============== HTTP Utilities ============== .. module:: werkzeug.http Werkzeug provides a couple of functions to parse and generate HTTP headers that are useful when implementing WSGI middlewares or whenever you are operating on a lower level layer. All this functionality is also exposed from request and response objects. Date Functions ============== The following functions simplify working with times in an HTTP context. Werkzeug uses offset-naive :class:`~datetime.datetime` objects internally that store the time in UTC. If you're working with timezones in your application make sure to replace the tzinfo attribute with a UTC timezone information before processing the values. .. autofunction:: cookie_date .. autofunction:: http_date .. autofunction:: parse_date Header Parsing ============== The following functions can be used to parse incoming HTTP headers. Because Python does not provide data structures with the semantics required by :rfc:`2616`, Werkzeug implements some custom data structures that are :ref:`documented separately `. .. autofunction:: parse_options_header .. autofunction:: parse_set_header .. autofunction:: parse_list_header .. autofunction:: parse_dict_header .. autofunction:: parse_accept_header(value, [class]) .. autofunction:: parse_cache_control_header .. autofunction:: parse_authorization_header .. autofunction:: parse_www_authenticate_header .. autofunction:: parse_if_range_header .. autofunction:: parse_range_header .. autofunction:: parse_content_range_header Header Utilities ================ The following utilities operate on HTTP headers well but do not parse them. They are useful if you're dealing with conditional responses or if you want to proxy arbitrary requests but want to remove WSGI-unsupported hop-by-hop headers. Also there is a function to create HTTP header strings from the parsed data. .. autofunction:: is_entity_header .. autofunction:: is_hop_by_hop_header .. autofunction:: remove_entity_headers .. autofunction:: remove_hop_by_hop_headers .. autofunction:: is_byte_range_valid .. autofunction:: quote_header_value .. autofunction:: unquote_header_value .. autofunction:: dump_header Cookies ======= .. autofunction:: parse_cookie .. autofunction:: dump_cookie Conditional Response Helpers ============================ For conditional responses the following functions might be useful: .. autofunction:: parse_etags .. autofunction:: quote_etag .. autofunction:: unquote_etag .. autofunction:: generate_etag .. autofunction:: is_resource_modified Constants ========= .. data:: HTTP_STATUS_CODES A dict of status code -> default status message pairs. This is used by the wrappers and other places where an integer status code is expanded to a string throughout Werkzeug. Form Data Parsing ================= .. module:: werkzeug.formparser Werkzeug provides the form parsing functions separately from the request object so that you can access form data from a plain WSGI environment. The following formats are currently supported by the form data parser: - `application/x-www-form-urlencoded` - `multipart/form-data` Nested multipart is not currently supported (Werkzeug 0.9), but it isn't used by any of the modern web browsers. Usage example: >>> from cStringIO import StringIO >>> data = '--foo\r\nContent-Disposition: form-data; name="test"\r\n' \ ... '\r\nHello World!\r\n--foo--' >>> environ = {'wsgi.input': StringIO(data), 'CONTENT_LENGTH': str(len(data)), ... 'CONTENT_TYPE': 'multipart/form-data; boundary=foo', ... 'REQUEST_METHOD': 'POST'} >>> stream, form, files = parse_form_data(environ) >>> stream.read() '' >>> form['test'] u'Hello World!' >>> not files True Normally the WSGI environment is provided by the WSGI gateway with the incoming data as part of it. If you want to generate such fake-WSGI environments for unittesting you might want to use the :func:`create_environ` function or the :class:`EnvironBuilder` instead. .. autoclass:: FormDataParser .. autofunction:: parse_form_data .. autofunction:: parse_multipart_headers