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base64 — RFC 3548: Base16, Base32, Base64 Data Encodings

This module provides data encoding and decoding as specified in RFC 3548. This standard defines the Base16, Base32, and Base64 algorithms for encoding and decoding arbitrary binary strings into text strings that can be safely sent by email, used as parts of URLs, or included as part of an HTTP POST request. The encoding algorithm is not the same as the uuencode program.

There are two interfaces provided by this module. The modern interface supports encoding and decoding string objects using both base-64 alphabets defined in RFC 3548 (normal, and URL- and filesystem-safe). The legacy interface provides for encoding and decoding to and from file-like objects as well as strings, but only using the Base64 standard alphabet.

The modern interface, which was introduced in Python 2.4, provides:

base64.b64encode(s[, altchars])

Encode a string using Base64.

s is the string to encode. Optional altchars must be a string of at least length 2 (additional characters are ignored) which specifies an alternative alphabet for the + and / characters. This allows an application to e.g. generate URL or filesystem safe Base64 strings. The default is None, for which the standard Base64 alphabet is used.

The encoded string is returned.

base64.b64decode(s[, altchars])

Decode a Base64 encoded string.

s is the string to decode. Optional altchars must be a string of at least length 2 (additional characters are ignored) which specifies the alternative alphabet used instead of the + and / characters.

The decoded string is returned. A TypeError is raised if s is incorrectly padded. Characters that are neither in the normal base-64 alphabet nor the alternative alphabet are discarded prior to the padding check.

base64.standard_b64encode(s)

Encode string s using the standard Base64 alphabet.

base64.standard_b64decode(s)

Decode string s using the standard Base64 alphabet.

base64.urlsafe_b64encode(s)

Encode string s using the URL- and filesystem-safe alphabet, which substitutes - instead of + and _ instead of / in the standard Base64 alphabet. The result can still contain =.

base64.urlsafe_b64decode(s)

Decode string s using the URL- and filesystem-safe alphabet, which substitutes - instead of + and _ instead of / in the standard Base64 alphabet.

base64.b32encode(s)

Encode a string using Base32. s is the string to encode. The encoded string is returned.

base64.b32decode(s[, casefold[, map01]])

Decode a Base32 encoded string.

s is the string to decode. Optional casefold is a flag specifying whether a lowercase alphabet is acceptable as input. For security purposes, the default is False.

RFC 3548 allows for optional mapping of the digit 0 (zero) to the letter O (oh), and for optional mapping of the digit 1 (one) to either the letter I (eye) or letter L (el). The optional argument map01 when not None, specifies which letter the digit 1 should be mapped to (when map01 is not None, the digit 0 is always mapped to the letter O). For security purposes the default is None, so that 0 and 1 are not allowed in the input.

The decoded string is returned. A TypeError is raised if s is incorrectly padded or if there are non-alphabet characters present in the string.

base64.b16encode(s)

Encode a string using Base16.

s is the string to encode. The encoded string is returned.

base64.b16decode(s[, casefold])

Decode a Base16 encoded string.

s is the string to decode. Optional casefold is a flag specifying whether a lowercase alphabet is acceptable as input. For security purposes, the default is False.

The decoded string is returned. A TypeError is raised if s were incorrectly padded or if there are non-alphabet characters present in the string.

The legacy interface:

base64.decode(input, output)

Decode the contents of the input file and write the resulting binary data to the output file. input and output must either be file objects or objects that mimic the file object interface. input will be read until input.read() returns an empty string.

base64.decodestring(s)

Decode the string s, which must contain one or more lines of base64 encoded data, and return a string containing the resulting binary data.

base64.encode(input, output)

Encode the contents of the input file and write the resulting base64 encoded data to the output file. input and output must either be file objects or objects that mimic the file object interface. input will be read until input.read() returns an empty string. encode() returns the encoded data plus a trailing newline character ('\n').

base64.encodestring(s)

Encode the string s, which can contain arbitrary binary data, and return a string containing one or more lines of base64-encoded data. encodestring() returns a string containing one or more lines of base64-encoded data always including an extra trailing newline ('\n').

An example usage of the module:

>>> import base64
>>> encoded = base64.b64encode('data to be encoded')
>>> encoded
'ZGF0YSB0byBiZSBlbmNvZGVk'
>>> data = base64.b64decode(encoded)
>>> data
'data to be encoded'

See also

Module binascii

Support module containing ASCII-to-binary and binary-to-ASCII conversions.

RFC 1521 - MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions) Part One: Mechanisms for Specifying and Describing the Format of Internet Message Bodies

Section 5.2, “Base64 Content-Transfer-Encoding,” provides the definition of the base64 encoding.

© 2001–2020 Python Software Foundation
Licensed under the PSF License.
https://docs.python.org/2.7/library/base64.html