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wipac-rest-tools

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wipac-rest-tools

REST tools in python - common code for client and server

  • 1.8.4
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  • PyPI
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PyPI GitHub release (latest by date including pre-releases) PyPI - License Lines of code GitHub issues GitHub pull requests

rest-tools

This project contains REST tools in python, as common code for multiple other projects under https://github.com/WIPACrepo.

All code uses python asyncio, so is fully asyncronous.

Note that both the client and server assume starting the asyncio loop happens elsewhere - they do not start the loop themselves.

Client

A REST API client exists under rest_tools.client. Use as:

from rest_tools.client import RestClient

api = RestClient('http://my.site.here/api', token='XXXX')
ret = await api.request('GET', '/fruits/apple')
ret = await api.request('POST', '/fruits', {'name': 'banana'})

There are several variations of the client for OAuth2/OpenID support:

  • OpenIDRestClient : A child of RestClient that supports OAuth2 token refresh using the OpenID Connect Discovery protocol for an authentication server.

  • ClientCredentialsAuth : Uses OpenIDRestClient in combination with OAuth2 client credentials (client ID and secret) for service-based auth. Use this for long-lived services that need to perform REST API calls.

  • DeviceGrantAuth / SavedDeviceGrantAuth : Uses OpenIDRestClient to perform a "device" login for a user. Use this for user-based terminal applications that need to perform REST API calls. The SavedDeviceGrantAuth can save the refresh token to disk, allowing repeated application sessions without having to log in again.

Server

A REST API server exists under rest_tools.server. Use as:

import asyncio
from rest_tools.server import RestServer, RestHandler

class Fruits(RestHandler):
    def post(self):
        # handle a new fruit
        self.write({})

server = RestServer()
server.add_route('/fruits', Fruits)
server.startup(address='my.site.here', port=8080)
asyncio.get_event_loop().run_forever()

The server uses Tornado to handle HTTP connections. It is recommended to use Apache or Nginx as a front-facing proxy, to handle TLS sessions and non-standard HTTP requests in production.

Handling Arguments Server-side

server.ArgumentHandler is a robust wrapper around argparse.ArgumentParser, extended for use in handling REST arguments, both query arguments and JSON-encoded body arguments. The intended design of this class is to follow the argparse pattern as closely as possible.

from rest_tools.server import RestHandler, ArgumentHandler, ArgumentSource

class Fruits(RestHandler):

    def get(self):
        argo = ArgumentHandler(ArgumentSource.QUERY_ARGUMENTS, self)

        argo.add_argument('name', type=str)  # de-facto required
        argo.add_argument('alias', dest='other_names', type=str, nargs='*', default=[])  # list

        argo.add_argument('is-citrus', type=bool, default=False)
        argo.add_argument('amount', type=float, required=True)

        args = argo.parse_args()

        fruit = get_fruit(args.name, args.other_names, args.is_citrus, args.amount)

        ...

    def post(self):
        argo = ArgumentHandler(ArgumentSource.JSON_BODY_ARGUMENTS, self)

        argo.add_argument('name', type=str)  # de-facto required
        argo.add_argument('other-names', type=list, default=[])

        argo.add_argument('supply', type=dict, required=True)

        def _origin(val):
            try:
                return {'USA': 'United States of America', 'MEX': 'Mexico'}[val]
            except KeyError:
                # raise a ValueError or TypeError to propagate a 400 Error
                raise ValueError('Invalid origin')

        argo.add_argument('country_code', dest='origin', type=_origin, required=True)

        args = argo.parse_args()

        add_to_basket(args.name, args.other_names, args.supply, args.origin)

        ...

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