Shopware API Client
A Django-ORM like, Python 3.12, async Shopware 6 admin and store-front API client.
Installation
pip install shopware-api-client
Usage
There are two kinds of clients provided by this library. The client.AdminClient
for the Admin API and the
client.StoreClient
for the Store API.
client.AdminClient
To use the AdminClient you need to create a config.AdminConfig
. The AdminConfig
class supports two login methods
(grant-types):
- client_credentials (Default) Let's you log in with a
client_id
and client_secret
- password Let's you log in using a
username
and password
You also need to provide the Base-URL of your shop.
Example:
from shopware_api_client.config import AdminConfig
CLIENT_ID = "MyClientID"
CLIENT_SECRET = "SuperSecretToken"
SHOP_URL = "https://pets24.shop"
config = AdminConfig(url=SHOP_URL, client_id=CLIENT_ID, client_secret=CLIENT_SECRET, grant_type="client_credentials")
ADMIN_USER = "admin"
ADMIN_PASSWORD = "!MeowMoewMoew~"
config = AdminConfig(url=SHOP_URL, username=ADMIN_USER, password=ADMIN_PASSWORD, grant_type="password")
Now you can create the Client. There are two output formats for the client, that can be selected by the raw
parameter:
- raw=True Outputs the result as a plain dict or list of dicts
- raw=False (Default) Outputs the result as Pydantic-Models
from shopware_api_client.client import AdminClient
client = AdminClient(config=config)
client = AdminClient(config=config, raw=True)
Client-Connections should be closed after usage: await client.close()
. The client can also be used in an async with
block to be closed automatically.
from shopware_api_client.client import AdminClient
async with AdminClient(config=config) as client:
pass
All registered Endpoints are directly available from the client instance. For example if you want to query the Customer
Endpoint:
customer = await client.customer.first()
All available Endpoint functions can be found in the EndpointBase section.
There are two additional ways how the client can be utilized by using it with the Endpoint-Class directly or the
associated Pydantic Model:
from shopware_api_client.endpoints.admin.core.customer import Customer, CustomerEndpoint
customer_endpoint = CustomerEndpoint(client=client)
customer = await customer_endpoint.first()
customer = await Customer.using(client=client).first()
Related Objects
If you use the Pydantic-Model approach (raw=False
) you can also use the returned object to access its related objects:
from shopware_api_client.endpoints.admin import Customer
customer = await Customer.using(client=client).first()
customer_group = await customer.group
all_the_customers = await customer_group.customers
!! Be careful to not close the client before doing related objects calls, since they use the same Client instance !!
from shopware_api_client.client import AdminClient
from shopware_api_client.endpoints.admin import Customer
async with AdminClient(config=config) as client:
customer = await Customer.using(client=client).first()
customer_group = await customer.group
CustomEntities
Shopware allows to create custom entities. You can use the load_custom_entities
function to load them into the client.
from shopware_api_client.client import AdminClient
config = ...
client = AdminClient(config=config)
await client.load_custom_entities(client)
await client.ce_blog.all()
CeBlog = client.ce_blog.model_class
Since custom entities are completely dynamic no autocompletion in IDE is available. However there are some pydantic validations added for the field-types of the custom entity. Relations are currently not supported, but everything else should work as expected.
client.StoreClient
To use the StoreClient you need to create a config.StoreConfig
. The StoreConfig
needs a store api access key.
You also need to provide the Base-URL of your shop.
Some Endpoints (that are somehow related to a user) require a context-token. This parameter is optional.
Example:
from shopware_api_client.config import StoreConfig
ACCESS_KEY = "SJMSAKSOMEKEY"
CONTEXT_TOKEN = "ASKSKJNNMMS"
SHOP_URL = "https://pets24.shop"
config = StoreConfig(url=SHOP_URL, access_key=STORE_API_ACCESS_KEY, context_token=CONTEXT_TOKEN)
This config can be used with the StoreClient
, which works exactly like the AdminClient
.
EndpointBase
The base.EndpointBase
class should be used for creating new Endpoints. It provides some usefull functions to call
the Shopware-API.
The base structure of an Endpoint is pretty simple:
from shopware_api_client.base import ApiModelBase, EndpointBase
class CustomerGroup(ApiModelBase["CustomerGroupEndpoint"]):
pass
class CustomerGroupEndpoint(EndpointBase[CustomerGroup]):
name = "customer_group"
path = "/customer-group"
model_class = CustomerGroup
List of available Functions
all()
return all objects (GET /customer-group or POST /search/customer-group if filter or sort is set)get(pk: str = id)
returns the object with the passed id (GET /customer-group/id)update(pk: str = id, obj: ModelClass | dict[str: Any]
updates an object (PATCH /customer-group/id)create(obj: ModelClass | dict[str: Any]
creates a new object (POST /customer-group)delete(pk: str = id)
deletes an object (DELETE /customer-group/id)filter(name="Cats")
adds a filter to the query. Needs to be called with .all(), .iter() or .first())) More Info: Filterlimit(count: int | None)
sets the limit parameter, to limit the amount of results. Needs to be called with .all() or .first()first()
sets the limit to 1 and returns the result (calling .all())order_by(fields: str | tuple[str]
sets the sort parameter. Needs to be called with .all(), .iter() or .first(). Syntax: "name" for ASC, "-name" for DESCselect_related(**kwargs: dict[str, Any])
sets the _associations parameter to define which related models to load in the request. Needs to be called with .all(), .iter() or .first().only(**kwargs: list[str])
sets the _includes parameter to define which fields to request. Needs to be called with .all(), .iter() or .first().iter(batch_size: int = 100)
sets the limit-parameter to batch_size and makes use of the pagination of the api. Should be used when requesting a big set of data (GET /customer-group or POST /search/customer-group if filter or sort is set)bulk_upsert(objs: list[ModelClass] | list[dict[str, Any]
creates/updates multiple objects. Does always return dict of plain response. (POST /_action/sync)bulk_delete(objs: list[ModelClass] | list[dict[str, Any]
deletes multiple objects. Does always return dict or plain response. (POST /_action/sync)
Not all functions are available for the StoreClient-Endpoints. But some of them have some additional functions.
Filter
The filter()
functions allows you to filter the result of an query. The parameters are basically the field names.
You can add an appendix to change the filter type. Without it looks for direct matches (equals). The following
appendices are available:
__in
expects a list of values, matches if the value is provided in this list (equalsAny)__contains
matches values that contain this value (contains)__gt
greater than (range)__gte
greater than equal (range)__lt
lower than (range)__lte
lower than equal (range)__range
expects a touple of two items, matches everything inbetween. inclusive. (range)__startswith
matches if the value starts with this (prefix)__endswith
matches if the value ends with this (suffix)
For some fields (that are returned as dict, like custom_fields) it's also possible to filter over the values of it's
keys. To do so you can append the key seperated by "__" For example if we have a custom field called "preferred_protein"
we can filter on it like this:
customer = await Customer.using(client=client).filter(custom_field__preferred_protein="fish")
customer = await Customer.using(client=client).filter(custom_field__preferred_protein__in=["fish", "chicken"])
ApiModelBase
The base.ApiModelBase
class is basicly a pydantic.BaseModel
which should be used to create Endpoint-Models.
The base structure of an Endpoint-Model looks like this. Field names are converted to snake_case. Aliases are autogenerated:
from pydantic import Field
from typing import Any
from shopware_api_client.base import ApiModelBase
class CustomerGroup(ApiModelBase["CustomerGroupEndpoint"]):
_identifier = "customer_group"
name: str
display_gross: bool | None = None
custom_fields: dict[str, Any] | None = None
The id
, created_at
and updated_at
attributes are provided in the ApiModelBase and must not be added.
List of available Function
save()
executes Endpoint.update()
if an id is set otherwise Endpoint.create()
delete()
executes Endpoint.delete()
Relations
To make relations to other models work, we have to define them in the Model. There are two classes to make this work:
endpoints.relations.ForeignRelation
and endpoints.relations.ManyRelation
.
-
ForeignRelation[class]
is used when we get the id of the related object in the api response.
class
: Class of the related model
-
ManyRelation[class]
is used for the reverse relation. We don't get ids in the api response, but it can be used through
relation links.
class
: Class of the related model
Example (Customer):
from pydantic import Field
from typing import TYPE_CHECKING
from shopware_api_client.base import ApiModelBase, EndpointClass
from shopware_api_client.endpoints.relations import ForeignRelation, ManyRelation
from ...base_fields import IdField
if TYPE_CHECKING:
from shopware_api_client.endpoints.admin import CustomerAddress
class CustomerBase(ApiModelBase[EndpointClass]):
default_billing_address_id: IdField
class CustomerRelations:
default_billing_address: ForeignRelation["CustomerAddress"]
addresses: ManyRelation["CustomerAddress"]
class Customer(CustomerBase["CustomerEndpoint"], CustomerRelations):
pass
We have two classes Base
and Relations
. This way we can reuse the Base-Model.
Development
Model Creation
Shopware provides API-definitions for their whole API. You can download it from <shopurl>/api/_info/openapi3.json
Then you can use tools like datamodel-code-generator
datamodel-codegen --input openapi3.json --output model_openapi3.py --snake-case-field --use-double-quotes --output-model-type=pydantic_v2.BaseModel --use-standard-collections --use-union-operator
The file may look confusing at first, but you can search for Endpoint-Name + JsonApi (Example: class CustomerJsonApi)
to get all returned fields + relationships class as an overview over the available Relations. However, the Models will
need some Modifications. But it's a good start.
Not all fields returned by the API are writeable and the API will throw an error when you try to set it. So this fields
must have an exclude=True
in their definition. To find out which fields need to be excluded check the Shopware
Endpoint documentation at https://shopware.stoplight.io/. Go to the Endpoint your Model belongs to and check the
available POST fields.
The newly created Model and its Endpoint must than be imported to admin/__init__.py
or store/__init__.py
. The Model must be added to __all__
The Endpoint must be added to the Endpoints class. The __all__
statement is necessary so they
don't get cleaned away as unused imports by code-formaters/cleaners.
We need to import all related models at the end of the file. If we don't add them, Pydantic fails to build the model. If we add them before
our model definition, we run into circular imports.
Step by Step Example (Admin Endpoint Media Thumbnail)
-
Create the file for the endpoint. Since Media Thumbnail is an Admin > Core Endpoint we create a file called media_thumbnail.py
in endpoints/admin/core/
-
You can copy & paste the following example as a base for the new Endpoint:
from typing import Any
from pydantic import Field
from ....base import ApiModelBase, EndpointBase, EndpointClass
from ...base_fields import IdField
from ...relations import ForeignRelation, ManyRelation
class YourModelBase(ApiModelBase[EndpointClass]):
_identifier = "your_model"
foreign_id: IdField
class YourModelRelations:
foreign: ForeignRelation["ForeignRelationModel"]
many: ManyRelation["ManyRelationModel"]
class YourModel(YourModelBase["YourModelEndpoint"], YourModelRelations):
pass
class YourModelEndpoint(EndpointBase[YourModel]):
name = "your_model"
path = "/your-model"
model_class = YourModel
from .foreign_relation_model import ForeignRelationModel
from .may_relation_model import ManyRelationModel
-
Update the example to your needs (Media Thumbnail Example):
- Replace
YourModel
with MediaThumbnail
- Replace
your_model
with media_thumbnail
- Replace
your-model
with media-thumbnail
-
Assuming you used the datamodel-codegen command above to generate datamodels you can search the file for
class MediaThumbnailJsonApi
and copy all fields except id
, created_at
, updated_at
(included in ApiModelBase) and relationships
.
ID-Fields will use the type constr(pattern=r"^[0-9a-f]{32}$")
. Replace it with IdField
from endpoints.base_fields
.
Remove the generated alias entries, because we use a generator for this.
-
Now your media_thumbnail.py
should look like this:
from typing import TYPE_CHECKING, Any, ClassVar
from pydantic import Field
from ....base import ApiModelBase, EndpointBase, EndpointClass
from ....client import registry
from ...base_fields import IdField
from ...relations import ForeignRelation, ManyRelation
class MediaThumbnailBase(ApiModelBase[EndpointClass]):
_identifier = "media_thumbnail"
media_id: IdField
width: int
height: int
url: str | None = Field(
None, description="Runtime field, cannot be used as part of the criteria."
)
path: str | None = None
custom_fields: dict[str, Any] | None = None
class MediaThumbnailRelations:
foreign: ClassVar[ForeignRelation["ForeignRelationModel"]] = ForeignRelation("ForeignRelationModel", "foreign_id")
many: ClassVar[ManyRelation["ManyRelationModel"]] = ManyRelation("ManyRelationModel", "manyRelation")
class MediaThumbnail(MediaThumbnailBase["MediaThumbnailEndpoint"], MediaThumbnailRelations):
pass
class MediaThumbnailEndpoint(EndpointBase[MediaThumbnail]):
name = "media_thumbnail"
path = "/media-thumbnail"
model_class = MediaThumbnail
from .foreign_relation_model import ForeignRelationModel
from .may_relation_model import ManyRelationModel
-
Next up: Relations. For this check the type of the relationships
. MediaThumbnail
has only one relation to media
.
If you follow the types of media > data
you can see the actual model type in the type
field as examples attribute: media.
So it relates to the Media Endpoint.
For this relation our related Field looks like this:
media: ForeignRelation["Media"]
.
We add it to the Relations class.
-
Updated media_thumbnails.py
:
from typing import Any
from pydantic import Field
from ....base import ApiModelBase, EndpointBase, EndpointClass
from ...base_fields import IdField
from ...relations import ForeignRelation
class MediaThumbnailBase(ApiModelBase[EndpointClass]):
_identifier = "media_thumbnail"
media_id: IdField
width: int
height: int
url: str | None = Field(
None, description="Runtime field, cannot be used as part of the criteria."
)
path: str | None = None
custom_fields: dict[str, Any] | None = None
class MediaThumbnailRelations:
media: ForeignRelation["Media"]
class MediaThumbnail(MediaThumbnailBase["MediaThumbnailEndpoint"], MediaThumbnailRelations):
pass
class MediaThumbnailEndpoint(EndpointBase[MediaThumbnail]):
name = "media_thumbnail"
path = "/media-thumbnail"
model_class = MediaThumbnail
from .media import Media
-
Now we have to check, which fields are read-only fields. The easiest way for this is to head to the POST section of the documentation of this Endpoint: https://shopware.stoplight.io/docs/admin-api/9724c473cce7d-create-a-new-media-thumbnail-resources
All fields that aren't listed here are read-only fields. So for our example this are: width, height, path, created_at and updated_at. We need to add an exclude=True
to this fields, to make Pydantic ignore this fields when we send them back to the
API for saving or creating entries. We try to provide default values for excluded fields which are required, so we don't have to set them, when we create
a new object.
-
After adding exclude=True
our final file should look like this:
from typing import Any
from pydantic import AwareDatetime, Field
from ....base import ApiModelBase, EndpointBase, EndpointClass
from ....client import registry
from ...base_fields import IdField
from ...relations import ForeignRelation
class MediaThumbnailBase(ApiModelBase[EndpointClass]):
_identifier = "media_thumbnail"
media_id: IdField
width: int = Field(default=0, exclude=True)
height: int = Field(default=0, exclude=True)
url: str | None = Field(
None, description="Runtime field, cannot be used as part of the criteria."
)
path: str | None = Field(None, exclude=True)
custom_fields: dict[str, Any] | None = None
class MediaThumbnailRelations:
media: ClassVar[ForeignRelation["Media"]] = ForeignRelation("Media", "media_id")
class MediaThumbnail(MediaThumbnailBase["MediaThumbnailEndpoint"], MediaThumbnailRelations):
pass
class MediaThumbnailEndpoint(EndpointBase[MediaThumbnail]):
name = "media_thumbnail"
path = "/media-thumbnail"
model_class = MediaThumbnail
from .media import Media
- As final step we need to add an import for the Model to
endpoints/admin/__init__.py
and add the Model to __all__
and to the AdminEndpoints.init_endpoints
from .core.admin.media_thumbnail import MediaThumbnail, MediaThumbnailEndpoint
__all__ = [
"MediaThumbnail",
]
...
class AdminEndpoints:
def init_endpoints(self, client: "AdminClient"):
self.media_thumbnail = MediaThumbnailEndpoint(client)
We are done and you are now ready to use your new endpoint! 🎉
Reusing Admin-Models for Store-Endpoints
The Store-Endpoints use the same Model structure as the Admin-Endpoints, but have no relations. Some of the related
objects are added to the response directly. We can use the Base-Models from our Admin-Endpoints for this purpose:
from ...admin.core.country import CountryBase
from ...admin.core.country_state import CountryStateBase
from ...admin.core.customer_address import CustomerAddressBase
from ...admin.core.salutation import SalutationBase
class Address(CustomerAddressBase["AddressEndpoint"]):
_identifier = "address"
country: CountryBase | None = None
customer_state: CountryStateBase | None = None
salutation: SalutationBase | None = None
Since country, customerState and salutation are returned in the response, we can use their Base-Models to define
their types.
This "related" fields should always be optional, because their value is not always returned (object-creation).
Structure
> endpoints -- All endpoints live here
> admin -- AdminAPI endpoints
> core -- AdminAPI > Core
customer_address.py -- Every Endpoint has its own file. Model and Endpoint are defined here
> commercial -- AdminAPI > Commercial
> digital_sales_rooms -- AdminAPI > Digital Sales Rooms
> store -- StoreAPI
> core -- StoreAPI > Core
> commercial -- StoreAPI > Commercial
> digital_sales_rooms -- StoreAPI > Digital Sales Rooms
base.py -- All the Base Classes
client.py -- Clients & Registry
config.py -- Configs
exceptions.py -- Exceptions
logging.py -- Logging
tests.py -- tests