I created the following .py file in Aptana Studio to test whether an HTML request (using the GET method) reaches the cache or the actual server:
import httplib2
httplib2.debuglevel = 1
def testNoCacheResponse():
h = httplib2.Http('.cache')
#This line works as expected - it visits the cached file.
response, content = h.request("http://www.giantrodents.com/test/python/dive_into_python/chapter_15/gen5.xml")
#This line does not work as expected -
#if run in a .py file or a module, it should visit the server but instead it still visits the cached file.
#if run as an individual line in python3 launched in terminal, then it works.
response2, content2 = h.request("http://www.giantrodents.com/test/python/dive_into_python/chapter_15/gen5.xml",\
headers = {'cache‐control' : 'no‐cache'})
testNoCacheResponse()
If I launch python3 in terminal, and enter the request with 'cache-control' set as 'no-cache', it actually visits the server and responses from the server are printed as below:
>>>response2, content2 = h.request("http://www.giantrodents.com/test/python/dive_into_python/chapter_15/gen5.xml",headers = {'cache‐control' : 'no‐cache'})
send: b'GET /test/python/dive_into_python/chapter_15/gen5.xml HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: www.giantrodents.com\r\naccept-encoding: gzip, deflate\r\nuser-agent: Python-httplib2/0.9.2 (gzip)\r\ncache-control: no-cache\r\n\r\n'
reply: 'HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n'
header: Date header: Server header: Last-Modified header: ETag header: Accept-Ranges header: Content-Length header: Cache-Control header: Expires header: Content-Type
However, if I run the .py script; or launch python3 from terminal, import the .py file as a module and run the testNoCacheResponse() function, it does neither visit the server nor print the responses from the server.
Please advise! Thank you!
print()
in function - so why should it print something ?print()
to see the output.