dependabot[bot] bbd10fe918 chore: bump urllib3 from 2.6.3 to 2.7.0 in /libs/partners/anthropic (#37343)
Bumps [urllib3](https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3) from 2.6.3 to 2.7.0.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/releases">urllib3's
releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>2.7.0</h2>
<h2>🚀 urllib3 is fundraising for HTTP/2 support</h2>
<p><a
href="https://sethmlarson.dev/urllib3-is-fundraising-for-http2-support">urllib3
is raising ~$40,000 USD</a> to release HTTP/2 support and ensure
long-term sustainable maintenance of the project after a sharp decline
in financial support. If your company or organization uses Python and
would benefit from HTTP/2 support in Requests, pip, cloud SDKs, and
thousands of other projects <a
href="https://opencollective.com/urllib3">please consider contributing
financially</a> to ensure HTTP/2 support is developed sustainably and
maintained for the long-haul.</p>
<p>Thank you for your support.</p>
<h2>Security</h2>
<p>Addressed high-severity security issues. Impact was limited to
specific use cases detailed in the accompanying advisories; overall user
exposure was estimated to be marginal.</p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>Decompression-bomb safeguards of the streaming API were bypassed:</p>
<ol>
<li>When <code>HTTPResponse.drain_conn()</code> was called after the
response had been read and decompressed partially. (Reported by <a
href="https://github.com/Cycloctane"><code>@​Cycloctane</code></a>)</li>
<li>During the second <code>HTTPResponse.read(amt=N)</code> or
<code>HTTPResponse.stream(amt=N)</code> call when the response was
decompressed using the official <a
href="https://pypi.org/project/brotli/">Brotli</a> library. (Reported by
<a
href="https://github.com/kimkou2024"><code>@​kimkou2024</code></a>)</li>
</ol>
<p>See GHSA-mf9v-mfxr-j63j for details.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>HTTP pools created using
<code>ProxyManager.connection_from_url</code> did not strip sensitive
headers specified in <code>Retry.remove_headers_on_redirect</code> when
redirecting to a different host. (GHSA-qccp-gfcp-xxvc reported by <a
href="https://github.com/christos-spearbit"><code>@​christos-spearbit</code></a>)</p>
</li>
</ul>
<h2>Deprecations and Removals</h2>
<ul>
<li>Used <code>FutureWarning</code> instead of
<code>DeprecationWarning</code> for better visibility of existing
deprecation notices. Rescheduled the removal of deprecated features to
version 3.0. (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3763">urllib3/urllib3#3763</a>)</li>
<li>Removed support for end-of-life Python 3.9. (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3720">urllib3/urllib3#3720</a>)</li>
<li>Removed support for end-of-life PyPy3.10. (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/4979">urllib3/urllib3#4979</a>)</li>
<li>Bumped the minimum supported pyOpenSSL version to 19.0.0. (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3777">urllib3/urllib3#3777</a>)</li>
</ul>
<h2>Bugfixes</h2>
<ul>
<li>Fixed a bug where <code>HTTPResponse.read(amt=None)</code> was
ignoring decompressed data buffered from previous partial reads. (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3636">urllib3/urllib3#3636</a>)</li>
<li>Fixed a bug where <code>HTTPResponse.read()</code> could cache only
part of the response after a partial read when
<code>cache_content=True</code>. (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/4967">urllib3/urllib3#4967</a>)</li>
<li>Fixed <code>HTTPResponse.stream()</code> and
<code>HTTPResponse.read_chunked()</code> to handle <code>amt=0</code>.
(<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3793">urllib3/urllib3#3793</a>)</li>
<li>Updated <code>_TYPE_BODY</code> type alias to include missing
<code>Iterable[str]</code>, matching the documented and runtime behavior
of chunked request bodies. (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3798">urllib3/urllib3#3798</a>)</li>
<li>Fixed <code>LocationParseError</code> when paths resembling
schemeless URIs were passed to
<code>HTTPConnectionPool.urlopen()</code>. (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3352">urllib3/urllib3#3352</a>)</li>
<li>Fixed <code>BaseHTTPResponse.readinto()</code> type annotation to
accept <code>memoryview</code> in addition to <code>bytearray</code>,
matching the <code>io.RawIOBase.readinto</code> contract and enabling
use with <code>io.BufferedReader</code> without type errors. (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3764">urllib3/urllib3#3764</a>)</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Changelog</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/blob/main/CHANGES.rst">urllib3's
changelog</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h1>2.7.0 (2026-05-07)</h1>
<h2>Security</h2>
<p>Addressed high-severity security issues.
Impact was limited to specific use cases detailed in the accompanying
advisories; overall user exposure was estimated to be marginal.</p>
<ul>
<li>
<p>Decompression-bomb safeguards of the streaming API were bypassed:</p>
<ol>
<li>When <code>HTTPResponse.drain_conn()</code> was called after the
response had been
read and decompressed partially.</li>
<li>During the second <code>HTTPResponse.read(amt=N)</code> or
<code>HTTPResponse.stream(amt=N)</code> call when the response was
decompressed
using the official <code>Brotli
&lt;https://pypi.org/project/brotli/&gt;</code>__ library.</li>
</ol>
<p>See <code>GHSA-mf9v-mfxr-j63j
&lt;https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/security/advisories/GHSA-mf9v-mfxr-j63j&gt;</code>__
for details.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>HTTP pools created using
<code>ProxyManager.connection_from_url</code> did not strip
sensitive headers specified in
<code>Retry.remove_headers_on_redirect</code> when
redirecting to a different host.
(<code>GHSA-qccp-gfcp-xxvc
&lt;https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/security/advisories/GHSA-qccp-gfcp-xxvc&gt;</code>__)</p>
</li>
</ul>
<h2>Deprecations and Removals</h2>
<ul>
<li>Used <code>FutureWarning</code> instead of
<code>DeprecationWarning</code> for better
visibility of existing deprecation notices. Rescheduled the removal of
deprecated features to version 3.0.
(<code>[#3763](https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3763)
&lt;https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3763&gt;</code>__)</li>
<li>Removed support for end-of-life Python 3.9.
(<code>[#3720](https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3720)
&lt;https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3720&gt;</code>__)</li>
<li>Removed support for end-of-life PyPy3.10.
(<code>[#4979](https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/4979)
&lt;https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/4979&gt;</code>__)</li>
<li>Bumped the minimum supported pyOpenSSL version to 19.0.0.
(<code>[#3777](https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3777)
&lt;https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3777&gt;</code>__)</li>
</ul>
<h2>Bugfixes</h2>
<ul>
<li>Fixed a bug where <code>HTTPResponse.read(amt=None)</code> was
ignoring decompressed
data buffered from previous partial reads.
(<code>[#3636](https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3636)
&lt;https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/3636&gt;</code>__)</li>
<li>Fixed a bug where <code>HTTPResponse.read()</code> could cache only
part of the
response after a partial read when <code>cache_content=True</code>.</li>
</ul>
<!-- raw HTML omitted -->
</blockquote>
<p>... (truncated)</p>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="9a950b92d9"><code>9a950b9</code></a>
Release 2.7.0</li>
<li><a
href="5ec0de499b"><code>5ec0de4</code></a>
Merge commit from fork</li>
<li><a
href="2bdcc44d1e"><code>2bdcc44</code></a>
Merge commit from fork</li>
<li><a
href="f45b0df09d"><code>f45b0df</code></a>
Fix a misleading example for <code>ProxyManager</code> (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/4970">#4970</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="577193ca02"><code>577193c</code></a>
Switch to nightly PyPy3.11 in CI for now (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/4984">#4984</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="e90af45bb0"><code>e90af45</code></a>
Avoid infinite loop in <code>HTTPResponse.read_chunked</code> when
<code>amt=0</code> (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/4974">#4974</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="67ed74fdae"><code>67ed74f</code></a>
Bump dev dependencies (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/4972">#4972</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="3abd481097"><code>3abd481</code></a>
Upgrade mypy to version 1.20.2 (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/4978">#4978</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="2b8725dfca"><code>2b8725d</code></a>
Drop support for EOL PyPy3.10 (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/4979">#4979</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="2944b2a0a6"><code>2944b2a</code></a>
Upgrade <code>setup-chrome</code> and <code>setup-firefox</code> to fix
warnings (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/urllib3/urllib3/issues/4973">#4973</a>)</li>
<li>Additional commits viewable in <a
href="https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/compare/2.6.3...2.7.0">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
<br />

Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-05-11 11:20:13 -07:00
2023-06-16 15:42:14 -07:00
2023-11-28 17:34:27 -08:00
2026-05-05 17:58:15 +02:00

The agent engineering platform.

PyPI - License PyPI - Downloads Version Twitter / X

LangChain is a framework for building agents and LLM-powered applications. It helps you chain together interoperable components and third-party integrations to simplify AI application development — all while future-proofing decisions as the underlying technology evolves.

Tip

Just getting started? Check out Deep Agents — a higher-level package built on LangChain for agents that have built-in capabilites for common usage patterns such as planning, subagents, file system usage, and more.

Quickstart

pip install langchain
# or
uv add langchain
from langchain.chat_models import init_chat_model

model = init_chat_model("openai:gpt-5.4")
result = model.invoke("Hello, world!")

If you're looking for more advanced customization or agent orchestration, check out LangGraph, our framework for building controllable agent workflows.

For an equivalent JS/TS library, check out LangChain.js.

Tip

For developing, debugging, and deploying AI agents and LLM applications, see LangSmith.

LangChain ecosystem

While the LangChain framework can be used standalone, it also integrates seamlessly with any LangChain product, giving developers a full suite of tools when building LLM applications.

  • Deep Agents — Build agents that can plan, use subagents, and leverage file systems for complex tasks
  • LangGraph — Build agents that can reliably handle complex tasks with our low-level agent orchestration framework
  • Integrations — Chat & embedding models, tools & toolkits, and more
  • LangSmith — Agent evals, observability, and debugging for LLM apps
  • LangSmith Deployment — Deploy and scale agents with a purpose-built platform for long-running, stateful workflows

Why use LangChain?

LangChain helps developers build applications powered by LLMs through a standard interface for models, embeddings, vector stores, and more.

  • Real-time data augmentation — Easily connect LLMs to diverse data sources and external/internal systems, drawing from LangChain's vast library of integrations with model providers, tools, vector stores, retrievers, and more
  • Model interoperability — Swap models in and out as your engineering team experiments to find the best choice for your application's needs. As the industry frontier evolves, adapt quickly — LangChain's abstractions keep you moving without losing momentum
  • Rapid prototyping — Quickly build and iterate on LLM applications with LangChain's modular, component-based architecture. Test different approaches and workflows without rebuilding from scratch, accelerating your development cycle
  • Production-ready features — Deploy reliable applications with built-in support for monitoring, evaluation, and debugging through integrations like LangSmith. Scale with confidence using battle-tested patterns and best practices
  • Vibrant community and ecosystem — Leverage a rich ecosystem of integrations, templates, and community-contributed components. Benefit from continuous improvements and stay up-to-date with the latest AI developments through an active open-source community
  • Flexible abstraction layers — Work at the level of abstraction that suits your needs — from high-level chains for quick starts to low-level components for fine-grained control. LangChain grows with your application's complexity

Documentation

Discussions: Visit the LangChain Forum to connect with the community and share all of your technical questions, ideas, and feedback.

Additional resources

  • Contributing Guide Learn how to contribute to LangChain projects and find good first issues.
  • Code of Conduct Our community guidelines and standards for participation.
  • LangChain Academy Comprehensive, free courses on LangChain libraries and products, made by the LangChain team.
Description
Building applications with LLMs through composability
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