Just a short, simple one about the excellent Requests module for Python.
I can't seem to find in the documentation what the variable 'proxies' should contain. When I send it a dict with a standard "IP:PORT" value it rejected it asking for 2 values. So, I guess (because this doesn't seem to be covered in the docs) that the first value is the ip and the second the port?
The docs mention this only:
proxies – (optional) Dictionary mapping protocol to the URL of the proxy.
So I tried this... what should I be doing?
proxy = { ip: port}
and should I convert these to some type before putting them in the dict?
r = requests.get(url,headers=headers,proxies=proxy)
The proxies
' dict syntax is {"protocol":"ip:port", ...}
. With it you can specify different (or the same) proxie(s) for requests using http, https, and ftp protocols:
http_proxy = "http://10.10.1.10:3128"
https_proxy = "https://10.10.1.11:1080"
ftp_proxy = "ftp://10.10.1.10:3128"
proxyDict = {
"http" : http_proxy,
"https" : https_proxy,
"ftp" : ftp_proxy
}
r = requests.get(url, headers=headers, proxies=proxyDict)
Deduced from the requests
documentation:
Parameters:
method
– method for the new Request object.
url
– URL for the new Request object.
...
proxies
– (optional) Dictionary mapping protocol to the URL of the proxy.
...
On linux you can also do this via the HTTP_PROXY
, HTTPS_PROXY
, and FTP_PROXY
environment variables:
export HTTP_PROXY=10.10.1.10:3128
export HTTPS_PROXY=10.10.1.11:1080
export FTP_PROXY=10.10.1.10:3128
On Windows:
set http_proxy=10.10.1.10:3128
set https_proxy=10.10.1.11:1080
set ftp_proxy=10.10.1.10:3128
Thanks, Jay for pointing this out:
The syntax changed with requests 2.0.0.
You'll need to add a schema to the url: https://2.python-requests.org/en/latest/user/advanced/#proxies