Tiny framework for building good API client libraries thanks to urllib3.
- Threadsafely reuses connections with Keep-Alive (via urllib3).
- Small and easy to understand codebase perfect for extending and building upon.
- Built-in support for rate limiting and request throttling.
- Functional examples for the Klout API and the Facebook OpenGraph API.
How to make your own super-simple client API library:
>>> from apiclient import APIClient >>> class AcmePublicAPI(APIClient): ... BASE_URL = 'https://localhost:1234/' >>> acme_api = AcmePublicAPI() >>> acme_api.call('/hello') {'what': 'world'} >>> acme_api.call('/echo', params={"ping": "pong"}) {'ping': 'pong'}
How to add rate limiting to your client API library so that we don't exceed 10 requests per minute:
>>> from apiclient import RateLimiter >>> lock = RateLimiter(max_messages=10, every_seconds=60) >>> acme_api = AcmePublicAPI(rate_limit_lock=lock) >>> # Get the first 100 pages >>> for page in xrange(100): ... # Whenever our request rate exceeds the specifications of the API's ... # RateLimiter, the next request will block until the next request window ... r = acme_api.call('/stream', page=str(page))
For more specific API examples, see the examples/ directory.
To handle different calling conventions, apiclient
can be extended through
subclassing.
For example, if an API requires that all arguments be JSON encoded, the
_compose_url
method could be implemented like this:
>>> class JSONArgsAPIClient(APIClient): ... def _compose_url(self, path, params=None): ... if params is not None: ... params = dict((key, json.dumps(val)) ... for (key, val) in params.iteritems()) ... return APIClient._compose_url(self, path, params=params)
Or if an API returns YAML instead of JSON, the _handle_response
method
could be overridden:
>>> class YAMLResponseAPIClient(APIClient): ... def _handle_response(self, response): ... return yaml.load(response.data)
- Tests.
- More documentation.
- More types of API handshakes, like OAuth and OAuth2.
- More examples.
Any contribution is highly encouraged and desired. :)
- Fork on Github.
- Make the changes. Bonus points if changes include documentation and tests.
- Send a pull request.
If you're unsure if it's a good idea, open an Issue or contact me to discuss your proposal. Extra juicy bonus points if you pick off some of the items in the TODO list.