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I am trying to pull information from a url that requires NTLM login.

I originaly received 401 error and after some tweaks have been able to pull the page stating that I have input invalid credentials.

The username and password are correct yet I cannot get past the invalid credentials page.

Lgn2.py:

import urllib2
import HTTPNtlmAuthHandler

login = open('c:/temp/login.txt')
open = login.read()
to = open.split()
user = str(to[0])
password = str(to[1])

url = "http://INSERT URL HERE.com/"
passman = urllib2.HTTPPasswordMgrWithDefaultRealm()
passman.add_password(None, url, user, password)
auth_NTLM = HTTPNtlmAuthHandler.HTTPNtlmAuthHandler(passman)


opener = urllib2.build_opener(auth_NTLM)
urllib2.install_opener(opener)


response = urllib2.urlopen(url)
print(response.read())

I have a username including a \ using the method above I do not get a double backslash in the name when it prints. Should I keep it to where print will have the double backslash in the name as apposed to exactly as the txt file has the username spelled?

The txt file is just a txt document with only: domain\user\name password.

The second backslash in the middle of username would be part of the username.

Any help would be appreciated.

share|improve this question
code.google.com/p/python-ntlm has a username that looks like 'DOMAIN\User'. Does your username have a domain in it? – Nathan Villaescusa Nov 2 '12 at 3:46
yes without the domain it will return a 401 – User-PC Nov 2 '12 at 3:53
What kind of auth mechanism is your web site using? If it's not set to allow basic auth, then you have to use a digest - see the extended example on code.google.com/p/python-ntlm – Seth Nov 2 '12 at 4:32

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