1:mod:`nntplib` --- NNTP protocol client
2=======================================
3
4.. module:: nntplib
5   :synopsis: NNTP protocol client (requires sockets).
6
7**Source code:** :source:`Lib/nntplib.py`
8
9.. index::
10   pair: NNTP; protocol
11   single: Network News Transfer Protocol
12
13--------------
14
15This module defines the class :class:`NNTP` which implements the client side of
16the Network News Transfer Protocol.  It can be used to implement a news reader
17or poster, or automated news processors.  It is compatible with :rfc:`3977`
18as well as the older :rfc:`977` and :rfc:`2980`.
19
20Here are two small examples of how it can be used.  To list some statistics
21about a newsgroup and print the subjects of the last 10 articles::
22
23   >>> s = nntplib.NNTP('news.gmane.io')
24   >>> resp, count, first, last, name = s.group('gmane.comp.python.committers')
25   >>> print('Group', name, 'has', count, 'articles, range', first, 'to', last)
26   Group gmane.comp.python.committers has 1096 articles, range 1 to 1096
27   >>> resp, overviews = s.over((last - 9, last))
28   >>> for id, over in overviews:
29   ...     print(id, nntplib.decode_header(over['subject']))
30   ...
31   1087 Re: Commit privileges for Łukasz Langa
32   1088 Re: 3.2 alpha 2 freeze
33   1089 Re: 3.2 alpha 2 freeze
34   1090 Re: Commit privileges for Łukasz Langa
35   1091 Re: Commit privileges for Łukasz Langa
36   1092 Updated ssh key
37   1093 Re: Updated ssh key
38   1094 Re: Updated ssh key
39   1095 Hello fellow committers!
40   1096 Re: Hello fellow committers!
41   >>> s.quit()
42   '205 Bye!'
43
44To post an article from a binary file (this assumes that the article has valid
45headers, and that you have right to post on the particular newsgroup)::
46
47   >>> s = nntplib.NNTP('news.gmane.io')
48   >>> f = open('article.txt', 'rb')
49   >>> s.post(f)
50   '240 Article posted successfully.'
51   >>> s.quit()
52   '205 Bye!'
53
54The module itself defines the following classes:
55
56
57.. class:: NNTP(host, port=119, user=None, password=None, readermode=None, usenetrc=False, [timeout])
58
59   Return a new :class:`NNTP` object, representing a connection
60   to the NNTP server running on host *host*, listening at port *port*.
61   An optional *timeout* can be specified for the socket connection.
62   If the optional *user* and *password* are provided, or if suitable
63   credentials are present in :file:`/.netrc` and the optional flag *usenetrc*
64   is true, the ``AUTHINFO USER`` and ``AUTHINFO PASS`` commands are used
65   to identify and authenticate the user to the server.  If the optional
66   flag *readermode* is true, then a ``mode reader`` command is sent before
67   authentication is performed.  Reader mode is sometimes necessary if you are
68   connecting to an NNTP server on the local machine and intend to call
69   reader-specific commands, such as ``group``.  If you get unexpected
70   :exc:`NNTPPermanentError`\ s, you might need to set *readermode*.
71   The :class:`NNTP` class supports the :keyword:`with` statement to
72   unconditionally consume :exc:`OSError` exceptions and to close the NNTP
73   connection when done, e.g.:
74
75    >>> from nntplib import NNTP
76    >>> with NNTP('news.gmane.io') as n:
77    ...     n.group('gmane.comp.python.committers')
78    ... # doctest: +SKIP
79    ('211 1755 1 1755 gmane.comp.python.committers', 1755, 1, 1755, 'gmane.comp.python.committers')
80    >>>
81
82   .. audit-event:: nntplib.connect self,host,port nntplib.NNTP
83
84   .. audit-event:: nntplib.putline self,line nntplib.NNTP
85
86      All commands will raise an :ref:`auditing event <auditing>`
87      ``nntplib.putline`` with arguments ``self`` and ``line``,
88      where ``line`` is the bytes about to be sent to the remote host.
89
90   .. versionchanged:: 3.2
91      *usenetrc* is now ``False`` by default.
92
93   .. versionchanged:: 3.3
94      Support for the :keyword:`with` statement was added.
95
96.. class:: NNTP_SSL(host, port=563, user=None, password=None, ssl_context=None, readermode=None, usenetrc=False, [timeout])
97
98   Return a new :class:`NNTP_SSL` object, representing an encrypted
99   connection to the NNTP server running on host *host*, listening at
100   port *port*.  :class:`NNTP_SSL` objects have the same methods as
101   :class:`NNTP` objects.  If *port* is omitted, port 563 (NNTPS) is used.
102   *ssl_context* is also optional, and is a :class:`~ssl.SSLContext` object.
103   Please read :ref:`ssl-security` for best practices.
104   All other parameters behave the same as for :class:`NNTP`.
105
106   Note that SSL-on-563 is discouraged per :rfc:`4642`, in favor of
107   STARTTLS as described below.  However, some servers only support the
108   former.
109
110   .. audit-event:: nntplib.connect self,host,port nntplib.NNTP_SSL
111
112   .. audit-event:: nntplib.putline self,line nntplib.NNTP_SSL
113
114      All commands will raise an :ref:`auditing event <auditing>`
115      ``nntplib.putline`` with arguments ``self`` and ``line``,
116      where ``line`` is the bytes about to be sent to the remote host.
117
118   .. versionadded:: 3.2
119
120   .. versionchanged:: 3.4
121      The class now supports hostname check with
122      :attr:`ssl.SSLContext.check_hostname` and *Server Name Indication* (see
123      :data:`ssl.HAS_SNI`).
124
125.. exception:: NNTPError
126
127   Derived from the standard exception :exc:`Exception`, this is the base
128   class for all exceptions raised by the :mod:`nntplib` module.  Instances
129   of this class have the following attribute:
130
131   .. attribute:: response
132
133      The response of the server if available, as a :class:`str` object.
134
135
136.. exception:: NNTPReplyError
137
138   Exception raised when an unexpected reply is received from the server.
139
140
141.. exception:: NNTPTemporaryError
142
143   Exception raised when a response code in the range 400--499 is received.
144
145
146.. exception:: NNTPPermanentError
147
148   Exception raised when a response code in the range 500--599 is received.
149
150
151.. exception:: NNTPProtocolError
152
153   Exception raised when a reply is received from the server that does not begin
154   with a digit in the range 1--5.
155
156
157.. exception:: NNTPDataError
158
159   Exception raised when there is some error in the response data.
160
161
162.. _nntp-objects:
163
164NNTP Objects
165------------
166
167When connected, :class:`NNTP` and :class:`NNTP_SSL` objects support the
168following methods and attributes.
169
170Attributes
171^^^^^^^^^^
172
173.. attribute:: NNTP.nntp_version
174
175   An integer representing the version of the NNTP protocol supported by the
176   server.  In practice, this should be ``2`` for servers advertising
177   :rfc:`3977` compliance and ``1`` for others.
178
179   .. versionadded:: 3.2
180
181.. attribute:: NNTP.nntp_implementation
182
183   A string describing the software name and version of the NNTP server,
184   or :const:`None` if not advertised by the server.
185
186   .. versionadded:: 3.2
187
188Methods
189^^^^^^^
190
191The *response* that is returned as the first item in the return tuple of almost
192all methods is the server's response: a string beginning with a three-digit
193code.  If the server's response indicates an error, the method raises one of
194the above exceptions.
195
196Many of the following methods take an optional keyword-only argument *file*.
197When the *file* argument is supplied, it must be either a :term:`file object`
198opened for binary writing, or the name of an on-disk file to be written to.
199The method will then write any data returned by the server (except for the
200response line and the terminating dot) to the file; any list of lines,
201tuples or objects that the method normally returns will be empty.
202
203.. versionchanged:: 3.2
204   Many of the following methods have been reworked and fixed, which makes
205   them incompatible with their 3.1 counterparts.
206
207
208.. method:: NNTP.quit()
209
210   Send a ``QUIT`` command and close the connection.  Once this method has been
211   called, no other methods of the NNTP object should be called.
212
213
214.. method:: NNTP.getwelcome()
215
216   Return the welcome message sent by the server in reply to the initial
217   connection.  (This message sometimes contains disclaimers or help information
218   that may be relevant to the user.)
219
220
221.. method:: NNTP.getcapabilities()
222
223   Return the :rfc:`3977` capabilities advertised by the server, as a
224   :class:`dict` instance mapping capability names to (possibly empty) lists
225   of values. On legacy servers which don't understand the ``CAPABILITIES``
226   command, an empty dictionary is returned instead.
227
228      >>> s = NNTP('news.gmane.io')
229      >>> 'POST' in s.getcapabilities()
230      True
231
232   .. versionadded:: 3.2
233
234
235.. method:: NNTP.login(user=None, password=None, usenetrc=True)
236
237   Send ``AUTHINFO`` commands with the user name and password.  If *user*
238   and *password* are ``None`` and *usenetrc* is true, credentials from
239   ``~/.netrc`` will be used if possible.
240
241   Unless intentionally delayed, login is normally performed during the
242   :class:`NNTP` object initialization and separately calling this function
243   is unnecessary.  To force authentication to be delayed, you must not set
244   *user* or *password* when creating the object, and must set *usenetrc* to
245   False.
246
247   .. versionadded:: 3.2
248
249
250.. method:: NNTP.starttls(context=None)
251
252   Send a ``STARTTLS`` command.  This will enable encryption on the NNTP
253   connection.  The *context* argument is optional and should be a
254   :class:`ssl.SSLContext` object.  Please read :ref:`ssl-security` for best
255   practices.
256
257   Note that this may not be done after authentication information has
258   been transmitted, and authentication occurs by default if possible during a
259   :class:`NNTP` object initialization.  See :meth:`NNTP.login` for information
260   on suppressing this behavior.
261
262   .. versionadded:: 3.2
263
264   .. versionchanged:: 3.4
265      The method now supports hostname check with
266      :attr:`ssl.SSLContext.check_hostname` and *Server Name Indication* (see
267      :data:`ssl.HAS_SNI`).
268
269.. method:: NNTP.newgroups(date, *, file=None)
270
271   Send a ``NEWGROUPS`` command.  The *date* argument should be a
272   :class:`datetime.date` or :class:`datetime.datetime` object.
273   Return a pair ``(response, groups)`` where *groups* is a list representing
274   the groups that are new since the given *date*. If *file* is supplied,
275   though, then *groups* will be empty.
276
277      >>> from datetime import date, timedelta
278      >>> resp, groups = s.newgroups(date.today() - timedelta(days=3))
279      >>> len(groups) # doctest: +SKIP
280      85
281      >>> groups[0] # doctest: +SKIP
282      GroupInfo(group='gmane.network.tor.devel', last='4', first='1', flag='m')
283
284
285.. method:: NNTP.newnews(group, date, *, file=None)
286
287   Send a ``NEWNEWS`` command.  Here, *group* is a group name or ``'*'``, and
288   *date* has the same meaning as for :meth:`newgroups`.  Return a pair
289   ``(response, articles)`` where *articles* is a list of message ids.
290
291   This command is frequently disabled by NNTP server administrators.
292
293
294.. method:: NNTP.list(group_pattern=None, *, file=None)
295
296   Send a ``LIST`` or ``LIST ACTIVE`` command.  Return a pair
297   ``(response, list)`` where *list* is a list of tuples representing all
298   the groups available from this NNTP server, optionally matching the
299   pattern string *group_pattern*.  Each tuple has the form
300   ``(group, last, first, flag)``, where *group* is a group name, *last*
301   and *first* are the last and first article numbers, and *flag* usually
302   takes one of these values:
303
304   * ``y``: Local postings and articles from peers are allowed.
305   * ``m``: The group is moderated and all postings must be approved.
306   * ``n``: No local postings are allowed, only articles from peers.
307   * ``j``: Articles from peers are filed in the junk group instead.
308   * ``x``: No local postings, and articles from peers are ignored.
309   * ``=foo.bar``: Articles are filed in the ``foo.bar`` group instead.
310
311   If *flag* has another value, then the status of the newsgroup should be
312   considered unknown.
313
314   This command can return very large results, especially if *group_pattern*
315   is not specified.  It is best to cache the results offline unless you
316   really need to refresh them.
317
318   .. versionchanged:: 3.2
319      *group_pattern* was added.
320
321
322.. method:: NNTP.descriptions(grouppattern)
323
324   Send a ``LIST NEWSGROUPS`` command, where *grouppattern* is a wildmat string as
325   specified in :rfc:`3977` (it's essentially the same as DOS or UNIX shell wildcard
326   strings).  Return a pair ``(response, descriptions)``, where *descriptions*
327   is a dictionary mapping group names to textual descriptions.
328
329      >>> resp, descs = s.descriptions('gmane.comp.python.*')
330      >>> len(descs) # doctest: +SKIP
331      295
332      >>> descs.popitem() # doctest: +SKIP
333      ('gmane.comp.python.bio.general', 'BioPython discussion list (Moderated)')
334
335
336.. method:: NNTP.description(group)
337
338   Get a description for a single group *group*.  If more than one group matches
339   (if 'group' is a real wildmat string), return the first match.   If no group
340   matches, return an empty string.
341
342   This elides the response code from the server.  If the response code is needed,
343   use :meth:`descriptions`.
344
345
346.. method:: NNTP.group(name)
347
348   Send a ``GROUP`` command, where *name* is the group name.  The group is
349   selected as the current group, if it exists.  Return a tuple
350   ``(response, count, first, last, name)`` where *count* is the (estimated)
351   number of articles in the group, *first* is the first article number in
352   the group, *last* is the last article number in the group, and *name*
353   is the group name.
354
355
356.. method:: NNTP.over(message_spec, *, file=None)
357
358   Send an ``OVER`` command, or an ``XOVER`` command on legacy servers.
359   *message_spec* can be either a string representing a message id, or
360   a ``(first, last)`` tuple of numbers indicating a range of articles in
361   the current group, or a ``(first, None)`` tuple indicating a range of
362   articles starting from *first* to the last article in the current group,
363   or :const:`None` to select the current article in the current group.
364
365   Return a pair ``(response, overviews)``.  *overviews* is a list of
366   ``(article_number, overview)`` tuples, one for each article selected
367   by *message_spec*.  Each *overview* is a dictionary with the same number
368   of items, but this number depends on the server.  These items are either
369   message headers (the key is then the lower-cased header name) or metadata
370   items (the key is then the metadata name prepended with ``":"``).  The
371   following items are guaranteed to be present by the NNTP specification:
372
373   * the ``subject``, ``from``, ``date``, ``message-id`` and ``references``
374     headers
375   * the ``:bytes`` metadata: the number of bytes in the entire raw article
376     (including headers and body)
377   * the ``:lines`` metadata: the number of lines in the article body
378
379   The value of each item is either a string, or :const:`None` if not present.
380
381   It is advisable to use the :func:`decode_header` function on header
382   values when they may contain non-ASCII characters::
383
384      >>> _, _, first, last, _ = s.group('gmane.comp.python.devel')
385      >>> resp, overviews = s.over((last, last))
386      >>> art_num, over = overviews[0]
387      >>> art_num
388      117216
389      >>> list(over.keys())
390      ['xref', 'from', ':lines', ':bytes', 'references', 'date', 'message-id', 'subject']
391      >>> over['from']
392      '=?UTF-8?B?Ik1hcnRpbiB2LiBMw7Z3aXMi?= <martin@v.loewis.de>'
393      >>> nntplib.decode_header(over['from'])
394      '"Martin v. Löwis" <martin@v.loewis.de>'
395
396   .. versionadded:: 3.2
397
398
399.. method:: NNTP.help(*, file=None)
400
401   Send a ``HELP`` command.  Return a pair ``(response, list)`` where *list* is a
402   list of help strings.
403
404
405.. method:: NNTP.stat(message_spec=None)
406
407   Send a ``STAT`` command, where *message_spec* is either a message id
408   (enclosed in ``'<'`` and ``'>'``) or an article number in the current group.
409   If *message_spec* is omitted or :const:`None`, the current article in the
410   current group is considered.  Return a triple ``(response, number, id)``
411   where *number* is the article number and *id* is the message id.
412
413      >>> _, _, first, last, _ = s.group('gmane.comp.python.devel')
414      >>> resp, number, message_id = s.stat(first)
415      >>> number, message_id
416      (9099, '<20030112190404.GE29873@epoch.metaslash.com>')
417
418
419.. method:: NNTP.next()
420
421   Send a ``NEXT`` command.  Return as for :meth:`.stat`.
422
423
424.. method:: NNTP.last()
425
426   Send a ``LAST`` command.  Return as for :meth:`.stat`.
427
428
429.. method:: NNTP.article(message_spec=None, *, file=None)
430
431   Send an ``ARTICLE`` command, where *message_spec* has the same meaning as
432   for :meth:`.stat`.  Return a tuple ``(response, info)`` where *info*
433   is a :class:`~collections.namedtuple` with three attributes *number*,
434   *message_id* and *lines* (in that order).  *number* is the article number
435   in the group (or 0 if the information is not available), *message_id* the
436   message id as a string, and *lines* a list of lines (without terminating
437   newlines) comprising the raw message including headers and body.
438
439      >>> resp, info = s.article('<20030112190404.GE29873@epoch.metaslash.com>')
440      >>> info.number
441      0
442      >>> info.message_id
443      '<20030112190404.GE29873@epoch.metaslash.com>'
444      >>> len(info.lines)
445      65
446      >>> info.lines[0]
447      b'Path: main.gmane.org!not-for-mail'
448      >>> info.lines[1]
449      b'From: Neal Norwitz <neal@metaslash.com>'
450      >>> info.lines[-3:]
451      [b'There is a patch for 2.3 as well as 2.2.', b'', b'Neal']
452
453
454.. method:: NNTP.head(message_spec=None, *, file=None)
455
456   Same as :meth:`article()`, but sends a ``HEAD`` command.  The *lines*
457   returned (or written to *file*) will only contain the message headers, not
458   the body.
459
460
461.. method:: NNTP.body(message_spec=None, *, file=None)
462
463   Same as :meth:`article()`, but sends a ``BODY`` command.  The *lines*
464   returned (or written to *file*) will only contain the message body, not the
465   headers.
466
467
468.. method:: NNTP.post(data)
469
470   Post an article using the ``POST`` command.  The *data* argument is either
471   a :term:`file object` opened for binary reading, or any iterable of bytes
472   objects (representing raw lines of the article to be posted).  It should
473   represent a well-formed news article, including the required headers.  The
474   :meth:`post` method automatically escapes lines beginning with ``.`` and
475   appends the termination line.
476
477   If the method succeeds, the server's response is returned.  If the server
478   refuses posting, a :class:`NNTPReplyError` is raised.
479
480
481.. method:: NNTP.ihave(message_id, data)
482
483   Send an ``IHAVE`` command. *message_id* is the id of the message to send
484   to the server (enclosed in  ``'<'`` and ``'>'``).  The *data* parameter
485   and the return value are the same as for :meth:`post()`.
486
487
488.. method:: NNTP.date()
489
490   Return a pair ``(response, date)``.  *date* is a :class:`~datetime.datetime`
491   object containing the current date and time of the server.
492
493
494.. method:: NNTP.slave()
495
496   Send a ``SLAVE`` command.  Return the server's *response*.
497
498
499.. method:: NNTP.set_debuglevel(level)
500
501   Set the instance's debugging level.  This controls the amount of debugging
502   output printed.  The default, ``0``, produces no debugging output.  A value of
503   ``1`` produces a moderate amount of debugging output, generally a single line
504   per request or response.  A value of ``2`` or higher produces the maximum amount
505   of debugging output, logging each line sent and received on the connection
506   (including message text).
507
508
509The following are optional NNTP extensions defined in :rfc:`2980`.  Some of
510them have been superseded by newer commands in :rfc:`3977`.
511
512
513.. method:: NNTP.xhdr(hdr, str, *, file=None)
514
515   Send an ``XHDR`` command.  The *hdr* argument is a header keyword, e.g.
516   ``'subject'``.  The *str* argument should have the form ``'first-last'``
517   where *first* and *last* are the first and last article numbers to search.
518   Return a pair ``(response, list)``, where *list* is a list of pairs ``(id,
519   text)``, where *id* is an article number (as a string) and *text* is the text of
520   the requested header for that article. If the *file* parameter is supplied, then
521   the output of the  ``XHDR`` command is stored in a file.  If *file* is a string,
522   then the method will open a file with that name, write to it  then close it.
523   If *file* is a :term:`file object`, then it will start calling :meth:`write` on
524   it to store the lines of the command output. If *file* is supplied, then the
525   returned *list* is an empty list.
526
527
528.. method:: NNTP.xover(start, end, *, file=None)
529
530   Send an ``XOVER`` command.  *start* and *end* are article numbers
531   delimiting the range of articles to select.  The return value is the
532   same of for :meth:`over()`.  It is recommended to use :meth:`over()`
533   instead, since it will automatically use the newer ``OVER`` command
534   if available.
535
536
537.. method:: NNTP.xpath(id)
538
539   Return a pair ``(resp, path)``, where *path* is the directory path to the
540   article with message ID *id*.  Most of the time, this extension is not
541   enabled by NNTP server administrators.
542
543   .. deprecated:: 3.3
544      The XPATH extension is not actively used.
545
546
547.. XXX deprecated:
548
549   .. method:: NNTP.xgtitle(name, *, file=None)
550
551      Process an ``XGTITLE`` command, returning a pair ``(response, list)``, where
552      *list* is a list of tuples containing ``(name, title)``. If the *file* parameter
553      is supplied, then the output of the  ``XGTITLE`` command is stored in a file.
554      If *file* is a string,  then the method will open a file with that name, write
555      to it  then close it.  If *file* is a :term:`file object`, then it will start
556      calling :meth:`write` on it to store the lines of the command output. If *file*
557      is supplied, then the returned *list* is an empty list. This is an optional NNTP
558      extension, and may not be supported by all servers.
559
560      :rfc:`2980` says "It is suggested that this extension be deprecated".  Use
561      :meth:`descriptions` or :meth:`description` instead.
562
563
564Utility functions
565-----------------
566
567The module also defines the following utility function:
568
569
570.. function:: decode_header(header_str)
571
572   Decode a header value, un-escaping any escaped non-ASCII characters.
573   *header_str* must be a :class:`str` object.  The unescaped value is
574   returned.  Using this function is recommended to display some headers
575   in a human readable form::
576
577      >>> decode_header("Some subject")
578      'Some subject'
579      >>> decode_header("=?ISO-8859-15?Q?D=E9buter_en_Python?=")
580      'Débuter en Python'
581      >>> decode_header("Re: =?UTF-8?B?cHJvYmzDqG1lIGRlIG1hdHJpY2U=?=")
582      'Re: problème de matrice'
583