL
    socket by means of :py:func:`urllib3.util.ssl_wrap_socket`.
    """

    default_port = port_by_scheme["https"]

    cert_reqs = None
    ca_certs = None
    ca_cert_dir = None
    ca_cert_data = None
    ssl_version = None
    assert_fingerprint = None
    tls_in_tls_required = False

    def __init__(
        self,
        host,
        port=None,
        key_file=None,
        cert_file=None,
        key_password=None,
        strict=None,
        timeout=socket._GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT,
        ssl_context=None,
        server_hostname=None,
        **kw
    ):

        HTTPConnection.__init__(self, host, port, strict=strict, timeout=timeout, **kw)

        self.key_file = key_file
        self.cert_file = cert_file
        self.key_password = key_password
        self.ssl_context = ssl_context
        self.server_hostname = server_hostname

        # Required property for Google AppEngine 1.9.0 which otherwise causes
        # HTTPS requests to go out as HTTP. (See Issue #356)
        self._protocol = "https"

    def set_cert(
        self,
        key_file=None,
        cert_file=None,
        cert_reqs=None,
        key_password=None,
        ca_certs=None,
        assert_hostname=None,
        assert_fingerprint=None,
        ca_cert_dir=None,
        ca_cert_data=None,
    ):
        """
        This method should only be called once, before the connection is used.
        """
        # If cert_reqs is not provided we'll assume CERT_REQUIRED unless we also
        # have an SSLContext object in which case we'll use its verify_mode.
        if cert_reqs is None:
            if self.ssl_context is not None:
                cert_reqs = self.ssl_context.verify_mode
            else:
                cert_reqs = resolve_cert_reqs(None)

        self.key_file = key_file
        self.cert_file = cert_file
        self.cert_reqs = cert_reqs
        self.key_password = key_password
        self.assert_hostname = assert_hostname
        self.assert_fingerprint = assert_fingerprint
        self.ca_certs = ca_certs and os.path.expanduser(ca_certs)
        self.ca_cert_dir = ca_cert_dir and os.path.expanduser(ca_cert_dir)
        self.ca_cert_data = ca_cert_data

    def connect(self):
        # Add certificate verification
        conn = self._new_conn()
        hostname = self.host
        tls_in_tls = False

        if self._is_using_tunnel():
            if self.tls_in_tls_required:
                conn = self._connect_tls_proxy(hostname, conn)
                tls_in_tls = True

            self.sock = conn

            # Calls self._set_hostport(), so self.host is
            # self._tunnel_host below.
            self._tunnel()
            # Mark this connection as not reusable
            self.auto_open = 0

            # Override the host with the one we're requesting data from.
            hostname = self._tunnel_host

        server_hostname = hostname
        if self.server_hostname is not None:
            server_hostname = self.server_hostname

        is_time_off = datetime.date.today() < RECENT_DATE
        if is_time_off:
            warnings.warn(
                (
                    "System time is way off (before {0}). This will probably "
                    "lead to SSL verification errors"
                ).format(RECENT_DATE),
                SystemTimeWarning,
            )

        # Wrap socket using verification with the root certs in
        # trusted_root_certs
        default_ssl_context = False
        if self.ssl_context is None:
            default_ssl_context = True
            self.ssl_context = create_urllib3_context(
                ssl_version=resolve_ssl_version(self.ssl_version),
                cert_reqs=resolve_cert_reqs(self.cert_reqs),
            )

        context = self.ssl_context
        context.verify_mode = resolve_cert_reqs(self.cert_reqs)

        # Try to load OS default certs if none are given.
        # Works well on Windows (requires Python3.4+)
        if (
            not self.ca_certs
            and not self.ca_cert_dir
            and not self.ca_cert_data
            and default_ssl_context
            and hasattr(context, "load_default_certs")
        ):
            context.load_default_certs()

        self.sock = ssl_wrap_socket(
            sock=conn,
            keyfile=self.key_file,
            certfile=self.cert_file,
            key_password=self.key_password,
            ca_certs=self.ca_certs,
            ca_cert_dir=self.ca_cert_dir,
            ca_cert_data=self.ca_cert_data,
            server_hostname=server_hostname,
            ssl_context=context,
            tls_in_tls=tls_in_tls,
        )

        # If we're using all defaults and the connection
        # is TLSv1 or TLSv1.1 we throw a DeprecationWarning
        # for the host.
        if (
            default_ssl_context
            and self.ssl_version is None
            and hasattr(self.sock, "version")
            and self.sock.version() in {"TLSv1", "TLSv1.1"}
        ):
            warnings.warn(
                "Negotiating TLSv1/TLSv1.1 by default is deprecated "
                "and will be disabled in urllib3 v2.0.0. Connecting to "
                "'%s' with '%s' can be enabled by explicitly opting-in "
                "with 'ssl_version'" % (self.host, self.sock.version()),
                DeprecationWarning,
            )

        if self.assert_fingerprint:
            assert_fingerprint(
                self.sock.getpeercert(binary_form=True), self.assert_fingerprint
            )
        elif (
            context.verify_mode != ssl.CERT_NONE
            and not getattr(context, "check_hostname", False)
            and self.assert_hostname is not False
        ):
            # While urllib3 attempts to always turn off hostname matching from
            # the TLS library, this cannot always be done. So we check whether
            # the TLS Library still thinks it's matching hostnames.
            cert = self.sock.getpeercert()
            if not cert.get("subjectAltName", ()):
                warnings.warn(
                    (
                        "Certificate for {0} has no `subjectAltName`, falling back to check for a "
                        "`commonName` for now. This feature is being removed by major browsers and "
                        "deprecated by RFC 2818. (See https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/497 "
                        "for details.)".format(hostname)
                    ),
                    SubjectAltNameWarning,
                )
            _match_hostname(cert, self.assert_hostname or server_hostname)

        self.is_verified = (
            context.verify_mode == ssl.CERT_REQUIRED
            or self.assert_fingerprint is not None
        )

    def _connect_tls_proxy(self, hostname, conn):
        """
        Establish a TLS connection to the proxy using the provided SSL context.
        """
        proxy_config = self.proxy_config
        ssl_context = proxy_config.ssl_context
        if ssl_context:
            # If the user provided a proxy context, we assume CA and client
            # certificates have already been set
            return ssl_wrap_socket(
                sock=conn,
                server_hostname=hostname,
                ssl_context=ssl_context,
            )

        ssl_context = create_proxy_ssl_context(
            self.ssl_version,
            self.cert_reqs,
            self.ca_certs,
            self.ca_cert_dir,
            self.ca_cert_data,
        )
        # By default urllib3's SSLContext disables `check_hostname` and uses
        # a custom check. For proxies we're good with relying on the default
        # verification.
        ssl_context.check_hostname = True

        # If no cert was provided, use only the default options for server
        # certificate validation
        return ssl_wrap_socket(
            sock=conn,
            ca_certs=self.ca_certs,
            ca_cert_dir=self.ca_cert_dir,
            ca_cert_data=self.ca_cert_data,
            server_hostname=hostname,
            ssl_context=ssl_context,
        )

set_cert(key_file=None, cert_file=None, cert_reqs=None, key_password=None, ca_certs=None, assert_hostname=None, assert_fingerprint=None, ca_cert_dir=None, ca_cert_data=None)

This method should only be called once, before the connection is used.

Source code in client/ayon_fusion/vendor/urllib3/connection.py
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
def set_cert(
    self,
    key_file=None,
    cert_file=None,
    cert_reqs=None,
    key_password=None,
    ca_certs=None,
    assert_hostname=None,
    assert_fingerprint=None,
    ca_cert_dir=None,
    ca_cert_data=None,
):
    """
    This method should only be called once, before the connection is used.
    """
    # If cert_reqs is not provided we'll assume CERT_REQUIRED unless we also
    # have an SSLContext object in which case we'll use its verify_mode.
    if cert_reqs is None:
        if self.ssl_context is not None:
            cert_reqs = self.ssl_context.verify_mode
        else:
            cert_reqs = resolve_cert_reqs(None)

    self.key_file = key_file
    self.cert_file = cert_file
    self.cert_reqs = cert_reqs
    self.key_password = key_password
    self.assert_hostname = assert_hostname
    self.assert_fingerprint = assert_fingerprint
    self.ca_certs = ca_certs and os.path.expanduser(ca_certs)
    self.ca_cert_dir = ca_cert_dir and os.path.expanduser(ca_cert_dir)
    self.ca_cert_data = ca_cert_data