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pycookiecheat

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Borrow cookies from your browser's authenticated session for use in Python scripts.

Installation

NB: Use pip and python instead of pip3 and python3 if you're still on Python 2 and using pycookiecheat < v0.4.0. pycookiecheat >= v0.4.0 requires Python 3.5+, and may soon go to 3.6+.

  • python3 -m pip install pycookiecheat

Installation notes regarding alternative keyrings on Linux

See #12. Chrome is now using a few different keyrings to store your Chrome Safe Storage password, instead of a hard-coded password. Pycookiecheat doesn't work with most of these so far, and to be honest my enthusiasm for adding support for ones I don't use is limited. However, users have contributed code that seems to work with some of the recent Ubuntu desktops. To get it working, you may have to sudo apt-get install libsecret-1-dev python-gi python3-gi, and if you're installing into a virtualenv (highly recommended), you need to use the --system-site-packages flag to get access to the necessary libraries.

Alternatively, some users have suggested running Chrome with the --password-store=basic or --use-mock-keychain flags.

Development Setup

  1. git clone https://github.com/n8henrie/pycookiecheat.git
  2. cd pycookiecheat
  3. conda-create - 3.7
  4. python -m pip install -e .[test]
  5. python -m pip install -e .[dev]
  6. python -m pip install -e .[testenv]

Usage

from pycookiecheat import chrome_cookies
import requests

url = 'http://example.com/fake.html'

# Uses Chrome's default cookies filepath by default
cookies = chrome_cookies(url)
r = requests.get(url, cookies=cookies)

Use the cookie_file keyword-argument to specify a different filepath for the cookies-file: chrome_cookies(url, cookie_file='/abspath/to/cookies')

Keep in mind that pycookiecheat defaults to looking for cookies for Chromium, not Google Chrome, so if you're using the latter, you'll need to manually specify something like "/home/username/.config/google-chrome/Default/Cookies" as your cookie_file.

Features

  • Returns decrypted cookies from Google Chrome on OSX or Linux.
  • Optionally outputs cookies to file (thanks to Muntashir Al-Islam!)

FAQ / Troubleshooting

How about Windows?

I don't use Windows or have a PC, so I won't be adding support myself. Feel free to make a PR :)

I get an installation error with the cryptography module on OS X

(pycookiecheat <v0.4.0)

If you're getting this error and using Homebrew, then you need to follow the instructions for Building cryptography on OS X and export LDFLAGS="-L$(brew --prefix openssl)/lib" CFLAGS="-I$(brew --prefix openssl)/include" and try again.

I get an installation error with the cryptography module on Linux

Please check the official cryptography docs. On some systems (e.g. Ubuntu), you may need to do something like sudo apt-get install build-essential libssl-dev libffi-dev python-dev prior to installing with pip.

How can I use pycookiecheat on KDE-based Linux distros?

On KDE, Chrome defaults to using KDE's own keyring, KWallet. For pycookiecheat to support KWallet the dbus-python package must be installed.

How do I install the dev branch with pip?

  • python -m pip install git+https://github.com/n8henrie/pycookiecheat@dev

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Borrow cookies from your browser's authenticated session for use in Python scripts.

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