New in version 2.2.
XML-RPC is a Remote Procedure Call method that uses XML passed via HTTP as a transport. With it, a client can call methods with parameters on a remote server (the server is named by a URI) and get back structured data. This module supports writing XML-RPC client code; it handles all the details of translating between conformable Python objects and XML on the wire.
uri[, transport[, encoding[, verbose[, allow_none[, use_datetime]]]]]) |
None
will be translated into XML; the
default behaviour is for None
to raise a TypeError.
This is a commonly-used extension to the XML-RPC specification, but isn't
supported by all clients and servers; see
http://ontosys.com/xml-rpc/extensions.php for a description.
The use_datetime flag can be used to cause date/time values to be
presented as datetime.datetime objects; this is false
by default. datetime.datetime,
datetime.date and datetime.time
objects may be passed to calls. datetime.date objects
are converted with a time of ``00:00:00''.
datetime.time objects are converted using today's date.
Both the HTTP and HTTPS transports support the URL syntax extension for
HTTP Basic Authentication: http://user:pass@host:port/path
. The
user:pass
portion will be base64-encoded as an HTTP `Authorization'
header, and sent to the remote server as part of the connection process
when invoking an XML-RPC method. You only need to use this if the
remote server requires a Basic Authentication user and password.
The returned instance is a proxy object with methods that can be used to invoke corresponding RPC calls on the remote server. If the remote server supports the introspection API, the proxy can also be used to query the remote server for the methods it supports (service discovery) and fetch other server-associated metadata.
ServerProxy instance methods take Python basic types and objects as arguments and return Python basic types and classes. Types that are conformable (e.g. that can be marshalled through XML), include the following (and except where noted, they are unmarshalled as the same Python type):
Name | Meaning |
---|---|
boolean | The True and False constants |
integers | Pass in directly |
floating-point numbers | Pass in directly |
strings | Pass in directly |
arrays | Any Python sequence type containing conformable elements. Arrays are returned as lists |
structures | A Python dictionary. Keys must be strings, values may be any conformable type. |
dates | in seconds since the epoch (pass in an instance of the DateTime class) or a datetime.datetime, datetime.date or datetime.time instance |
binary data | pass in an instance of the Binary wrapper class |
This is the full set of data types supported by XML-RPC. Method calls may also raise a special Fault instance, used to signal XML-RPC server errors, or ProtocolError used to signal an error in the HTTP/HTTPS transport layer. Both Fault and ProtocolError derive from a base class called Error. Note that even though starting with Python 2.2 you can subclass builtin types, the xmlrpclib module currently does not marshal instances of such subclasses.
When passing strings, characters special to XML such as "<", ">", and "&" will be automatically escaped. However, it's the caller's responsibility to ensure that the string is free of characters that aren't allowed in XML, such as the control characters with ASCII values between 0 and 31 (except, of course, tab, newline and carriage return); failing to do this will result in an XML-RPC request that isn't well-formed XML. If you have to pass arbitrary strings via XML-RPC, use the Binary wrapper class described below.
Server is retained as an alias for ServerProxy for backwards compatibility. New code should use ServerProxy.
Changed in version 2.5: The use_datetime flag was added.
See Also: