python ignore certificate validation urllib2

In the meantime urllib2 seems to verify server certificates by default. The warning, that was shown in the past disappeared for 2.7.9 and I currently ran into this problem in a test environment with a self signed certificate (and Python 2.7.9).

My evil workaround (don't do this in production!):

import urllib2
import ssl

ctx = ssl.create_default_context()
ctx.check_hostname = False
ctx.verify_mode = ssl.CERT_NONE

urllib2.urlopen("https://your-test-server.local", context=ctx)

According to docs calling SSLContext constructor directly should work, too. I haven't tried that.


According to @Enno Gröper 's post, I've tried the SSLContext constructor and it works well on my machine. code as below:

import ssl
ctx = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_SSLv23)
urllib2.urlopen("https://your-test-server.local", context=ctx)

if you need opener, just added this context like:

opener = urllib2.build_opener(urllib2.HTTPSHandler(context=ctx))

NOTE: all above test environment is python 2.7.12. I use PROTOCOL_SSLv23 here since the doc says so, other protocol might also works but depends on your machine and remote server, please check the doc for detail.


For those who uses an opener, you can achieve the same thing based on Enno Gröper's great answer:

import urllib2, ssl

ctx = ssl.create_default_context()
ctx.check_hostname = False
ctx.verify_mode = ssl.CERT_NONE

opener = urllib2.build_opener(urllib2.HTTPSHandler(context=ctx), your_first_handler, your_second_handler[...])
opener.addheaders = [('Referer', 'http://example.org/blah.html')]

content = opener.open("https://localhost/").read()

And then use it as before.

According to build_opener and HTTPSHandler, a HTTPSHandler is added if ssl module exists, here we just specify our own instead of the default one.


The easiest way:

python 2

import urllib2, ssl

request = urllib2.Request('https://somedomain.co/')
response = urllib2.urlopen(request, context=ssl._create_unverified_context())

python 3

from urllib.request import urlopen
import ssl

response = urlopen('https://somedomain.co', context=ssl._create_unverified_context())