Python urllib.request.parse_http_list() Examples

The following are 30 code examples of urllib.request.parse_http_list(). You can vote up the ones you like or vote down the ones you don't like, and go to the original project or source file by following the links above each example. You may also want to check out all available functions/classes of the module urllib.request , or try the search function .
Example #1
Source File: urlmap.py    From masakari with Apache License 2.0 6 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in urllib2.parse_http_list(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #2
Source File: http.py    From data with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #3
Source File: http.py    From syntheticmass with Apache License 2.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #4
Source File: http.py    From syntheticmass with Apache License 2.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_dict_header(value, cls=dict):
    """Parse lists of key, value pairs as described by RFC 2068 Section 2 and
    convert them into a python dict (or any other mapping object created from
    the type with a dict like interface provided by the `cls` arugment):

    >>> d = parse_dict_header('foo="is a fish", bar="as well"')
    >>> type(d) is dict
    True
    >>> sorted(d.items())
    [('bar', 'as well'), ('foo', 'is a fish')]

    If there is no value for a key it will be `None`:

    >>> parse_dict_header('key_without_value')
    {'key_without_value': None}

    To create a header from the :class:`dict` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    .. versionchanged:: 0.9
       Added support for `cls` argument.

    :param value: a string with a dict header.
    :param cls: callable to use for storage of parsed results.
    :return: an instance of `cls`
    """
    result = cls()
    if not isinstance(value, text_type):
        # XXX: validate
        value = bytes_to_wsgi(value)
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if '=' not in item:
            result[item] = None
            continue
        name, value = item.split('=', 1)
        if value[:1] == value[-1:] == '"':
            value = unquote_header_value(value[1:-1])
        result[name] = value
    return result 
Example #5
Source File: http.py    From arithmancer with Apache License 2.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #6
Source File: http.py    From arithmancer with Apache License 2.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_dict_header(value, cls=dict):
    """Parse lists of key, value pairs as described by RFC 2068 Section 2 and
    convert them into a python dict (or any other mapping object created from
    the type with a dict like interface provided by the `cls` arugment):

    >>> d = parse_dict_header('foo="is a fish", bar="as well"')
    >>> type(d) is dict
    True
    >>> sorted(d.items())
    [('bar', 'as well'), ('foo', 'is a fish')]

    If there is no value for a key it will be `None`:

    >>> parse_dict_header('key_without_value')
    {'key_without_value': None}

    To create a header from the :class:`dict` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    .. versionchanged:: 0.9
       Added support for `cls` argument.

    :param value: a string with a dict header.
    :param cls: callable to use for storage of parsed results.
    :return: an instance of `cls`
    """
    result = cls()
    if not isinstance(value, text_type):
        #XXX: validate
        value = bytes_to_wsgi(value)
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if '=' not in item:
            result[item] = None
            continue
        name, value = item.split('=', 1)
        if value[:1] == value[-1:] == '"':
            value = unquote_header_value(value[1:-1])
        result[name] = value
    return result 
Example #7
Source File: http.py    From appengine-try-python-flask with Apache License 2.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #8
Source File: http.py    From appengine-try-python-flask with Apache License 2.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_dict_header(value, cls=dict):
    """Parse lists of key, value pairs as described by RFC 2068 Section 2 and
    convert them into a python dict (or any other mapping object created from
    the type with a dict like interface provided by the `cls` arugment):

    >>> d = parse_dict_header('foo="is a fish", bar="as well"')
    >>> type(d) is dict
    True
    >>> sorted(d.items())
    [('bar', 'as well'), ('foo', 'is a fish')]

    If there is no value for a key it will be `None`:

    >>> parse_dict_header('key_without_value')
    {'key_without_value': None}

    To create a header from the :class:`dict` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    .. versionchanged:: 0.9
       Added support for `cls` argument.

    :param value: a string with a dict header.
    :param cls: callable to use for storage of parsed results.
    :return: an instance of `cls`
    """
    result = cls()
    if not isinstance(value, text_type):
        #XXX: validate
        value = bytes_to_wsgi(value)
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if '=' not in item:
            result[item] = None
            continue
        name, value = item.split('=', 1)
        if value[:1] == value[-1:] == '"':
            value = unquote_header_value(value[1:-1])
        result[name] = value
    return result 
Example #9
Source File: utils.py    From bazarr with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_keqv_list(l):
    """A unicode-safe version of urllib2.parse_keqv_list"""
    # With Python 2.6, parse_http_list handles unicode fine
    return urllib2.parse_keqv_list(l) 
Example #10
Source File: utils.py    From bazarr with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_http_list(u):
    """A unicode-safe version of urllib2.parse_http_list"""
    # With Python 2.6, parse_http_list handles unicode fine
    return urllib2.parse_http_list(u) 
Example #11
Source File: utils.py    From bazarr with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_authorization_header(authorization_header):
    """Parse an OAuth authorization header into a list of 2-tuples"""
    auth_scheme = 'OAuth '.lower()
    if authorization_header[:len(auth_scheme)].lower().startswith(auth_scheme):
        items = parse_http_list(authorization_header[len(auth_scheme):])
        try:
            return list(parse_keqv_list(items).items())
        except (IndexError, ValueError):
            pass
    raise ValueError('Malformed authorization header') 
Example #12
Source File: http.py    From data with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #13
Source File: http.py    From data with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_dict_header(value, cls=dict):
    """Parse lists of key, value pairs as described by RFC 2068 Section 2 and
    convert them into a python dict (or any other mapping object created from
    the type with a dict like interface provided by the `cls` arugment):

    >>> d = parse_dict_header('foo="is a fish", bar="as well"')
    >>> type(d) is dict
    True
    >>> sorted(d.items())
    [('bar', 'as well'), ('foo', 'is a fish')]

    If there is no value for a key it will be `None`:

    >>> parse_dict_header('key_without_value')
    {'key_without_value': None}

    To create a header from the :class:`dict` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    .. versionchanged:: 0.9
       Added support for `cls` argument.

    :param value: a string with a dict header.
    :param cls: callable to use for storage of parsed results.
    :return: an instance of `cls`
    """
    result = cls()
    if not isinstance(value, text_type):
        # XXX: validate
        value = bytes_to_wsgi(value)
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if '=' not in item:
            result[item] = None
            continue
        name, value = item.split('=', 1)
        if value[:1] == value[-1:] == '"':
            value = unquote_header_value(value[1:-1])
        result[name] = value
    return result 
Example #14
Source File: http.py    From data with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #15
Source File: http.py    From data with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_dict_header(value, cls=dict):
    """Parse lists of key, value pairs as described by RFC 2068 Section 2 and
    convert them into a python dict (or any other mapping object created from
    the type with a dict like interface provided by the `cls` arugment):

    >>> d = parse_dict_header('foo="is a fish", bar="as well"')
    >>> type(d) is dict
    True
    >>> sorted(d.items())
    [('bar', 'as well'), ('foo', 'is a fish')]

    If there is no value for a key it will be `None`:

    >>> parse_dict_header('key_without_value')
    {'key_without_value': None}

    To create a header from the :class:`dict` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    .. versionchanged:: 0.9
       Added support for `cls` argument.

    :param value: a string with a dict header.
    :param cls: callable to use for storage of parsed results.
    :return: an instance of `cls`
    """
    result = cls()
    if not isinstance(value, text_type):
        # XXX: validate
        value = bytes_to_wsgi(value)
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if '=' not in item:
            result[item] = None
            continue
        name, value = item.split('=', 1)
        if value[:1] == value[-1:] == '"':
            value = unquote_header_value(value[1:-1])
        result[name] = value
    return result 
Example #16
Source File: http.py    From data with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #17
Source File: http.py    From cloud-playground with Apache License 2.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #18
Source File: http.py    From data with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_dict_header(value, cls=dict):
    """Parse lists of key, value pairs as described by RFC 2068 Section 2 and
    convert them into a python dict (or any other mapping object created from
    the type with a dict like interface provided by the `cls` arugment):

    >>> d = parse_dict_header('foo="is a fish", bar="as well"')
    >>> type(d) is dict
    True
    >>> sorted(d.items())
    [('bar', 'as well'), ('foo', 'is a fish')]

    If there is no value for a key it will be `None`:

    >>> parse_dict_header('key_without_value')
    {'key_without_value': None}

    To create a header from the :class:`dict` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    .. versionchanged:: 0.9
       Added support for `cls` argument.

    :param value: a string with a dict header.
    :param cls: callable to use for storage of parsed results.
    :return: an instance of `cls`
    """
    result = cls()
    if not isinstance(value, text_type):
        # XXX: validate
        value = bytes_to_wsgi(value)
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if '=' not in item:
            result[item] = None
            continue
        name, value = item.split('=', 1)
        if value[:1] == value[-1:] == '"':
            value = unquote_header_value(value[1:-1])
        result[name] = value
    return result 
Example #19
Source File: http.py    From data with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #20
Source File: http.py    From data with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_dict_header(value, cls=dict):
    """Parse lists of key, value pairs as described by RFC 2068 Section 2 and
    convert them into a python dict (or any other mapping object created from
    the type with a dict like interface provided by the `cls` arugment):

    >>> d = parse_dict_header('foo="is a fish", bar="as well"')
    >>> type(d) is dict
    True
    >>> sorted(d.items())
    [('bar', 'as well'), ('foo', 'is a fish')]

    If there is no value for a key it will be `None`:

    >>> parse_dict_header('key_without_value')
    {'key_without_value': None}

    To create a header from the :class:`dict` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    .. versionchanged:: 0.9
       Added support for `cls` argument.

    :param value: a string with a dict header.
    :param cls: callable to use for storage of parsed results.
    :return: an instance of `cls`
    """
    result = cls()
    if not isinstance(value, text_type):
        # XXX: validate
        value = bytes_to_wsgi(value)
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if '=' not in item:
            result[item] = None
            continue
        name, value = item.split('=', 1)
        if value[:1] == value[-1:] == '"':
            value = unquote_header_value(value[1:-1])
        result[name] = value
    return result 
Example #21
Source File: utils.py    From Tautulli with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_keqv_list(l):
    """A unicode-safe version of urllib2.parse_keqv_list"""
    # With Python 2.6, parse_http_list handles unicode fine
    return urllib2.parse_keqv_list(l) 
Example #22
Source File: utils.py    From Tautulli with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_http_list(u):
    """A unicode-safe version of urllib2.parse_http_list"""
    # With Python 2.6, parse_http_list handles unicode fine
    return urllib2.parse_http_list(u) 
Example #23
Source File: utils.py    From Tautulli with GNU General Public License v3.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_authorization_header(authorization_header):
    """Parse an OAuth authorization header into a list of 2-tuples"""
    auth_scheme = 'OAuth '.lower()
    if authorization_header[:len(auth_scheme)].lower().startswith(auth_scheme):
        items = parse_http_list(authorization_header[len(auth_scheme):])
        try:
            return list(parse_keqv_list(items).items())
        except (IndexError, ValueError):
            pass
    raise ValueError('Malformed authorization header') 
Example #24
Source File: http.py    From android_universal with MIT License 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #25
Source File: http.py    From android_universal with MIT License 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_dict_header(value, cls=dict):
    """Parse lists of key, value pairs as described by RFC 2068 Section 2 and
    convert them into a python dict (or any other mapping object created from
    the type with a dict like interface provided by the `cls` argument):

    >>> d = parse_dict_header('foo="is a fish", bar="as well"')
    >>> type(d) is dict
    True
    >>> sorted(d.items())
    [('bar', 'as well'), ('foo', 'is a fish')]

    If there is no value for a key it will be `None`:

    >>> parse_dict_header('key_without_value')
    {'key_without_value': None}

    To create a header from the :class:`dict` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    .. versionchanged:: 0.9
       Added support for `cls` argument.

    :param value: a string with a dict header.
    :param cls: callable to use for storage of parsed results.
    :return: an instance of `cls`
    """
    result = cls()
    if not isinstance(value, text_type):
        # XXX: validate
        value = bytes_to_wsgi(value)
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if '=' not in item:
            result[item] = None
            continue
        name, value = item.split('=', 1)
        if value[:1] == value[-1:] == '"':
            value = unquote_header_value(value[1:-1])
        result[name] = value
    return result 
Example #26
Source File: http.py    From Serverless-Deep-Learning-with-TensorFlow-and-AWS-Lambda with MIT License 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #27
Source File: http.py    From Serverless-Deep-Learning-with-TensorFlow-and-AWS-Lambda with MIT License 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_dict_header(value, cls=dict):
    """Parse lists of key, value pairs as described by RFC 2068 Section 2 and
    convert them into a python dict (or any other mapping object created from
    the type with a dict like interface provided by the `cls` argument):

    >>> d = parse_dict_header('foo="is a fish", bar="as well"')
    >>> type(d) is dict
    True
    >>> sorted(d.items())
    [('bar', 'as well'), ('foo', 'is a fish')]

    If there is no value for a key it will be `None`:

    >>> parse_dict_header('key_without_value')
    {'key_without_value': None}

    To create a header from the :class:`dict` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    .. versionchanged:: 0.9
       Added support for `cls` argument.

    :param value: a string with a dict header.
    :param cls: callable to use for storage of parsed results.
    :return: an instance of `cls`
    """
    result = cls()
    if not isinstance(value, text_type):
        # XXX: validate
        value = bytes_to_wsgi(value)
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if '=' not in item:
            result[item] = None
            continue
        name, value = item.split('=', 1)
        if value[:1] == value[-1:] == '"':
            value = unquote_header_value(value[1:-1])
        result[name] = value
    return result 
Example #28
Source File: http.py    From Flask with Apache License 2.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result 
Example #29
Source File: http.py    From Flask with Apache License 2.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_dict_header(value, cls=dict):
    """Parse lists of key, value pairs as described by RFC 2068 Section 2 and
    convert them into a python dict (or any other mapping object created from
    the type with a dict like interface provided by the `cls` arugment):

    >>> d = parse_dict_header('foo="is a fish", bar="as well"')
    >>> type(d) is dict
    True
    >>> sorted(d.items())
    [('bar', 'as well'), ('foo', 'is a fish')]

    If there is no value for a key it will be `None`:

    >>> parse_dict_header('key_without_value')
    {'key_without_value': None}

    To create a header from the :class:`dict` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    .. versionchanged:: 0.9
       Added support for `cls` argument.

    :param value: a string with a dict header.
    :param cls: callable to use for storage of parsed results.
    :return: an instance of `cls`
    """
    result = cls()
    if not isinstance(value, text_type):
        #XXX: validate
        value = bytes_to_wsgi(value)
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if '=' not in item:
            result[item] = None
            continue
        name, value = item.split('=', 1)
        if value[:1] == value[-1:] == '"':
            value = unquote_header_value(value[1:-1])
        result[name] = value
    return result 
Example #30
Source File: http.py    From Flask with Apache License 2.0 5 votes vote down vote up
def parse_list_header(value):
    """Parse lists as described by RFC 2068 Section 2.

    In particular, parse comma-separated lists where the elements of
    the list may include quoted-strings.  A quoted-string could
    contain a comma.  A non-quoted string could have quotes in the
    middle.  Quotes are removed automatically after parsing.

    It basically works like :func:`parse_set_header` just that items
    may appear multiple times and case sensitivity is preserved.

    The return value is a standard :class:`list`:

    >>> parse_list_header('token, "quoted value"')
    ['token', 'quoted value']

    To create a header from the :class:`list` again, use the
    :func:`dump_header` function.

    :param value: a string with a list header.
    :return: :class:`list`
    """
    result = []
    for item in _parse_list_header(value):
        if item[:1] == item[-1:] == '"':
            item = unquote_header_value(item[1:-1])
        result.append(item)
    return result