I assume you're talking about the remote ports. In that case, just tell the admin to open the standard web ports. Really, if your admin doesn't know how to make IE work through the firewall, he's hopeless. I suggest walking up to random people on the street and say "80 and 443" until someone looks up, then fire your admin and hire that guy; he can't be any worse.
If your admin does know what he's doing, and wants you to use an HTTP proxy instead of connecting directly, ask him to set up the proxy for you in IE, look at the settings he uses, then come back here and search for how to use HTTP proxies in Python (there are lots of answers on that), and ask for help if you get stuck.
If you're talking about the local ports, because you're got an insane firewall, they'll be picked at random from some large range. If you want to cover every common OS, you need all of 1024-65535 to be opened up, although if you only need to deal with a single platform, most use a smaller range than that, and if the machine won't be doing much but running your program, most have a way to restrict it to an even smaller range (e.g., as small as 255 ports on Windows). Google "ephemeral port" for details.
If you need to restrict your local port, the key is to call bind
on your socket before calling connect
. If you think you're talking about the local ports, you're probably wrong. Go ask your admin (or the new one you just hired) and make sure. But if you are…
If you're using urllib
/urllib2
, it does not have any way to do what you want, so you can't do that anymore. You can drop down to httplib
, which lets you pass a source_address
, a (host, port)
tuple that it will use to bind the socket before connecting. It's not as simple as what you're using, but it's a lot easier than implementing HTTP from scratch.
You might also want to look at requests, which I know has its own native OAuth support, and probably has a way to specify a source address. (I haven't looked, but I usually find that whenever I want to know if requests
can do X, it can, and in the most obvious way I think of…) The API for requests
is generally similar to urllib2
when urllib2
is sane, simpler and cleaner when urllib2
is messy, so it's usually pretty easy to port things.
At any rate, however you do this, you will have to consider the fact that only one socket can be bound to the same local port at a time. So, what happens if two programs are running at once, and they both need to make an outbound connections, and your admin has only given you one port? One of them will fail. Is that acceptable?
If not, what you really need to do is open a range of ports, and write code that does a random.shuffle
on the range, then tries to bind
them until one succeeds. Which means you'll need an HTTP library that lets you feed in a socket factory or a pre-opened socket instead of just specifying a port, which most of them do not, which probably means you'll be hacking up a copy of the httplib
source.
If all else fails, you can always set up a local proxy that binds to whatever source port (or port range) you want when proxying outward. Then you can just use your favorite high-level library, as-is, and connect to the local proxy, and there's no way the firewall can tell what's going on behind the proxy.
As you can see, this is not easy. That's mainly because you very actually rarely this.