HTTP Exceptions
werkzeug.exceptions
This module implements a number of Python exceptions you can raise fromwithin your views to trigger a standard non-200 response.
Usage Example
- from werkzeug.wrappers import BaseRequest
- from werkzeug.wsgi import responder
- from werkzeug.exceptions import HTTPException, NotFound
- def view(request):
- raise NotFound()
- @responder
- def application(environ, start_response):
- request = BaseRequest(environ)
- try:
- return view(request)
- except HTTPException as e:
- return e
As you can see from this example those exceptions are callable WSGIapplications. Because of Python 2.4 compatibility those do not extendfrom the response objects but only from the python exception class.
As a matter of fact they are not Werkzeug response objects. However youcan get a response object by calling get_response()
on a HTTPexception.
Keep in mind that you have to pass an environment to get_response()
because some errors fetch additional information from the WSGIenvironment.
If you want to hook in a different exception page to say, a 404 statuscode, you can add a second except for a specific subclass of an error:
- @responderdef application(environ, start_response): request = BaseRequest(environ) try: return view(request) except NotFound, e: return not_found(request) except HTTPException, e: return e
Error Classes
The following error classes exist in Werkzeug:
Raise if the browser sends something to the application the applicationor server cannot handle.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
Unauthorized
(description=None, response=None, www_authenticate=None) - 401
Unauthorized
Raise if the user is not authorized to access a resource.
The www_authenticate
argument should be used to set theWWW-Authenticate
header. This is used for HTTP basic auth andother schemes. Use WWWAuthenticate
to create correctly formatted values. Strictly speaking a 401response is invalid if it doesn’t provide at least one value forthis header, although real clients typically don’t care.
Parameters:
- description – Override the default message used for the bodyof the response.
- www-authenticate – A single value, or list of values, for theWWW-Authenticate header.
Changed in version 0.15.3: If the www_authenticate
argument is not set, theWWW-Authenticate
header is not set.
Changed in version 0.15.3: The response
argument was restored.
Changed in version 0.15.1: description
was moved back as the first argument, restoring its previous position.
Changed in version 0.15.0: www_authenticate
was added as the first argument, ahead ofdescription
.
Raise if the user doesn’t have the permission for the requested resourcebut was authenticated.
Raise if a resource does not exist and never existed.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
MethodNotAllowed
(valid_methods=None, description=None) - 405__Method Not Allowed
Raise if the server used a method the resource does not handle. Forexample POST if the resource is view only. Especially useful for REST.
The first argument for this exception should be a list of allowed methods.Strictly speaking the response would be invalid if you don’t provide validmethods in the header which you can do with that list.
Raise if the server can’t return any content conforming to theAccept headers of the client.
Raise to signalize a timeout.
Raise to signal that a request cannot be completed because it conflictswith the current state on the server.
New in version 0.7.
Raise if a resource existed previously and went away without new location.
Raise if the browser submitted data but no Content-Length
header whichis required for the kind of processing the server does.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
PreconditionFailed
(description=None, response=None) - 412__Precondition Failed
Status code used in combination with If-Match
, If-None-Match
, orIf-Unmodified-Since
.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
RequestEntityTooLarge
(description=None, response=None) - 413__Request Entity Too Large
The status code one should return if the data submitted exceeded a givenlimit.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
RequestURITooLarge
(description=None, response=None) - 414__Request URI Too Large
Like 413 but for too long URLs.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
UnsupportedMediaType
(description=None, response=None) - 415__Unsupported Media Type
The status code returned if the server is unable to handle the media typethe client transmitted.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
RequestedRangeNotSatisfiable
(length=None, units='bytes', description=None) - 416__Requested Range Not Satisfiable
The client asked for an invalid part of the file.
New in version 0.7.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
ExpectationFailed
(description=None, response=None) - 417__Expectation Failed
The server cannot meet the requirements of the Expect request-header.
New in version 0.7.
The server should return this if it is a teapot and someone attemptedto brew coffee with it.
New in version 0.7.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
FailedDependency
(description=None, response=None) - 424__Failed Dependency
Used if the method could not be performed on the resourcebecause the requested action depended on another action and that action failed.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
PreconditionRequired
(description=None, response=None) - 428__Precondition Required
The server requires this request to be conditional, typically to preventthe lost update problem, which is a race condition between two or moreclients attempting to update a resource through PUT or DELETE. By requiringeach client to include a conditional header (“If-Match” or “If-Unmodified-Since”) with the proper value retained from a recent GET request, theserver ensures that each client has at least seen the previous revision ofthe resource.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
TooManyRequests
(description=None, response=None) - 429__Too Many Requests
The server is limiting the rate at which this user receives responses, andthis request exceeds that rate. (The server may use any convenient methodto identify users and their request rates). The server may include a“Retry-After” header to indicate how long the user should wait beforeretrying.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
RequestHeaderFieldsTooLarge
(description=None, response=None) - 431__Request Header Fields Too Large
The server refuses to process the request because the header fields are toolarge. One or more individual fields may be too large, or the set of allheaders is too large.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
InternalServerError
(description=None, response=None) - 500__Internal Server Error
Raise if an internal server error occurred. This is a good fallback if anunknown error occurred in the dispatcher.
Raise if the application does not support the action requested by thebrowser.
If you do proxying in your application you should return this status codeif you received an invalid response from the upstream server it accessedin attempting to fulfill the request.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
ServiceUnavailable
(description=None, response=None) - 503__Service Unavailable
Status code you should return if a service is temporarily unavailable.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
HTTPUnicodeError
- This exception is used to signal unicode decode errors of requestdata. For more information see the Unicode chapter.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
ClientDisconnected
(description=None, response=None) - Internal exception that is raised if Werkzeug detects a disconnectedclient. Since the client is already gone at that point attempting tosend the error message to the client might not work and might ultimatelyresult in another exception in the server. Mainly this is here so thatit is silenced by default as far as Werkzeug is concerned.
Since disconnections cannot be reliably detected and are unspecifiedby WSGI to a large extent this might or might not be raised if a clientis gone.
New in version 0.8.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
SecurityError
(description=None, response=None) - Raised if something triggers a security error. This is otherwiseexactly like a bad request error.
New in version 0.9.
Baseclass
All the exceptions implement this common interface:
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
HTTPException
(description=None, response=None) Baseclass for all HTTP exceptions. This exception can be called as WSGIapplication to render a default error page or you can catch the subclassesof it independently and render nicer error messages.
Parameters:
- **environ** – the WSGI environment.
- **start_response** – the response callable provided by the WSGIserver.
getresponse
(_environ=None)- Get a response object. If one was passed to the exceptionit’s returned directly.
Parameters:environ – the optional environ for the request. Thiscan be used to modify the response dependingon how the request looked like.Returns:a Response
object or a subclass thereof.
Special HTTP Exceptions
Starting with Werkzeug 0.3 some of the builtin classes raise exceptions thatlook like regular python exceptions (eg KeyError
) but areBadRequest
HTTP exceptions at the same time. This decision was madeto simplify a common pattern where you want to abort if the client tamperedwith the submitted form data in a way that the application can’t recoverproperly and should abort with 400 BAD REQUEST
.
Assuming the application catches all HTTP exceptions and reacts to themproperly a view function could do the following safely and doesn’t have tocheck if the keys exist:
- def new_post(request):
- post = Post(title=request.form['title'], body=request.form['body'])
- post.save()
- return redirect(post.url)
If title or body are missing in the form, a special key error will beraised which behaves like a KeyError
but also a BadRequest
exception.
- exception
werkzeug.exceptions.
BadRequestKeyError
(arg=None, *args, **kwargs) - An exception that is used to signal both a
KeyError
and aBadRequest
. Used by many of the datastructures.
Simple Aborting
Sometimes it’s convenient to just raise an exception by the error code,without importing the exception and looking up the name etc. For thispurpose there is the abort()
function.
werkzeug.exceptions.
abort
(status, *args, **kwargs)- Raises an
HTTPException
for the given status code or WSGIapplication:
- abort(404) # 404 Not Found
- abort(Response('Hello World'))
Can be passed a WSGI application or a status code. If a status code isgiven it’s looked up in the list of exceptions and will raise thatexception, if passed a WSGI application it will wrap it in a proxy WSGIexception and raise that:
- abort(404)
- abort(Response('Hello World'))
If you want to use this functionality with custom exceptions you cancreate an instance of the aborter class:
- class
werkzeug.exceptions.
Aborter
(mapping=None, extra=None) - When passed a dict of code -> exception items it can be used ascallable that raises exceptions. If the first argument to thecallable is an integer it will be looked up in the mapping, if it’sa WSGI application it will be raised in a proxy exception.
The rest of the arguments are forwarded to the exception constructor.
Custom Errors
As you can see from the list above not all status codes are available aserrors. Especially redirects and other non 200 status codes that do notrepresent errors are missing. For redirects you can use the redirect()
function from the utilities.
If you want to add an error yourself you can subclass HTTPException
:
- from werkzeug.exceptions import HTTPException
- class PaymentRequired(HTTPException):
- code = 402
- description = '<p>Payment required.</p>'
This is the minimal code you need for your own exception. If you want toadd more logic to the errors you can override theget_description()
, get_body()
,get_headers()
and get_response()
methods. In any case you should have a look at the sourcecode of theexceptions module.
You can override the default description in the constructor with thedescription
parameter:
- raise BadRequest(description='Request failed because X was not present')