Security News
Weekly Downloads Now Available in npm Package Search Results
Socket's package search now displays weekly downloads for npm packages, helping developers quickly assess popularity and make more informed decisions.
airbyte-source-google-analytics-data-api
Advanced tools
Source implementation for Google Analytics Data Api.
This is the repository for the Google-Analytics-Data-Api source connector, written in Python. For information about how to use this connector within Airbyte, see the documentation.
From this connector directory, run:
poetry install --with dev
If you are a community contributor, follow the instructions in the documentation
to generate the necessary credentials. Then create a file secrets/config.json
conforming to the source_google_analytics_data_api/spec.yaml
file.
Note that any directory named secrets
is gitignored across the entire Airbyte repo, so there is no danger of accidentally checking in sensitive information.
See sample_files/sample_config.json
for a sample config file.
poetry run source-google-analytics-data-api spec
poetry run source-google-analytics-data-api check --config secrets/config.json
poetry run source-google-analytics-data-api discover --config secrets/config.json
poetry run source-google-analytics-data-api read --config secrets/config.json --catalog sample_files/configured_catalog.json
To run unit tests locally, from the connector directory run:
poetry run pytest unit_tests
airbyte-ci
airbyte-ci connectors --name=source-google-analytics-data-api build
An image will be available on your host with the tag airbyte/source-google-analytics-data-api:dev
.
Then run any of the connector commands as follows:
docker run --rm airbyte/source-google-analytics-data-api:dev spec
docker run --rm -v $(pwd)/secrets:/secrets airbyte/source-google-analytics-data-api:dev check --config /secrets/config.json
docker run --rm -v $(pwd)/secrets:/secrets airbyte/source-google-analytics-data-api:dev discover --config /secrets/config.json
docker run --rm -v $(pwd)/secrets:/secrets -v $(pwd)/integration_tests:/integration_tests airbyte/source-google-analytics-data-api:dev read --config /secrets/config.json --catalog /integration_tests/configured_catalog.json
You can run our full test suite locally using airbyte-ci
:
airbyte-ci connectors --name=source-google-analytics-data-api test
Customize acceptance-test-config.yml
file to configure acceptance tests. See Connector Acceptance Tests for more information.
If your connector requires to create or destroy resources for use during acceptance tests create fixtures for it and place them inside integration_tests/acceptance.py.
All of your dependencies should be managed via Poetry. To add a new dependency, run:
poetry add <package-name>
Please commit the changes to pyproject.toml
and poetry.lock
files.
You've checked out the repo, implemented a million dollar feature, and you're ready to share your changes with the world. Now what?
airbyte-ci connectors --name=source-google-analytics-data-api test
dockerImageTag
value in in metadata.yaml
version
value in pyproject.toml
metadata.yaml
content is up to date.docs/integrations/sources/google-analytics-data-api.md
).FAQs
Source implementation for Google Analytics Data Api.
We found that airbyte-source-google-analytics-data-api demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
Socket's package search now displays weekly downloads for npm packages, helping developers quickly assess popularity and make more informed decisions.
Security News
A Stanford study reveals 9.5% of engineers contribute almost nothing, costing tech $90B annually, with remote work fueling the rise of "ghost engineers."
Research
Security News
Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.