Python requests session and cookies - python

I am a lot confused about cookies.
I am trying to work out scraping with many post/get requests chained
And I notice that every step needs 'Cookie' evaluated in the headers dictionary, because passing the right dictionary is the only way I don't get any access errors.
However, I look always at my cookie jar (via .cookies method) as it was at the previous step, but I cannot find what I need for the current step. And I know that by inspecting the network data in my browser.
So how shall I build up step by step a chain like 1) login, 2) botton interaction for changing dates, 3) file downloading?
My fault is that I am using requests instead of selenium?
I already use requests.Session().... but this means that I don't need to show up Cookie field when sending headers? Either way (showing or not showing Cookie in headers) I get server access error AFTER having correctly logged in...
Thanks,
David

If you cant access your cookies probably the login credentials are stored in an HTTP Only cookies. This is a secure place to store them to prevent CSS attacks.
You should try using a requests session to send this cookies along with your future requests.

Related

why doesn't request lib provide all cookies

I'm not understanding why the python requests library isn't pulling in all cookies. For examples, I am running this code
import requests
a_session = requests.Session()
a_session.get('https://google.com/')
session_cookies = a_session.cookies
cookies_dictionary = session_cookies.get_dict()
print(cookies_dictionary)
But I only get the cookie "1P_JAR" even though there should be several cookies.
list of cookies shown up on inspector pannel
Ultimately I'm trying to figure out why its choosing only that 1 cookie and not the others because I'm trying to build my own application that generates a cookie but when I run this script on my application I get back and empty list even though the inspector shows that I have generated a cookie.
A cookie is set by a server response to a specific request.
Your basic google.com request only sets that cookie, which you can observe by the set-cookie header.
The other cookies are probably set by other requests or even the js code. Requests doesn't evaluate or run js and thus doesn't make any other requests.
If you don't want to completely reverse engeneer every single cookie, the way to go would be to simulate a browser by using Selenium + Chrome Driver or a similar solution.

finding source code dosen't work in python [duplicate]

I would like to try send requests.get to this website:
requests.get('https://rent.591.com.tw')
and I always get
<Response [404]>
I knew this is a common problem and tried different way but still failed.
but all of other website is ok.
any suggestion?
Webservers are black boxes. They are permitted to return any valid HTTP response, based on your request, the time of day, the phase of the moon, or any other criteria they pick. If another HTTP client gets a different response, consistently, try to figure out what the differences are in the request that Python sends and the request the other client sends.
That means you need to:
Record all aspects of the working request
Record all aspects of the failing request
Try out what changes you can make to make the failing request more like the working request, and minimise those changes.
I usually point my requests to a http://httpbin.org endpoint, have it record the request, and then experiment.
For requests, there are several headers that are set automatically, and many of these you would not normally expect to have to change:
Host; this must be set to the hostname you are contacting, so that it can properly multi-host different sites. requests sets this one.
Content-Length and Content-Type, for POST requests, are usually set from the arguments you pass to requests. If these don't match, alter the arguments you pass in to requests (but watch out with multipart/* requests, which use a generated boundary recorded in the Content-Type header; leave generating that to requests).
Connection: leave this to the client to manage
Cookies: these are often set on an initial GET request, or after first logging into the site. Make sure you capture cookies with a requests.Session() object and that you are logged in (supplied credentials the same way the browser did).
Everything else is fair game but if requests has set a default value, then more often than not those defaults are not the issue. That said, I usually start with the User-Agent header and work my way up from there.
In this case, the site is filtering on the user agent, it looks like they are blacklisting Python, setting it to almost any other value already works:
>>> requests.get('https://rent.591.com.tw', headers={'User-Agent': 'Custom'})
<Response [200]>
Next, you need to take into account that requests is not a browser. requests is only a HTTP client, a browser does much, much more. A browser parses HTML for additional resources such as images, fonts, styling and scripts, loads those additional resources too, and executes scripts. Scripts can then alter what the browser displays and load additional resources. If your requests results don't match what you see in the browser, but the initial request the browser makes matches, then you'll need to figure out what other resources the browser has loaded and make additional requests with requests as needed. If all else fails, use a project like requests-html, which lets you run a URL through an actual, headless Chromium browser.
The site you are trying to contact makes an additional AJAX request to https://rent.591.com.tw/home/search/rsList?is_new_list=1&type=1&kind=0&searchtype=1&region=1, take that into account if you are trying to scrape data from this site.
Next, well-built sites will use security best-practices such as CSRF tokens, which require you to make requests in the right order (e.g. a GET request to retrieve a form before a POST to the handler) and handle cookies or otherwise extract the extra information a server expects to be passed from one request to another.
Last but not least, if a site is blocking scripts from making requests, they probably are either trying to enforce terms of service that prohibit scraping, or because they have an API they rather have you use. Check for either, and take into consideration that you might be blocked more effectively if you continue to scrape the site anyway.
One thing to note: I was using requests.get() to do some webscraping off of links I was reading from a file. What I didn't realise was that the links had a newline character (\n) when I read each line from the file.
If you're getting multiple links from a file instead of a Python data type like a string, make sure to strip any \r or \n characters before you call requests.get("your link"). In my case, I used
with open("filepath", 'w') as file:
links = file.read().splitlines()
for link in links:
response = requests.get(link)
In my case this was due to fact that the website address was recently changed, and I was provided the old website address. At least this changed the status code from 404 to 500, which, I think, is progress :)

Python requests return 403 error code even after setting required headers [duplicate]

I would like to try send requests.get to this website:
requests.get('https://rent.591.com.tw')
and I always get
<Response [404]>
I knew this is a common problem and tried different way but still failed.
but all of other website is ok.
any suggestion?
Webservers are black boxes. They are permitted to return any valid HTTP response, based on your request, the time of day, the phase of the moon, or any other criteria they pick. If another HTTP client gets a different response, consistently, try to figure out what the differences are in the request that Python sends and the request the other client sends.
That means you need to:
Record all aspects of the working request
Record all aspects of the failing request
Try out what changes you can make to make the failing request more like the working request, and minimise those changes.
I usually point my requests to a http://httpbin.org endpoint, have it record the request, and then experiment.
For requests, there are several headers that are set automatically, and many of these you would not normally expect to have to change:
Host; this must be set to the hostname you are contacting, so that it can properly multi-host different sites. requests sets this one.
Content-Length and Content-Type, for POST requests, are usually set from the arguments you pass to requests. If these don't match, alter the arguments you pass in to requests (but watch out with multipart/* requests, which use a generated boundary recorded in the Content-Type header; leave generating that to requests).
Connection: leave this to the client to manage
Cookies: these are often set on an initial GET request, or after first logging into the site. Make sure you capture cookies with a requests.Session() object and that you are logged in (supplied credentials the same way the browser did).
Everything else is fair game but if requests has set a default value, then more often than not those defaults are not the issue. That said, I usually start with the User-Agent header and work my way up from there.
In this case, the site is filtering on the user agent, it looks like they are blacklisting Python, setting it to almost any other value already works:
>>> requests.get('https://rent.591.com.tw', headers={'User-Agent': 'Custom'})
<Response [200]>
Next, you need to take into account that requests is not a browser. requests is only a HTTP client, a browser does much, much more. A browser parses HTML for additional resources such as images, fonts, styling and scripts, loads those additional resources too, and executes scripts. Scripts can then alter what the browser displays and load additional resources. If your requests results don't match what you see in the browser, but the initial request the browser makes matches, then you'll need to figure out what other resources the browser has loaded and make additional requests with requests as needed. If all else fails, use a project like requests-html, which lets you run a URL through an actual, headless Chromium browser.
The site you are trying to contact makes an additional AJAX request to https://rent.591.com.tw/home/search/rsList?is_new_list=1&type=1&kind=0&searchtype=1&region=1, take that into account if you are trying to scrape data from this site.
Next, well-built sites will use security best-practices such as CSRF tokens, which require you to make requests in the right order (e.g. a GET request to retrieve a form before a POST to the handler) and handle cookies or otherwise extract the extra information a server expects to be passed from one request to another.
Last but not least, if a site is blocking scripts from making requests, they probably are either trying to enforce terms of service that prohibit scraping, or because they have an API they rather have you use. Check for either, and take into consideration that you might be blocked more effectively if you continue to scrape the site anyway.
One thing to note: I was using requests.get() to do some webscraping off of links I was reading from a file. What I didn't realise was that the links had a newline character (\n) when I read each line from the file.
If you're getting multiple links from a file instead of a Python data type like a string, make sure to strip any \r or \n characters before you call requests.get("your link"). In my case, I used
with open("filepath", 'w') as file:
links = file.read().splitlines()
for link in links:
response = requests.get(link)
In my case this was due to fact that the website address was recently changed, and I was provided the old website address. At least this changed the status code from 404 to 500, which, I think, is progress :)

python requests.get always get 404

I would like to try send requests.get to this website:
requests.get('https://rent.591.com.tw')
and I always get
<Response [404]>
I knew this is a common problem and tried different way but still failed.
but all of other website is ok.
any suggestion?
Webservers are black boxes. They are permitted to return any valid HTTP response, based on your request, the time of day, the phase of the moon, or any other criteria they pick. If another HTTP client gets a different response, consistently, try to figure out what the differences are in the request that Python sends and the request the other client sends.
That means you need to:
Record all aspects of the working request
Record all aspects of the failing request
Try out what changes you can make to make the failing request more like the working request, and minimise those changes.
I usually point my requests to a http://httpbin.org endpoint, have it record the request, and then experiment.
For requests, there are several headers that are set automatically, and many of these you would not normally expect to have to change:
Host; this must be set to the hostname you are contacting, so that it can properly multi-host different sites. requests sets this one.
Content-Length and Content-Type, for POST requests, are usually set from the arguments you pass to requests. If these don't match, alter the arguments you pass in to requests (but watch out with multipart/* requests, which use a generated boundary recorded in the Content-Type header; leave generating that to requests).
Connection: leave this to the client to manage
Cookies: these are often set on an initial GET request, or after first logging into the site. Make sure you capture cookies with a requests.Session() object and that you are logged in (supplied credentials the same way the browser did).
Everything else is fair game but if requests has set a default value, then more often than not those defaults are not the issue. That said, I usually start with the User-Agent header and work my way up from there.
In this case, the site is filtering on the user agent, it looks like they are blacklisting Python, setting it to almost any other value already works:
>>> requests.get('https://rent.591.com.tw', headers={'User-Agent': 'Custom'})
<Response [200]>
Next, you need to take into account that requests is not a browser. requests is only a HTTP client, a browser does much, much more. A browser parses HTML for additional resources such as images, fonts, styling and scripts, loads those additional resources too, and executes scripts. Scripts can then alter what the browser displays and load additional resources. If your requests results don't match what you see in the browser, but the initial request the browser makes matches, then you'll need to figure out what other resources the browser has loaded and make additional requests with requests as needed. If all else fails, use a project like requests-html, which lets you run a URL through an actual, headless Chromium browser.
The site you are trying to contact makes an additional AJAX request to https://rent.591.com.tw/home/search/rsList?is_new_list=1&type=1&kind=0&searchtype=1&region=1, take that into account if you are trying to scrape data from this site.
Next, well-built sites will use security best-practices such as CSRF tokens, which require you to make requests in the right order (e.g. a GET request to retrieve a form before a POST to the handler) and handle cookies or otherwise extract the extra information a server expects to be passed from one request to another.
Last but not least, if a site is blocking scripts from making requests, they probably are either trying to enforce terms of service that prohibit scraping, or because they have an API they rather have you use. Check for either, and take into consideration that you might be blocked more effectively if you continue to scrape the site anyway.
One thing to note: I was using requests.get() to do some webscraping off of links I was reading from a file. What I didn't realise was that the links had a newline character (\n) when I read each line from the file.
If you're getting multiple links from a file instead of a Python data type like a string, make sure to strip any \r or \n characters before you call requests.get("your link"). In my case, I used
with open("filepath", 'w') as file:
links = file.read().splitlines()
for link in links:
response = requests.get(link)
In my case this was due to fact that the website address was recently changed, and I was provided the old website address. At least this changed the status code from 404 to 500, which, I think, is progress :)

Flask sessions, where are the cookies stored?

I'm learning flask and want to understand how sessions work.
Apparently the server stores a signed cookie on the client browser.
I have done this process using
sessions['mycookie'] = 'mycookievalue'
But I'm unable to find the cookie on the browser. I normally list cookies on the browser using chrome developer tools and running the command:
document.cookie
This works when I set a cookie but nothing comes up when I set it through sessions.
The Flask session cookie has the httponly flag set, making it invisible from JavaScript.
It is otherwise a normal, regular cookie so it is still stored in the browser cookie store; you should still be able to see it in your browser's developer tools.
You can set the SESSION_COOKIE_HTTPONLY option to False if you want to be able to access the cookie value from JavaScript code. From the Builtin Configuration Values section:
SESSION_COOKIE_HTTPONLY
controls if the cookie should be set with the httponly flag. Defaults to True.
The cookie contains all your session data, serialised using JSON (with tagging support for a wider range of Python types), together with a cryptographic signature that makes sure the data can't be tampered with securely.
If you disable the httponly protection, any JS code could still decode and read all your session data. Even if it can't change those values, that could still be very interesting to malicious code. Imagine a XSS bug in your site being made worse because the JS code could just read a CSRF token used to protect a web form straight from the session.
I am finding this question 3 years and 8 months later because I have an interest in the event it is modified or spoofed, to ensure my backend is able to tell the difference.
Using chrome, use F12, select Application tab, underneath Storage go to Cookies. Under cookies you'll find the webpage, select it and the right side will populate and assuming you have done something to create your session cookie, it will be there. You will notice that the value is encrypted.
Picture showing the location of session cookie
sessions are meant for server use only. That is why it is hidden and encrypted for the client.
If you want to set a cookie which can be used by client/browser. You can just set a normal cookie instead of a secure cookie (like session).
You can set cookies by modifying response.
def home_page():
resp = make_response(...)
resp.set_cookie('my_cookie', 'cookie_value')
return resp
document.cookie on browser will give you mycookie=cookie_value

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