The problem is your URL cannot properly be encoded as per the IDNA
rules, which govern how internationalized domain names are converted:
The conversions between ASCII and non-ASCII forms of a domain name are
accomplished by algorithms called ToASCII and ToUnicode. These
algorithms are not applied to the domain name as a whole, but rather
to individual labels. For example, if the domain name is
www.example.com, then the labels are www, example, and com. ToASCII or
ToUnicode are applied to each of these three separately.
The details of these two algorithms are complex, and are specified in
RFC 3490. The following gives an overview of their function.
ToASCII leaves unchanged any ASCII label, but will fail if the label
is unsuitable for the Domain Name System. If given a label containing
at least one non-ASCII character, ToASCII will apply the Nameprep
algorithm, which converts the label to lowercase and performs other
normalization, and will then translate the result to ASCII using
Punycode[16] before prepending the four-character string "xn--".[17]
This four-character string is called the ASCII Compatible Encoding
(ACE) prefix, and is used to distinguish Punycode encoded labels from
ordinary ASCII labels. The ToASCII algorithm can fail in several ways;
for example, the final string could exceed the 63-character limit of a
DNS name. A label for which ToASCII fails cannot be used in an
internationalized domain name.
In your case a '' (blank) is not a valid domain name character, and you end up with this:
>>> '.f.de'.encode('idna')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python2.6/encodings/idna.py", line 164, in encode
result.append(ToASCII(label))
File "/usr/lib/python2.6/encodings/idna.py", line 73, in ToASCII
raise UnicodeError("label empty or too long")
UnicodeError: label empty or too long
If you change the domain name to 'a.f.de' it should not raise this exception.