Exceptions

Built-in Exceptions reference

Here’s a list of all exceptions included in Scrapy and their usage.

CloseSpider

exception scrapy.exceptions.CloseSpider(reason='cancelled')[source]

This exception can be raised from a spider callback to request the spider to be closed/stopped. Supported arguments:

Parameters

reason (str) – the reason for closing

For example:

def parse_page(self, response):
    if 'Bandwidth exceeded' in response.body:
        raise CloseSpider('bandwidth_exceeded')

DontCloseSpider

exception scrapy.exceptions.DontCloseSpider[source]

This exception can be raised in a spider_idle signal handler to prevent the spider from being closed.

DropItem

exception scrapy.exceptions.DropItem[source]

The exception that must be raised by item pipeline stages to stop processing an Item. For more information see Item Pipeline.

IgnoreRequest

exception scrapy.exceptions.IgnoreRequest[source]

This exception can be raised by the Scheduler or any downloader middleware to indicate that the request should be ignored.

NotConfigured

exception scrapy.exceptions.NotConfigured[source]

This exception can be raised by some components to indicate that they will remain disabled. Those components include:

  • Extensions

  • Item pipelines

  • Downloader middlewares

  • Spider middlewares

The exception must be raised in the component’s __init__ method.

NotSupported

exception scrapy.exceptions.NotSupported[source]

This exception is raised to indicate an unsupported feature.

StopDownload

New in version 2.2.

exception scrapy.exceptions.StopDownload(fail=True)[source]

Raised from a bytes_received signal handler to indicate that no further bytes should be downloaded for a response.

The fail boolean parameter controls which method will handle the resulting response:

  • If fail=True (default), the request errback is called. The response object is available as the response attribute of the StopDownload exception, which is in turn stored as the value attribute of the received Failure object. This means that in an errback defined as def errback(self, failure), the response can be accessed though failure.value.response.

  • If fail=False, the request callback is called instead.

In both cases, the response could have its body truncated: the body contains all bytes received up until the exception is raised, including the bytes received in the signal handler that raises the exception. Also, the response object is marked with "download_stopped" in its Response.flags attribute.

Note

fail is a keyword-only parameter, i.e. raising StopDownload(False) or StopDownload(True) will raise a TypeError.

See the documentation for the bytes_received signal and the Stopping the download of a Response topic for additional information and examples.