Pycookiecheat Save

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

Project README

pycookiecheat

master branch build
status

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 and in general will aim to support python versions that are stable and not yet end-of-life: https://devguide.python.org/versions.

  • 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. python3 -m venv .venv
  4. ./.venv/bin/python -m pip install -e .[dev]

Usage

from pycookiecheat import BrowserType, chrome_cookies
import requests

url = 'https://n8henrie.com'

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

# Using an alternate browser
cookies = chrome_cookies(url, browser=BrowserType.CHROMIUM)

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

You may be able to retrieve cookies for alternative Chromium-based browsers by manually specifying something like "/home/username/.config/BrowserName/Default/Cookies" as your cookie_file.

Features

  • Returns decrypted cookies from Google Chrome, Brave, or Slack, on MacOS 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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