I have an object with a CookieJar that I want to pickle.

However as you all probably know, pickle chokes on objects that contain lock objects. And for some horrible reason, a CookieJar has a lock object.

from cPickle import dumps
from cookielib import CookieJar

class Person(object):
    def __init__(self, name):
        self.name = name
        self.cookies = CookieJar()

bob = Person("bob")
dumps(bob)

# Traceback (most recent call last):
#  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
# cPickle.UnpickleableError: Cannot pickle <type 'thread.lock'> objects

How do I persist this?

The only solution I can think of is to use FileCookieJar.save and FileCookieJar.load to a stringIO object. But is there a better way?

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4  
Wow!! The question sounds like question for working in the kitchen. I am amazed the names used for the tools :) – shahkalpesh Jun 21 '09 at 5:25
Did you get a good solution? If so, please post. – Paul Tarjan Jul 9 '09 at 6:48
@Paul both Alex's and Anurag's solutions work. While Anurag's solution is hackish and faster, Alex's solution is more general and slower, so I will leave it up to the community to decide which is better. – Unknown Jul 9 '09 at 22:38
at first glance I thought this was a joke question – Claudiu Aug 21 '09 at 9:52
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted

Here is an attempt, by deriving a class from CookieJar, which override getstate/setstate used by pickle. I haven't used cookieJar, so don't know if it is usable but you can dump derived class

from cPickle import dumps
from cookielib import CookieJar
import threading

class MyCookieJar(CookieJar):
    def __getstate__(self):
        state = self.__dict__.copy()
        del state['_cookies_lock']
        return state

    def __setstate__(self, state):
        self.__dict__ = state
        self._cookies_lock = threading.RLock()

class Person(object):
    def __init__(self, name):
        self.name = name
        self.cookies = MyCookieJar()

bob = Person("bob")
print dumps(bob)
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cons: it relies on internal logic of CookieJar – Anurag Uniyal Jun 21 '09 at 5:03
1  
pros: it's simple and elegant! – Alex Jul 24 '09 at 20:00
1  
for some definitions of 'elegant' =P. I do like this approach too, though. – Claudiu Aug 21 '09 at 9:53
feedback

CookieJar is not particularly well-designed for persisting (that's what the FileCookieJar subclasses are mostly about!-), but you can iterate over a CookieJar instance to get all cookies (and persist a list of those, for example), and, to rebuild the jar given the cookies, use set_cookie on each. That's how I would set about persisting and unpersisting cookie jars, using the copy_reg method to register the appropriate functions if I needed to use them often.

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