aind-codeocean-utils
Library to contain useful utility methods to interface with Code Ocean.
Installation
To use the package, you can install it from pypi
:
pip install aind-codeocean-utils
To install the package from source, in the root directory, run
pip install -e .
To develop the code, run
pip install -e .[dev]
Usage
The package includes helper functions to interact with Code Ocean:
APIHandler
This class enables one to:
- Update asset tags in Code Ocean
- Find external data assets that do not exist in S3
- Find external data assets
import os
from codeocean.client import CodeOcean
from aind_codeocean_utils.api_handler import APIHandler
CO_TOKEN = os.environ["CO_TOKEN"]
CO_DOMAIN = os.environ["CO_DOMAIN"]
co_client = CodeOcean(domain=CO_DOMAIN, token=CO_TOKEN)
api_handler = APIHandler(co_client)
data_assets = [
co_client.data_assets.get_data_asset(data_asset_id="abc"),
co_client.data_assets.get_data_asset(data_asset_id="def")
]
api_handler.update_tags(
tags_to_remove=["test"],
tags_to_add=["new_tag"],
data_assets=data_assets,
)
Contributing
Linters and testing
There are several libraries used to run linters, check documentation, and run tests.
- Please test your changes using the coverage library, which will run the tests and log a coverage report:
coverage run -m unittest discover && coverage report
- Use interrogate to check that modules, methods, etc. have been documented thoroughly:
interrogate .
- Use flake8 to check that code is up to standards (no unused imports, etc.):
flake8 .
- Use black to automatically format the code into PEP standards:
black .
- Use isort to automatically sort import statements:
isort .
Pull requests
For internal members, please create a branch. For external members, please fork the repository and open a pull request from the fork. We'll primarily use Angular style for commit messages. Roughly, they should follow the pattern:
<type>(<scope>): <short summary>
where scope (optional) describes the packages affected by the code changes and type (mandatory) is one of:
- build: Changes that affect build tools or external dependencies (example scopes: pyproject.toml, setup.py)
- ci: Changes to our CI configuration files and scripts (examples: .github/workflows/ci.yml)
- docs: Documentation only changes
- feat: A new feature
- fix: A bugfix
- perf: A code change that improves performance
- refactor: A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
- test: Adding missing tests or correcting existing tests
Semantic Release
The table below, from semantic release, shows which commit message gets you which release type when semantic-release
runs (using the default configuration):
Commit message | Release type |
---|
fix(pencil): stop graphite breaking when too much pressure applied | Patch Fix Release, Default release |
feat(pencil): add 'graphiteWidth' option | Minor Feature Release |
perf(pencil): remove graphiteWidth option
BREAKING CHANGE: The graphiteWidth option has been removed.
The default graphite width of 10mm is always used for performance reasons. | Major Breaking Release (Note that the BREAKING CHANGE: token must be in the footer of the commit) |
Documentation
To generate the rst files source files for documentation, run
sphinx-apidoc -o doc_template/source/ src
Then to create the documentation HTML files, run
sphinx-build -b html doc_template/source/ doc_template/build/html
More info on sphinx installation can be found here.