Add the ability to filter out sensitive data, using one of three
methods: from headers, from a query string, and by using a custom
callback to modify the request.
Closes#67
Before this change, vcrpy would not work with modules of Boto (e.g., boto.iam)
that use Boto's CertValidatingHTTPSConnection to connect to AWS (unless you
went through the extra effort of disabling certificate validation during the
tests). This change adds support for those modules.
So the stubs were getting out of hand, and while trying to add support for the
putrequest and putheader methods, I had an idea for a cleaner way to handle
the stubs using the VCRHTTPConnection more as a proxy object. So
VCRHTTPConnection and VCRHTTPSConnection no longer inherit from HTTPConnection
and HTTPSConnection. This allowed me to get rid of quite a bit of
copy-and-pasted stdlib code.
This is a backwards-incompatible change that will store headers
as a list rather than a dictionary. The reason being that you can
have multiple values for a single header, and concatenating them
together with commas can create an unparseable string (sometimes
the header values can have commas in them)
`responses_of` replaces `response_of`, since each request can have
several matching responses now.
This breaks backwards compatibility if you are using the
response_of method, so a version bump will be required.
I wasn't emulating the stateful file-object in my response stub,
so urllib3 wasn't decompressing gzipped bodies properly. This
should fix that problem.
Thanks @bryanhelmig for the motivation to dig into this.
This commit not only changes the default method of matching requests
(just match on method and URI instead of the entire request + headers)
but also allows the user to add custom matchers.
This commit changes the whole core internal flow of requests.
Now, requests are actually physically made lazily when a response
is requested. This allows the entire request to be sent at once.
Otherwise, it would be impossible to compare whether requests have
already been recorded, since httplib.send() allows you to effectively
stream requests over HTTP.