1:mod:`pickle` --- Python object serialization 2============================================= 3 4.. module:: pickle 5 :synopsis: Convert Python objects to streams of bytes and back. 6 7.. sectionauthor:: Jim Kerr <[email protected]>. 8.. sectionauthor:: Barry Warsaw <[email protected]> 9 10**Source code:** :source:`Lib/pickle.py` 11 12.. index:: 13 single: persistence 14 pair: persistent; objects 15 pair: serializing; objects 16 pair: marshalling; objects 17 pair: flattening; objects 18 pair: pickling; objects 19 20-------------- 21 22The :mod:`pickle` module implements binary protocols for serializing and 23de-serializing a Python object structure. *"Pickling"* is the process 24whereby a Python object hierarchy is converted into a byte stream, and 25*"unpickling"* is the inverse operation, whereby a byte stream 26(from a :term:`binary file` or :term:`bytes-like object`) is converted 27back into an object hierarchy. Pickling (and unpickling) is alternatively 28known as "serialization", "marshalling," [#]_ or "flattening"; however, to 29avoid confusion, the terms used here are "pickling" and "unpickling". 30 31.. warning:: 32 33 The ``pickle`` module **is not secure**. Only unpickle data you trust. 34 35 It is possible to construct malicious pickle data which will **execute 36 arbitrary code during unpickling**. Never unpickle data that could have come 37 from an untrusted source, or that could have been tampered with. 38 39 Consider signing data with :mod:`hmac` if you need to ensure that it has not 40 been tampered with. 41 42 Safer serialization formats such as :mod:`json` may be more appropriate if 43 you are processing untrusted data. See :ref:`comparison-with-json`. 44 45 46Relationship to other Python modules 47------------------------------------ 48 49Comparison with ``marshal`` 50^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 51 52Python has a more primitive serialization module called :mod:`marshal`, but in 53general :mod:`pickle` should always be the preferred way to serialize Python 54objects. :mod:`marshal` exists primarily to support Python's :file:`.pyc` 55files. 56 57The :mod:`pickle` module differs from :mod:`marshal` in several significant ways: 58 59* The :mod:`pickle` module keeps track of the objects it has already serialized, 60 so that later references to the same object won't be serialized again. 61 :mod:`marshal` doesn't do this. 62 63 This has implications both for recursive objects and object sharing. Recursive 64 objects are objects that contain references to themselves. These are not 65 handled by marshal, and in fact, attempting to marshal recursive objects will 66 crash your Python interpreter. Object sharing happens when there are multiple 67 references to the same object in different places in the object hierarchy being 68 serialized. :mod:`pickle` stores such objects only once, and ensures that all 69 other references point to the master copy. Shared objects remain shared, which 70 can be very important for mutable objects. 71 72* :mod:`marshal` cannot be used to serialize user-defined classes and their 73 instances. :mod:`pickle` can save and restore class instances transparently, 74 however the class definition must be importable and live in the same module as 75 when the object was stored. 76 77* The :mod:`marshal` serialization format is not guaranteed to be portable 78 across Python versions. Because its primary job in life is to support 79 :file:`.pyc` files, the Python implementers reserve the right to change the 80 serialization format in non-backwards compatible ways should the need arise. 81 The :mod:`pickle` serialization format is guaranteed to be backwards compatible 82 across Python releases provided a compatible pickle protocol is chosen and 83 pickling and unpickling code deals with Python 2 to Python 3 type differences 84 if your data is crossing that unique breaking change language boundary. 85 86 87.. _comparison-with-json: 88 89Comparison with ``json`` 90^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 91 92There are fundamental differences between the pickle protocols and 93`JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) <https://json.org>`_: 94 95* JSON is a text serialization format (it outputs unicode text, although 96 most of the time it is then encoded to ``utf-8``), while pickle is 97 a binary serialization format; 98 99* JSON is human-readable, while pickle is not; 100 101* JSON is interoperable and widely used outside of the Python ecosystem, 102 while pickle is Python-specific; 103 104* JSON, by default, can only represent a subset of the Python built-in 105 types, and no custom classes; pickle can represent an extremely large 106 number of Python types (many of them automatically, by clever usage 107 of Python's introspection facilities; complex cases can be tackled by 108 implementing :ref:`specific object APIs <pickle-inst>`); 109 110* Unlike pickle, deserializing untrusted JSON does not in itself create an 111 arbitrary code execution vulnerability. 112 113.. seealso:: 114 The :mod:`json` module: a standard library module allowing JSON 115 serialization and deserialization. 116 117 118.. _pickle-protocols: 119 120Data stream format 121------------------ 122 123.. index:: 124 single: External Data Representation 125 126The data format used by :mod:`pickle` is Python-specific. This has the 127advantage that there are no restrictions imposed by external standards such as 128JSON or XDR (which can't represent pointer sharing); however it means that 129non-Python programs may not be able to reconstruct pickled Python objects. 130 131By default, the :mod:`pickle` data format uses a relatively compact binary 132representation. If you need optimal size characteristics, you can efficiently 133:doc:`compress <archiving>` pickled data. 134 135The module :mod:`pickletools` contains tools for analyzing data streams 136generated by :mod:`pickle`. :mod:`pickletools` source code has extensive 137comments about opcodes used by pickle protocols. 138 139There are currently 6 different protocols which can be used for pickling. 140The higher the protocol used, the more recent the version of Python needed 141to read the pickle produced. 142 143* Protocol version 0 is the original "human-readable" protocol and is 144 backwards compatible with earlier versions of Python. 145 146* Protocol version 1 is an old binary format which is also compatible with 147 earlier versions of Python. 148 149* Protocol version 2 was introduced in Python 2.3. It provides much more 150 efficient pickling of :term:`new-style classes <new-style class>`. Refer to :pep:`307` for 151 information about improvements brought by protocol 2. 152 153* Protocol version 3 was added in Python 3.0. It has explicit support for 154 :class:`bytes` objects and cannot be unpickled by Python 2.x. This was 155 the default protocol in Python 3.0--3.7. 156 157* Protocol version 4 was added in Python 3.4. It adds support for very large 158 objects, pickling more kinds of objects, and some data format 159 optimizations. It is the default protocol starting with Python 3.8. 160 Refer to :pep:`3154` for information about improvements brought by 161 protocol 4. 162 163* Protocol version 5 was added in Python 3.8. It adds support for out-of-band 164 data and speedup for in-band data. Refer to :pep:`574` for information about 165 improvements brought by protocol 5. 166 167.. note:: 168 Serialization is a more primitive notion than persistence; although 169 :mod:`pickle` reads and writes file objects, it does not handle the issue of 170 naming persistent objects, nor the (even more complicated) issue of concurrent 171 access to persistent objects. The :mod:`pickle` module can transform a complex 172 object into a byte stream and it can transform the byte stream into an object 173 with the same internal structure. Perhaps the most obvious thing to do with 174 these byte streams is to write them onto a file, but it is also conceivable to 175 send them across a network or store them in a database. The :mod:`shelve` 176 module provides a simple interface to pickle and unpickle objects on 177 DBM-style database files. 178 179 180Module Interface 181---------------- 182 183To serialize an object hierarchy, you simply call the :func:`dumps` function. 184Similarly, to de-serialize a data stream, you call the :func:`loads` function. 185However, if you want more control over serialization and de-serialization, 186you can create a :class:`Pickler` or an :class:`Unpickler` object, respectively. 187 188The :mod:`pickle` module provides the following constants: 189 190 191.. data:: HIGHEST_PROTOCOL 192 193 An integer, the highest :ref:`protocol version <pickle-protocols>` 194 available. This value can be passed as a *protocol* value to functions 195 :func:`dump` and :func:`dumps` as well as the :class:`Pickler` 196 constructor. 197 198.. data:: DEFAULT_PROTOCOL 199 200 An integer, the default :ref:`protocol version <pickle-protocols>` used 201 for pickling. May be less than :data:`HIGHEST_PROTOCOL`. Currently the 202 default protocol is 4, first introduced in Python 3.4 and incompatible 203 with previous versions. 204 205 .. versionchanged:: 3.0 206 207 The default protocol is 3. 208 209 .. versionchanged:: 3.8 210 211 The default protocol is 4. 212 213The :mod:`pickle` module provides the following functions to make the pickling 214process more convenient: 215 216.. function:: dump(obj, file, protocol=None, *, fix_imports=True, buffer_callback=None) 217 218 Write the pickled representation of the object *obj* to the open 219 :term:`file object` *file*. This is equivalent to 220 ``Pickler(file, protocol).dump(obj)``. 221 222 Arguments *file*, *protocol*, *fix_imports* and *buffer_callback* have 223 the same meaning as in the :class:`Pickler` constructor. 224 225 .. versionchanged:: 3.8 226 The *buffer_callback* argument was added. 227 228.. function:: dumps(obj, protocol=None, *, fix_imports=True, buffer_callback=None) 229 230 Return the pickled representation of the object *obj* as a :class:`bytes` object, 231 instead of writing it to a file. 232 233 Arguments *protocol*, *fix_imports* and *buffer_callback* have the same 234 meaning as in the :class:`Pickler` constructor. 235 236 .. versionchanged:: 3.8 237 The *buffer_callback* argument was added. 238 239.. function:: load(file, *, fix_imports=True, encoding="ASCII", errors="strict", buffers=None) 240 241 Read the pickled representation of an object from the open :term:`file object` 242 *file* and return the reconstituted object hierarchy specified therein. 243 This is equivalent to ``Unpickler(file).load()``. 244 245 The protocol version of the pickle is detected automatically, so no 246 protocol argument is needed. Bytes past the pickled representation 247 of the object are ignored. 248 249 Arguments *file*, *fix_imports*, *encoding*, *errors*, *strict* and *buffers* 250 have the same meaning as in the :class:`Unpickler` constructor. 251 252 .. versionchanged:: 3.8 253 The *buffers* argument was added. 254 255.. function:: loads(data, /, *, fix_imports=True, encoding="ASCII", errors="strict", buffers=None) 256 257 Return the reconstituted object hierarchy of the pickled representation 258 *data* of an object. *data* must be a :term:`bytes-like object`. 259 260 The protocol version of the pickle is detected automatically, so no 261 protocol argument is needed. Bytes past the pickled representation 262 of the object are ignored. 263 264 Arguments *fix_imports*, *encoding*, *errors*, *strict* and *buffers* 265 have the same meaning as in the :class:`Unpickler` constructor. 266 267 .. versionchanged:: 3.8 268 The *buffers* argument was added. 269 270 271The :mod:`pickle` module defines three exceptions: 272 273.. exception:: PickleError 274 275 Common base class for the other pickling exceptions. It inherits 276 :exc:`Exception`. 277 278.. exception:: PicklingError 279 280 Error raised when an unpicklable object is encountered by :class:`Pickler`. 281 It inherits :exc:`PickleError`. 282 283 Refer to :ref:`pickle-picklable` to learn what kinds of objects can be 284 pickled. 285 286.. exception:: UnpicklingError 287 288 Error raised when there is a problem unpickling an object, such as a data 289 corruption or a security violation. It inherits :exc:`PickleError`. 290 291 Note that other exceptions may also be raised during unpickling, including 292 (but not necessarily limited to) AttributeError, EOFError, ImportError, and 293 IndexError. 294 295 296The :mod:`pickle` module exports three classes, :class:`Pickler`, 297:class:`Unpickler` and :class:`PickleBuffer`: 298 299.. class:: Pickler(file, protocol=None, *, fix_imports=True, buffer_callback=None) 300 301 This takes a binary file for writing a pickle data stream. 302 303 The optional *protocol* argument, an integer, tells the pickler to use 304 the given protocol; supported protocols are 0 to :data:`HIGHEST_PROTOCOL`. 305 If not specified, the default is :data:`DEFAULT_PROTOCOL`. If a negative 306 number is specified, :data:`HIGHEST_PROTOCOL` is selected. 307 308 The *file* argument must have a write() method that accepts a single bytes 309 argument. It can thus be an on-disk file opened for binary writing, an 310 :class:`io.BytesIO` instance, or any other custom object that meets this 311 interface. 312 313 If *fix_imports* is true and *protocol* is less than 3, pickle will try to 314 map the new Python 3 names to the old module names used in Python 2, so 315 that the pickle data stream is readable with Python 2. 316 317 If *buffer_callback* is None (the default), buffer views are 318 serialized into *file* as part of the pickle stream. 319 320 If *buffer_callback* is not None, then it can be called any number 321 of times with a buffer view. If the callback returns a false value 322 (such as None), the given buffer is :ref:`out-of-band <pickle-oob>`; 323 otherwise the buffer is serialized in-band, i.e. inside the pickle stream. 324 325 It is an error if *buffer_callback* is not None and *protocol* is 326 None or smaller than 5. 327 328 .. versionchanged:: 3.8 329 The *buffer_callback* argument was added. 330 331 .. method:: dump(obj) 332 333 Write the pickled representation of *obj* to the open file object given in 334 the constructor. 335 336 .. method:: persistent_id(obj) 337 338 Do nothing by default. This exists so a subclass can override it. 339 340 If :meth:`persistent_id` returns ``None``, *obj* is pickled as usual. Any 341 other value causes :class:`Pickler` to emit the returned value as a 342 persistent ID for *obj*. The meaning of this persistent ID should be 343 defined by :meth:`Unpickler.persistent_load`. Note that the value 344 returned by :meth:`persistent_id` cannot itself have a persistent ID. 345 346 See :ref:`pickle-persistent` for details and examples of uses. 347 348 .. attribute:: dispatch_table 349 350 A pickler object's dispatch table is a registry of *reduction 351 functions* of the kind which can be declared using 352 :func:`copyreg.pickle`. It is a mapping whose keys are classes 353 and whose values are reduction functions. A reduction function 354 takes a single argument of the associated class and should 355 conform to the same interface as a :meth:`__reduce__` 356 method. 357 358 By default, a pickler object will not have a 359 :attr:`dispatch_table` attribute, and it will instead use the 360 global dispatch table managed by the :mod:`copyreg` module. 361 However, to customize the pickling for a specific pickler object 362 one can set the :attr:`dispatch_table` attribute to a dict-like 363 object. Alternatively, if a subclass of :class:`Pickler` has a 364 :attr:`dispatch_table` attribute then this will be used as the 365 default dispatch table for instances of that class. 366 367 See :ref:`pickle-dispatch` for usage examples. 368 369 .. versionadded:: 3.3 370 371 .. method:: reducer_override(obj) 372 373 Special reducer that can be defined in :class:`Pickler` subclasses. This 374 method has priority over any reducer in the :attr:`dispatch_table`. It 375 should conform to the same interface as a :meth:`__reduce__` method, and 376 can optionally return ``NotImplemented`` to fallback on 377 :attr:`dispatch_table`-registered reducers to pickle ``obj``. 378 379 For a detailed example, see :ref:`reducer_override`. 380 381 .. versionadded:: 3.8 382 383 .. attribute:: fast 384 385 Deprecated. Enable fast mode if set to a true value. The fast mode 386 disables the usage of memo, therefore speeding the pickling process by not 387 generating superfluous PUT opcodes. It should not be used with 388 self-referential objects, doing otherwise will cause :class:`Pickler` to 389 recurse infinitely. 390 391 Use :func:`pickletools.optimize` if you need more compact pickles. 392 393 394.. class:: Unpickler(file, *, fix_imports=True, encoding="ASCII", errors="strict", buffers=None) 395 396 This takes a binary file for reading a pickle data stream. 397 398 The protocol version of the pickle is detected automatically, so no 399 protocol argument is needed. 400 401 The argument *file* must have three methods, a read() method that takes an 402 integer argument, a readinto() method that takes a buffer argument 403 and a readline() method that requires no arguments, as in the 404 :class:`io.BufferedIOBase` interface. Thus *file* can be an on-disk file 405 opened for binary reading, an :class:`io.BytesIO` object, or any other 406 custom object that meets this interface. 407 408 The optional arguments *fix_imports*, *encoding* and *errors* are used 409 to control compatibility support for pickle stream generated by Python 2. 410 If *fix_imports* is true, pickle will try to map the old Python 2 names 411 to the new names used in Python 3. The *encoding* and *errors* tell 412 pickle how to decode 8-bit string instances pickled by Python 2; 413 these default to 'ASCII' and 'strict', respectively. The *encoding* can 414 be 'bytes' to read these 8-bit string instances as bytes objects. 415 Using ``encoding='latin1'`` is required for unpickling NumPy arrays and 416 instances of :class:`~datetime.datetime`, :class:`~datetime.date` and 417 :class:`~datetime.time` pickled by Python 2. 418 419 If *buffers* is None (the default), then all data necessary for 420 deserialization must be contained in the pickle stream. This means 421 that the *buffer_callback* argument was None when a :class:`Pickler` 422 was instantiated (or when :func:`dump` or :func:`dumps` was called). 423 424 If *buffers* is not None, it should be an iterable of buffer-enabled 425 objects that is consumed each time the pickle stream references 426 an :ref:`out-of-band <pickle-oob>` buffer view. Such buffers have been 427 given in order to the *buffer_callback* of a Pickler object. 428 429 .. versionchanged:: 3.8 430 The *buffers* argument was added. 431 432 .. method:: load() 433 434 Read the pickled representation of an object from the open file object 435 given in the constructor, and return the reconstituted object hierarchy 436 specified therein. Bytes past the pickled representation of the object 437 are ignored. 438 439 .. method:: persistent_load(pid) 440 441 Raise an :exc:`UnpicklingError` by default. 442 443 If defined, :meth:`persistent_load` should return the object specified by 444 the persistent ID *pid*. If an invalid persistent ID is encountered, an 445 :exc:`UnpicklingError` should be raised. 446 447 See :ref:`pickle-persistent` for details and examples of uses. 448 449 .. method:: find_class(module, name) 450 451 Import *module* if necessary and return the object called *name* from it, 452 where the *module* and *name* arguments are :class:`str` objects. Note, 453 unlike its name suggests, :meth:`find_class` is also used for finding 454 functions. 455 456 Subclasses may override this to gain control over what type of objects and 457 how they can be loaded, potentially reducing security risks. Refer to 458 :ref:`pickle-restrict` for details. 459 460 .. audit-event:: pickle.find_class module,name pickle.Unpickler.find_class 461 462.. class:: PickleBuffer(buffer) 463 464 A wrapper for a buffer representing picklable data. *buffer* must be a 465 :ref:`buffer-providing <bufferobjects>` object, such as a 466 :term:`bytes-like object` or a N-dimensional array. 467 468 :class:`PickleBuffer` is itself a buffer provider, therefore it is 469 possible to pass it to other APIs expecting a buffer-providing object, 470 such as :class:`memoryview`. 471 472 :class:`PickleBuffer` objects can only be serialized using pickle 473 protocol 5 or higher. They are eligible for 474 :ref:`out-of-band serialization <pickle-oob>`. 475 476 .. versionadded:: 3.8 477 478 .. method:: raw() 479 480 Return a :class:`memoryview` of the memory area underlying this buffer. 481 The returned object is a one-dimensional, C-contiguous memoryview 482 with format ``B`` (unsigned bytes). :exc:`BufferError` is raised if 483 the buffer is neither C- nor Fortran-contiguous. 484 485 .. method:: release() 486 487 Release the underlying buffer exposed by the PickleBuffer object. 488 489 490.. _pickle-picklable: 491 492What can be pickled and unpickled? 493---------------------------------- 494 495The following types can be pickled: 496 497* ``None``, ``True``, and ``False``; 498 499* integers, floating-point numbers, complex numbers; 500 501* strings, bytes, bytearrays; 502 503* tuples, lists, sets, and dictionaries containing only picklable objects; 504 505* functions (built-in and user-defined) accessible from the top level of a 506 module (using :keyword:`def`, not :keyword:`lambda`); 507 508* classes accessible from the top level of a module; 509 510* instances of such classes whose the result of calling :meth:`__getstate__` 511 is picklable (see section :ref:`pickle-inst` for details). 512 513Attempts to pickle unpicklable objects will raise the :exc:`PicklingError` 514exception; when this happens, an unspecified number of bytes may have already 515been written to the underlying file. Trying to pickle a highly recursive data 516structure may exceed the maximum recursion depth, a :exc:`RecursionError` will be 517raised in this case. You can carefully raise this limit with 518:func:`sys.setrecursionlimit`. 519 520Note that functions (built-in and user-defined) are pickled by fully 521:term:`qualified name`, not by value. [#]_ This means that only the function name is 522pickled, along with the name of the containing module and classes. Neither 523the function's code, nor any of its function attributes are pickled. Thus the 524defining module must be importable in the unpickling environment, and the module 525must contain the named object, otherwise an exception will be raised. [#]_ 526 527Similarly, classes are pickled by fully qualified name, so the same restrictions in 528the unpickling environment apply. Note that none of the class's code or data is 529pickled, so in the following example the class attribute ``attr`` is not 530restored in the unpickling environment:: 531 532 class Foo: 533 attr = 'A class attribute' 534 535 picklestring = pickle.dumps(Foo) 536 537These restrictions are why picklable functions and classes must be defined at 538the top level of a module. 539 540Similarly, when class instances are pickled, their class's code and data are not 541pickled along with them. Only the instance data are pickled. This is done on 542purpose, so you can fix bugs in a class or add methods to the class and still 543load objects that were created with an earlier version of the class. If you 544plan to have long-lived objects that will see many versions of a class, it may 545be worthwhile to put a version number in the objects so that suitable 546conversions can be made by the class's :meth:`__setstate__` method. 547 548 549.. _pickle-inst: 550 551Pickling Class Instances 552------------------------ 553 554.. currentmodule:: None 555 556In this section, we describe the general mechanisms available to you to define, 557customize, and control how class instances are pickled and unpickled. 558 559In most cases, no additional code is needed to make instances picklable. By 560default, pickle will retrieve the class and the attributes of an instance via 561introspection. When a class instance is unpickled, its :meth:`__init__` method 562is usually *not* invoked. The default behaviour first creates an uninitialized 563instance and then restores the saved attributes. The following code shows an 564implementation of this behaviour:: 565 566 def save(obj): 567 return (obj.__class__, obj.__dict__) 568 569 def restore(cls, attributes): 570 obj = cls.__new__(cls) 571 obj.__dict__.update(attributes) 572 return obj 573 574Classes can alter the default behaviour by providing one or several special 575methods: 576 577.. method:: object.__getnewargs_ex__() 578 579 In protocols 2 and newer, classes that implements the 580 :meth:`__getnewargs_ex__` method can dictate the values passed to the 581 :meth:`__new__` method upon unpickling. The method must return a pair 582 ``(args, kwargs)`` where *args* is a tuple of positional arguments 583 and *kwargs* a dictionary of named arguments for constructing the 584 object. Those will be passed to the :meth:`__new__` method upon 585 unpickling. 586 587 You should implement this method if the :meth:`__new__` method of your 588 class requires keyword-only arguments. Otherwise, it is recommended for 589 compatibility to implement :meth:`__getnewargs__`. 590 591 .. versionchanged:: 3.6 592 :meth:`__getnewargs_ex__` is now used in protocols 2 and 3. 593 594 595.. method:: object.__getnewargs__() 596 597 This method serves a similar purpose as :meth:`__getnewargs_ex__`, but 598 supports only positional arguments. It must return a tuple of arguments 599 ``args`` which will be passed to the :meth:`__new__` method upon unpickling. 600 601 :meth:`__getnewargs__` will not be called if :meth:`__getnewargs_ex__` is 602 defined. 603 604 .. versionchanged:: 3.6 605 Before Python 3.6, :meth:`__getnewargs__` was called instead of 606 :meth:`__getnewargs_ex__` in protocols 2 and 3. 607 608 609.. method:: object.__getstate__() 610 611 Classes can further influence how their instances are pickled by overriding 612 the method :meth:`__getstate__`. It is called and the returned object 613 is pickled as the contents for the instance, instead of a default state. 614 There are several cases: 615 616 * For a class that has no instance :attr:`~object.__dict__` and no 617 :attr:`~object.__slots__`, the default state is ``None``. 618 619 * For a class that has an instance :attr:`~object.__dict__` and no 620 :attr:`~object.__slots__`, the default state is ``self.__dict__``. 621 622 * For a class that has an instance :attr:`~object.__dict__` and 623 :attr:`~object.__slots__`, the default state is a tuple consisting of two 624 dictionaries: ``self.__dict__``, and a dictionary mapping slot 625 names to slot values. Only slots that have a value are 626 included in the latter. 627 628 * For a class that has :attr:`~object.__slots__` and no instance 629 :attr:`~object.__dict__`, the default state is a tuple whose first item 630 is ``None`` and whose second item is a dictionary mapping slot names 631 to slot values described in the previous bullet. 632 633 .. versionchanged:: 3.11 634 Added the default implementation of the ``__getstate__()`` method in the 635 :class:`object` class. 636 637 638.. method:: object.__setstate__(state) 639 640 Upon unpickling, if the class defines :meth:`__setstate__`, it is called with 641 the unpickled state. In that case, there is no requirement for the state 642 object to be a dictionary. Otherwise, the pickled state must be a dictionary 643 and its items are assigned to the new instance's dictionary. 644 645 .. note:: 646 647 If :meth:`__getstate__` returns a false value, the :meth:`__setstate__` 648 method will not be called upon unpickling. 649 650 651Refer to the section :ref:`pickle-state` for more information about how to use 652the methods :meth:`__getstate__` and :meth:`__setstate__`. 653 654.. note:: 655 656 At unpickling time, some methods like :meth:`__getattr__`, 657 :meth:`__getattribute__`, or :meth:`__setattr__` may be called upon the 658 instance. In case those methods rely on some internal invariant being 659 true, the type should implement :meth:`__new__` to establish such an 660 invariant, as :meth:`__init__` is not called when unpickling an 661 instance. 662 663.. index:: pair: copy; protocol 664 665As we shall see, pickle does not use directly the methods described above. In 666fact, these methods are part of the copy protocol which implements the 667:meth:`__reduce__` special method. The copy protocol provides a unified 668interface for retrieving the data necessary for pickling and copying 669objects. [#]_ 670 671Although powerful, implementing :meth:`__reduce__` directly in your classes is 672error prone. For this reason, class designers should use the high-level 673interface (i.e., :meth:`__getnewargs_ex__`, :meth:`__getstate__` and 674:meth:`__setstate__`) whenever possible. We will show, however, cases where 675using :meth:`__reduce__` is the only option or leads to more efficient pickling 676or both. 677 678.. method:: object.__reduce__() 679 680 The interface is currently defined as follows. The :meth:`__reduce__` method 681 takes no argument and shall return either a string or preferably a tuple (the 682 returned object is often referred to as the "reduce value"). 683 684 If a string is returned, the string should be interpreted as the name of a 685 global variable. It should be the object's local name relative to its 686 module; the pickle module searches the module namespace to determine the 687 object's module. This behaviour is typically useful for singletons. 688 689 When a tuple is returned, it must be between two and six items long. 690 Optional items can either be omitted, or ``None`` can be provided as their 691 value. The semantics of each item are in order: 692 693 .. XXX Mention __newobj__ special-case? 694 695 * A callable object that will be called to create the initial version of the 696 object. 697 698 * A tuple of arguments for the callable object. An empty tuple must be given 699 if the callable does not accept any argument. 700 701 * Optionally, the object's state, which will be passed to the object's 702 :meth:`__setstate__` method as previously described. If the object has no 703 such method then, the value must be a dictionary and it will be added to 704 the object's :attr:`~object.__dict__` attribute. 705 706 * Optionally, an iterator (and not a sequence) yielding successive items. 707 These items will be appended to the object either using 708 ``obj.append(item)`` or, in batch, using ``obj.extend(list_of_items)``. 709 This is primarily used for list subclasses, but may be used by other 710 classes as long as they have :meth:`append` and :meth:`extend` methods with 711 the appropriate signature. (Whether :meth:`append` or :meth:`extend` is 712 used depends on which pickle protocol version is used as well as the number 713 of items to append, so both must be supported.) 714 715 * Optionally, an iterator (not a sequence) yielding successive key-value 716 pairs. These items will be stored to the object using ``obj[key] = 717 value``. This is primarily used for dictionary subclasses, but may be used 718 by other classes as long as they implement :meth:`__setitem__`. 719 720 * Optionally, a callable with a ``(obj, state)`` signature. This 721 callable allows the user to programmatically control the state-updating 722 behavior of a specific object, instead of using ``obj``'s static 723 :meth:`__setstate__` method. If not ``None``, this callable will have 724 priority over ``obj``'s :meth:`__setstate__`. 725 726 .. versionadded:: 3.8 727 The optional sixth tuple item, ``(obj, state)``, was added. 728 729 730.. method:: object.__reduce_ex__(protocol) 731 732 Alternatively, a :meth:`__reduce_ex__` method may be defined. The only 733 difference is this method should take a single integer argument, the protocol 734 version. When defined, pickle will prefer it over the :meth:`__reduce__` 735 method. In addition, :meth:`__reduce__` automatically becomes a synonym for 736 the extended version. The main use for this method is to provide 737 backwards-compatible reduce values for older Python releases. 738 739.. currentmodule:: pickle 740 741.. _pickle-persistent: 742 743Persistence of External Objects 744^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 745 746.. index:: 747 single: persistent_id (pickle protocol) 748 single: persistent_load (pickle protocol) 749 750For the benefit of object persistence, the :mod:`pickle` module supports the 751notion of a reference to an object outside the pickled data stream. Such 752objects are referenced by a persistent ID, which should be either a string of 753alphanumeric characters (for protocol 0) [#]_ or just an arbitrary object (for 754any newer protocol). 755 756The resolution of such persistent IDs is not defined by the :mod:`pickle` 757module; it will delegate this resolution to the user-defined methods on the 758pickler and unpickler, :meth:`~Pickler.persistent_id` and 759:meth:`~Unpickler.persistent_load` respectively. 760 761To pickle objects that have an external persistent ID, the pickler must have a 762custom :meth:`~Pickler.persistent_id` method that takes an object as an 763argument and returns either ``None`` or the persistent ID for that object. 764When ``None`` is returned, the pickler simply pickles the object as normal. 765When a persistent ID string is returned, the pickler will pickle that object, 766along with a marker so that the unpickler will recognize it as a persistent ID. 767 768To unpickle external objects, the unpickler must have a custom 769:meth:`~Unpickler.persistent_load` method that takes a persistent ID object and 770returns the referenced object. 771 772Here is a comprehensive example presenting how persistent ID can be used to 773pickle external objects by reference. 774 775.. literalinclude:: ../includes/dbpickle.py 776 777.. _pickle-dispatch: 778 779Dispatch Tables 780^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 781 782If one wants to customize pickling of some classes without disturbing 783any other code which depends on pickling, then one can create a 784pickler with a private dispatch table. 785 786The global dispatch table managed by the :mod:`copyreg` module is 787available as :data:`copyreg.dispatch_table`. Therefore, one may 788choose to use a modified copy of :data:`copyreg.dispatch_table` as a 789private dispatch table. 790 791For example :: 792 793 f = io.BytesIO() 794 p = pickle.Pickler(f) 795 p.dispatch_table = copyreg.dispatch_table.copy() 796 p.dispatch_table[SomeClass] = reduce_SomeClass 797 798creates an instance of :class:`pickle.Pickler` with a private dispatch 799table which handles the ``SomeClass`` class specially. Alternatively, 800the code :: 801 802 class MyPickler(pickle.Pickler): 803 dispatch_table = copyreg.dispatch_table.copy() 804 dispatch_table[SomeClass] = reduce_SomeClass 805 f = io.BytesIO() 806 p = MyPickler(f) 807 808does the same but all instances of ``MyPickler`` will by default 809share the private dispatch table. On the other hand, the code :: 810 811 copyreg.pickle(SomeClass, reduce_SomeClass) 812 f = io.BytesIO() 813 p = pickle.Pickler(f) 814 815modifies the global dispatch table shared by all users of the :mod:`copyreg` module. 816 817.. _pickle-state: 818 819Handling Stateful Objects 820^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 821 822.. index:: 823 single: __getstate__() (copy protocol) 824 single: __setstate__() (copy protocol) 825 826Here's an example that shows how to modify pickling behavior for a class. 827The :class:`TextReader` class opens a text file, and returns the line number and 828line contents each time its :meth:`!readline` method is called. If a 829:class:`TextReader` instance is pickled, all attributes *except* the file object 830member are saved. When the instance is unpickled, the file is reopened, and 831reading resumes from the last location. The :meth:`__setstate__` and 832:meth:`__getstate__` methods are used to implement this behavior. :: 833 834 class TextReader: 835 """Print and number lines in a text file.""" 836 837 def __init__(self, filename): 838 self.filename = filename 839 self.file = open(filename) 840 self.lineno = 0 841 842 def readline(self): 843 self.lineno += 1 844 line = self.file.readline() 845 if not line: 846 return None 847 if line.endswith('\n'): 848 line = line[:-1] 849 return "%i: %s" % (self.lineno, line) 850 851 def __getstate__(self): 852 # Copy the object's state from self.__dict__ which contains 853 # all our instance attributes. Always use the dict.copy() 854 # method to avoid modifying the original state. 855 state = self.__dict__.copy() 856 # Remove the unpicklable entries. 857 del state['file'] 858 return state 859 860 def __setstate__(self, state): 861 # Restore instance attributes (i.e., filename and lineno). 862 self.__dict__.update(state) 863 # Restore the previously opened file's state. To do so, we need to 864 # reopen it and read from it until the line count is restored. 865 file = open(self.filename) 866 for _ in range(self.lineno): 867 file.readline() 868 # Finally, save the file. 869 self.file = file 870 871 872A sample usage might be something like this:: 873 874 >>> reader = TextReader("hello.txt") 875 >>> reader.readline() 876 '1: Hello world!' 877 >>> reader.readline() 878 '2: I am line number two.' 879 >>> new_reader = pickle.loads(pickle.dumps(reader)) 880 >>> new_reader.readline() 881 '3: Goodbye!' 882 883.. _reducer_override: 884 885Custom Reduction for Types, Functions, and Other Objects 886-------------------------------------------------------- 887 888.. versionadded:: 3.8 889 890Sometimes, :attr:`~Pickler.dispatch_table` may not be flexible enough. 891In particular we may want to customize pickling based on another criterion 892than the object's type, or we may want to customize the pickling of 893functions and classes. 894 895For those cases, it is possible to subclass from the :class:`Pickler` class and 896implement a :meth:`~Pickler.reducer_override` method. This method can return an 897arbitrary reduction tuple (see :meth:`__reduce__`). It can alternatively return 898``NotImplemented`` to fallback to the traditional behavior. 899 900If both the :attr:`~Pickler.dispatch_table` and 901:meth:`~Pickler.reducer_override` are defined, then 902:meth:`~Pickler.reducer_override` method takes priority. 903 904.. Note:: 905 For performance reasons, :meth:`~Pickler.reducer_override` may not be 906 called for the following objects: ``None``, ``True``, ``False``, and 907 exact instances of :class:`int`, :class:`float`, :class:`bytes`, 908 :class:`str`, :class:`dict`, :class:`set`, :class:`frozenset`, :class:`list` 909 and :class:`tuple`. 910 911Here is a simple example where we allow pickling and reconstructing 912a given class:: 913 914 import io 915 import pickle 916 917 class MyClass: 918 my_attribute = 1 919 920 class MyPickler(pickle.Pickler): 921 def reducer_override(self, obj): 922 """Custom reducer for MyClass.""" 923 if getattr(obj, "__name__", None) == "MyClass": 924 return type, (obj.__name__, obj.__bases__, 925 {'my_attribute': obj.my_attribute}) 926 else: 927 # For any other object, fallback to usual reduction 928 return NotImplemented 929 930 f = io.BytesIO() 931 p = MyPickler(f) 932 p.dump(MyClass) 933 934 del MyClass 935 936 unpickled_class = pickle.loads(f.getvalue()) 937 938 assert isinstance(unpickled_class, type) 939 assert unpickled_class.__name__ == "MyClass" 940 assert unpickled_class.my_attribute == 1 941 942 943.. _pickle-oob: 944 945Out-of-band Buffers 946------------------- 947 948.. versionadded:: 3.8 949 950In some contexts, the :mod:`pickle` module is used to transfer massive amounts 951of data. Therefore, it can be important to minimize the number of memory 952copies, to preserve performance and resource consumption. However, normal 953operation of the :mod:`pickle` module, as it transforms a graph-like structure 954of objects into a sequential stream of bytes, intrinsically involves copying 955data to and from the pickle stream. 956 957This constraint can be eschewed if both the *provider* (the implementation 958of the object types to be transferred) and the *consumer* (the implementation 959of the communications system) support the out-of-band transfer facilities 960provided by pickle protocol 5 and higher. 961 962Provider API 963^^^^^^^^^^^^ 964 965The large data objects to be pickled must implement a :meth:`__reduce_ex__` 966method specialized for protocol 5 and higher, which returns a 967:class:`PickleBuffer` instance (instead of e.g. a :class:`bytes` object) 968for any large data. 969 970A :class:`PickleBuffer` object *signals* that the underlying buffer is 971eligible for out-of-band data transfer. Those objects remain compatible 972with normal usage of the :mod:`pickle` module. However, consumers can also 973opt-in to tell :mod:`pickle` that they will handle those buffers by 974themselves. 975 976Consumer API 977^^^^^^^^^^^^ 978 979A communications system can enable custom handling of the :class:`PickleBuffer` 980objects generated when serializing an object graph. 981 982On the sending side, it needs to pass a *buffer_callback* argument to 983:class:`Pickler` (or to the :func:`dump` or :func:`dumps` function), which 984will be called with each :class:`PickleBuffer` generated while pickling 985the object graph. Buffers accumulated by the *buffer_callback* will not 986see their data copied into the pickle stream, only a cheap marker will be 987inserted. 988 989On the receiving side, it needs to pass a *buffers* argument to 990:class:`Unpickler` (or to the :func:`load` or :func:`loads` function), 991which is an iterable of the buffers which were passed to *buffer_callback*. 992That iterable should produce buffers in the same order as they were passed 993to *buffer_callback*. Those buffers will provide the data expected by the 994reconstructors of the objects whose pickling produced the original 995:class:`PickleBuffer` objects. 996 997Between the sending side and the receiving side, the communications system 998is free to implement its own transfer mechanism for out-of-band buffers. 999Potential optimizations include the use of shared memory or datatype-dependent 1000compression. 1001 1002Example 1003^^^^^^^ 1004 1005Here is a trivial example where we implement a :class:`bytearray` subclass 1006able to participate in out-of-band buffer pickling:: 1007 1008 class ZeroCopyByteArray(bytearray): 1009 1010 def __reduce_ex__(self, protocol): 1011 if protocol >= 5: 1012 return type(self)._reconstruct, (PickleBuffer(self),), None 1013 else: 1014 # PickleBuffer is forbidden with pickle protocols <= 4. 1015 return type(self)._reconstruct, (bytearray(self),) 1016 1017 @classmethod 1018 def _reconstruct(cls, obj): 1019 with memoryview(obj) as m: 1020 # Get a handle over the original buffer object 1021 obj = m.obj 1022 if type(obj) is cls: 1023 # Original buffer object is a ZeroCopyByteArray, return it 1024 # as-is. 1025 return obj 1026 else: 1027 return cls(obj) 1028 1029The reconstructor (the ``_reconstruct`` class method) returns the buffer's 1030providing object if it has the right type. This is an easy way to simulate 1031zero-copy behaviour on this toy example. 1032 1033On the consumer side, we can pickle those objects the usual way, which 1034when unserialized will give us a copy of the original object:: 1035 1036 b = ZeroCopyByteArray(b"abc") 1037 data = pickle.dumps(b, protocol=5) 1038 new_b = pickle.loads(data) 1039 print(b == new_b) # True 1040 print(b is new_b) # False: a copy was made 1041 1042But if we pass a *buffer_callback* and then give back the accumulated 1043buffers when unserializing, we are able to get back the original object:: 1044 1045 b = ZeroCopyByteArray(b"abc") 1046 buffers = [] 1047 data = pickle.dumps(b, protocol=5, buffer_callback=buffers.append) 1048 new_b = pickle.loads(data, buffers=buffers) 1049 print(b == new_b) # True 1050 print(b is new_b) # True: no copy was made 1051 1052This example is limited by the fact that :class:`bytearray` allocates its 1053own memory: you cannot create a :class:`bytearray` instance that is backed 1054by another object's memory. However, third-party datatypes such as NumPy 1055arrays do not have this limitation, and allow use of zero-copy pickling 1056(or making as few copies as possible) when transferring between distinct 1057processes or systems. 1058 1059.. seealso:: :pep:`574` -- Pickle protocol 5 with out-of-band data 1060 1061 1062.. _pickle-restrict: 1063 1064Restricting Globals 1065------------------- 1066 1067.. index:: 1068 single: find_class() (pickle protocol) 1069 1070By default, unpickling will import any class or function that it finds in the 1071pickle data. For many applications, this behaviour is unacceptable as it 1072permits the unpickler to import and invoke arbitrary code. Just consider what 1073this hand-crafted pickle data stream does when loaded:: 1074 1075 >>> import pickle 1076 >>> pickle.loads(b"cos\nsystem\n(S'echo hello world'\ntR.") 1077 hello world 1078 0 1079 1080In this example, the unpickler imports the :func:`os.system` function and then 1081apply the string argument "echo hello world". Although this example is 1082inoffensive, it is not difficult to imagine one that could damage your system. 1083 1084For this reason, you may want to control what gets unpickled by customizing 1085:meth:`Unpickler.find_class`. Unlike its name suggests, 1086:meth:`Unpickler.find_class` is called whenever a global (i.e., a class or 1087a function) is requested. Thus it is possible to either completely forbid 1088globals or restrict them to a safe subset. 1089 1090Here is an example of an unpickler allowing only few safe classes from the 1091:mod:`builtins` module to be loaded:: 1092 1093 import builtins 1094 import io 1095 import pickle 1096 1097 safe_builtins = { 1098 'range', 1099 'complex', 1100 'set', 1101 'frozenset', 1102 'slice', 1103 } 1104 1105 class RestrictedUnpickler(pickle.Unpickler): 1106 1107 def find_class(self, module, name): 1108 # Only allow safe classes from builtins. 1109 if module == "builtins" and name in safe_builtins: 1110 return getattr(builtins, name) 1111 # Forbid everything else. 1112 raise pickle.UnpicklingError("global '%s.%s' is forbidden" % 1113 (module, name)) 1114 1115 def restricted_loads(s): 1116 """Helper function analogous to pickle.loads().""" 1117 return RestrictedUnpickler(io.BytesIO(s)).load() 1118 1119A sample usage of our unpickler working as intended:: 1120 1121 >>> restricted_loads(pickle.dumps([1, 2, range(15)])) 1122 [1, 2, range(0, 15)] 1123 >>> restricted_loads(b"cos\nsystem\n(S'echo hello world'\ntR.") 1124 Traceback (most recent call last): 1125 ... 1126 pickle.UnpicklingError: global 'os.system' is forbidden 1127 >>> restricted_loads(b'cbuiltins\neval\n' 1128 ... b'(S\'getattr(__import__("os"), "system")' 1129 ... b'("echo hello world")\'\ntR.') 1130 Traceback (most recent call last): 1131 ... 1132 pickle.UnpicklingError: global 'builtins.eval' is forbidden 1133 1134 1135.. XXX Add note about how extension codes could evade our protection 1136 mechanism (e.g. cached classes do not invokes find_class()). 1137 1138As our examples shows, you have to be careful with what you allow to be 1139unpickled. Therefore if security is a concern, you may want to consider 1140alternatives such as the marshalling API in :mod:`xmlrpc.client` or 1141third-party solutions. 1142 1143 1144Performance 1145----------- 1146 1147Recent versions of the pickle protocol (from protocol 2 and upwards) feature 1148efficient binary encodings for several common features and built-in types. 1149Also, the :mod:`pickle` module has a transparent optimizer written in C. 1150 1151 1152.. _pickle-example: 1153 1154Examples 1155-------- 1156 1157For the simplest code, use the :func:`dump` and :func:`load` functions. :: 1158 1159 import pickle 1160 1161 # An arbitrary collection of objects supported by pickle. 1162 data = { 1163 'a': [1, 2.0, 3+4j], 1164 'b': ("character string", b"byte string"), 1165 'c': {None, True, False} 1166 } 1167 1168 with open('data.pickle', 'wb') as f: 1169 # Pickle the 'data' dictionary using the highest protocol available. 1170 pickle.dump(data, f, pickle.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL) 1171 1172 1173The following example reads the resulting pickled data. :: 1174 1175 import pickle 1176 1177 with open('data.pickle', 'rb') as f: 1178 # The protocol version used is detected automatically, so we do not 1179 # have to specify it. 1180 data = pickle.load(f) 1181 1182 1183.. XXX: Add examples showing how to optimize pickles for size (like using 1184.. pickletools.optimize() or the gzip module). 1185 1186 1187.. seealso:: 1188 1189 Module :mod:`copyreg` 1190 Pickle interface constructor registration for extension types. 1191 1192 Module :mod:`pickletools` 1193 Tools for working with and analyzing pickled data. 1194 1195 Module :mod:`shelve` 1196 Indexed databases of objects; uses :mod:`pickle`. 1197 1198 Module :mod:`copy` 1199 Shallow and deep object copying. 1200 1201 Module :mod:`marshal` 1202 High-performance serialization of built-in types. 1203 1204 1205.. rubric:: Footnotes 1206 1207.. [#] Don't confuse this with the :mod:`marshal` module 1208 1209.. [#] This is why :keyword:`lambda` functions cannot be pickled: all 1210 :keyword:`!lambda` functions share the same name: ``<lambda>``. 1211 1212.. [#] The exception raised will likely be an :exc:`ImportError` or an 1213 :exc:`AttributeError` but it could be something else. 1214 1215.. [#] The :mod:`copy` module uses this protocol for shallow and deep copying 1216 operations. 1217 1218.. [#] The limitation on alphanumeric characters is due to the fact 1219 that persistent IDs in protocol 0 are delimited by the newline 1220 character. Therefore if any kind of newline characters occurs in 1221 persistent IDs, the resulting pickled data will become unreadable. 1222