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I can't seem to figure out how to access POST data using WSGI. I tried the example on the wsgi.org website and it didn't work. I'm using Python 3.0 right now. Please don't recommend a WSGI framework as that is not what I'm looking for.

I would like to figure out how to get it into a fieldstorage object.

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FWIW, at this point in time there is still no WSGI specification for Python 3.0, so anything you do will possibly be wasted effort as any final specification update may not be compatible with anyones attempts to implement what it may say for Python 3.0. For WSGI applications you are better off staying with Python 2.X. – Graham Dumpleton Aug 2 at 11:52

4 Answers

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Assuming you are trying to get just the POST data into a FieldStorage object:

# env is the environment handed to you by the WSGI server.
# I am removing the query string from the env before passing it to the
# FieldStorage so we only have POST data in there.
post_env = env.copy()
post_env['QUERY_STRING'] = ''
post = cgi.FieldStorage(
    fp=env['wsgi.input'],
    environ=post_env,
    keep_blank_values=True
)
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This doesn't work in Python 3.0 - it has a problem with the wsgi.input returning bytes instead of strings. :( I need a way of doing this in Python 3.0... – Evan Fosmark Feb 15 at 8:56
What WSGI handler are you using? If I use the built-in CGIHandler it works just fine for me. I have a file "post.cgi" on my local server with the contents at pastebin.com/f40849562 running just fine. – Mike Boers Feb 15 at 16:41
What io class is the wsgi.input? If it is a BufferedIOBase then you should be able to wrap it in a TextIOWrapper so that the cgi.FieldStorage can use it. – Mike Boers Feb 15 at 17:11
@Mike, I thought of that too, but that would make it not function properly in the long run as post data can be binary (eg, files). – Evan Fosmark Feb 15 at 20:35
@Evan, Maybe I'm crazy, but you could wrap the input in a TextIOWrapper and extend the FieldStorage and override the make_file method to return your own wrapper around a file which encodes back to binary data as it writes... If this can't be done an easier way. Which WSGI handler are you using? – Mike Boers Feb 16 at 3:34
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vote up 0 vote down

This worked for me (in Python 3.0):

import urllib.parse

post_input = urllib.parse.parse_qs(environ['wsgi.input'].readline().decode(),True)

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vote up 4 vote down
body= ''  # b'' for consistency on Python 3.0
try:
    length= int(environ.get('CONTENT_LENGTH', '0'))
except ValueError:
    length= 0
if length!=0:
    body= environ['wsgi.input'].read(length)

Note that WSGI is not yet fully-specified for Python 3.0, and much of the popular WSGI infrastructure has not been converted (or has been 2to3d, but not properly tested). (Even wsgiref.simple_server won't run.) You're in for a rough time doing WSGI on 3.0 today.

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Yeah I had issues getting wsgiref to work. I ended up implementing the patch. – Evan Fosmark Feb 10 at 2:12
vote up 1 vote down

I would suggest you look at how some frameworks do it for an example. (I am not recommending any single one, just using them as an example.)

Here is the code from Werkzeug:

http://dev.pocoo.org/projects/werkzeug/browser/werkzeug/wrappers.py#L150

which calls

http://dev.pocoo.org/projects/werkzeug/browser/werkzeug/utils.py#L1420

It's a bit complicated to summarize here, so I won't.

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Still doesn't work in Python 3.0, and that's what I'm looking for. Thanks anyways, though. – Evan Fosmark Feb 15 at 8:57
-1 question asked not to be shown frameworks – Fire Crow May 26 at 1:56

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