It is possible but you need to do a few things:
- Fake out the urllib2 subsystem into passing a file handle down to httplib by attaching a
__len__
attribute which makes len(data)
return the correct size, used to populate the Content-Length header.
- Override the
read()
method on your file handle: as httplib calls read()
your callback will be invoked, letting you calculate the percentage and update your progress bar.
This could work with any file-like object, but I've wrapped file
to show how it could work with a really large file streamed from disk:
import os, urllib2
from cStringIO import StringIO
class Progress(object):
def __init__(self):
self._seen = 0.0
def update(self, total, size, name):
self._seen += size
pct = (self._seen / total) * 100.0
print '%s progress: %.2f' % (name, pct)
class file_with_callback(file):
def __init__(self, path, mode, callback, *args):
file.__init__(self, path, mode)
self.seek(0, os.SEEK_END)
self._total = self.tell()
self.seek(0)
self._callback = callback
self._args = args
def __len__(self):
return self._total
def read(self, size):
data = file.read(self, size)
self._callback(self._total, len(data), *self._args)
return data
path = 'large_file.txt'
progress = Progress()
stream = file_with_callback(path, 'rb', progress.update, path)
req = urllib2.Request(url, stream)
res = urllib2.urlopen(req)
Output:
large_file.txt progress: 0.68
large_file.txt progress: 1.36
large_file.txt progress: 2.04
large_file.txt progress: 2.72
large_file.txt progress: 3.40
...
large_file.txt progress: 99.20
large_file.txt progress: 99.87
large_file.txt progress: 100.00
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