Microsoft App Configuration Data Library for Python
Project description
Azure App Configuration client library for Python
Azure App Configuration is a managed service that helps developers centralize their application configurations simply and securely.
Modern programs, especially programs running in a cloud, generally have many components that are distributed in nature. Spreading configuration settings across these components can lead to hard-to-troubleshoot errors during an application deployment. Use App Configuration to securely store all the settings for your application in one place.
Use the client library for App Configuration to create and manage application configuration settings.
Source code | Package (Pypi) | Package (Conda) | API reference documentation | Product documentation
Getting started
Install the package
Install the Azure App Configuration client library for Python with pip:
pip install azure-appconfiguration
Prerequisites
- Python 3.8 or later is required to use this package.
- You need an Azure subscription, and a Configuration Store to use this package.
To create a Configuration Store, you can use the Azure Portal or Azure CLI.
After that, create the Configuration Store:
az appconfig create --name <config-store-name> --resource-group <resource-group-name> --location eastus
Authenticate the client
In order to interact with the App Configuration service, you'll need to create an instance of the AzureAppConfigurationClient class. To make this possible, you can either use the connection string of the Configuration Store or use an AAD token.
Use connection string
Get credentials
Use the Azure CLI snippet below to get the connection string from the Configuration Store.
az appconfig credential list --name <config-store-name>
Alternatively, get the connection string from the Azure Portal.
Create client
Once you have the value of the connection string, you can create the AzureAppConfigurationClient:
import os
from azure.appconfiguration import AzureAppConfigurationClient
CONNECTION_STRING = os.environ["APPCONFIGURATION_CONNECTION_STRING"]
# Create app config client
client = AzureAppConfigurationClient.from_connection_string(CONNECTION_STRING)
Use AAD token
Here we demonstrate using DefaultAzureCredential to authenticate as a service principal. However, AzureAppConfigurationClient accepts any azure-identity credential. See the azure-identity documentation for more information about other credentials.
Create a service principal (optional)
This Azure CLI snippet shows how to create a new service principal. Before using it, replace "your-application-name" with the appropriate name for your service principal.
Create a service principal:
az ad sp create-for-rbac --name http://my-application --skip-assignment
Output:
{ "appId": "generated app id", "displayName": "my-application", "name": "http://my-application", "password": "random password", "tenant": "tenant id" }
Use the output to set AZURE_CLIENT_ID ("appId" above), AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET ("password" above) and AZURE_TENANT_ID ("tenant" above) environment variables. The following example shows a way to do this in Bash:
export AZURE_CLIENT_ID="generated app id"
export AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET="random password"
export AZURE_TENANT_ID="tenant id"
Assign one of the applicable App Configuration roles to the service principal.
Create a client
Once the AZURE_CLIENT_ID, AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET and AZURE_TENANT_ID environment variables are set, DefaultAzureCredential will be able to authenticate the AzureAppConfigurationClient.
Constructing the client also requires your configuration store's URL, which you can get from the Azure CLI or the Azure Portal. In the Azure Portal, the URL can be found listed as the service "Endpoint"
from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential
from azure.appconfiguration import AzureAppConfigurationClient
credential = DefaultAzureCredential()
client = AzureAppConfigurationClient(base_url="your_endpoint_url", credential=credential)
Key concepts
Configuration Setting
A Configuration Setting is the fundamental resource within a Configuration Store. In its simplest form it is a key and a value. However, there are additional properties such as the modifiable content type and tags fields that allow the value to be interpreted or associated in different ways.
The Label property of a Configuration Setting provides a way to separate Configuration Settings into different dimensions. These dimensions are user defined and can take any form. Some common examples of dimensions to use for a label include regions, semantic versions, or environments. Many applications have a required set of configuration keys that have varying values as the application exists across different dimensions.
For example, MaxRequests may be 100 in "NorthAmerica", and 200 in "WestEurope". By creating a Configuration Setting named MaxRequests with a label of "NorthAmerica" and another, only with a different value, in the "WestEurope" label, an application can seamlessly retrieve Configuration Settings as it runs in these two dimensions.
Properties of a Configuration Setting:
key : str
label : str
content_type : str
value : str
last_modified : str
read_only : bool
tags : dict
etag : str
Snapshot
Azure App Configuration allows users to create a point-in-time snapshot of their configuration store, providing them with the ability to treat settings as one consistent version. This feature enables applications to hold a consistent view of configuration, ensuring that there are no version mismatches to individual settings due to reading as updates were made. Snapshots are immutable, ensuring that configuration can confidently be rolled back to a last-known-good configuration in the event of a problem.
Examples
The following sections provide several code snippets covering some of the most common Configuration Service tasks, including:
- Create a Configuration Setting
- Get a Configuration Setting
- Delete a Configuration Setting
- List Configuration Settings
- Create a Snapshot
- Get a Snapshot
- Archive a Snapshot
- Recover a Snapshot
- List Snapshots
- List Configuration Settings of a Snapshot
- Async APIs
Create a Configuration Setting
Create a Configuration Setting to be stored in the Configuration Store. There are two ways to store a Configuration Setting:
- add_configuration_setting creates a setting only if the setting does not already exist in the store.
config_setting = ConfigurationSetting(
key="MyKey", label="MyLabel", value="my value", content_type="my content type", tags={"my tag": "my tag value"}
)
added_config_setting = client.add_configuration_setting(config_setting)
- set_configuration_setting creates a setting if it doesn't exist or overrides an existing setting.
added_config_setting.value = "new value"
added_config_setting.content_type = "new content type"
updated_config_setting = client.set_configuration_setting(added_config_setting)
Get a Configuration Setting
Get a previously stored Configuration Setting.
fetched_config_setting = client.get_configuration_setting(key="MyKey", label="MyLabel")
Delete a Configuration Setting
Delete an existing Configuration Setting.
client.delete_configuration_setting(
key="MyKey",
label="MyLabel",
)
List Configuration Settings
List all configuration settings filtered with label_filter and/or key_filter.
config_settings = client.list_configuration_settings(label_filter="MyLabel")
for item in config_settings:
print_configuration_setting(item)
Create a Snapshot
from azure.appconfiguration import ConfigurationSettingsFilter
filters = [ConfigurationSettingsFilter(key="my_key1", label="my_label1")]
response = client.begin_create_snapshot(name=snapshot_name, filters=filters)
created_snapshot = response.result()
print_snapshot(created_snapshot)
Get a Snapshot
received_snapshot = client.get_snapshot(name=snapshot_name)
Archive a Snapshot
archived_snapshot = client.archive_snapshot(name=snapshot_name)
print_snapshot(archived_snapshot)
Recover a Snapshot
recovered_snapshot = client.recover_snapshot(name=snapshot_name)
print_snapshot(recovered_snapshot)
List Snapshots
for snapshot in client.list_snapshots():
print_snapshot(snapshot)
List Configuration Settings of a Snapshot
for config_setting in client.list_configuration_settings(snapshot_name=snapshot_name):
print_configuration_setting(config_setting)
Async APIs
Async client is supported. To use the async client library, import the AzureAppConfigurationClient from package azure.appconfiguration.aio instead of azure.appconfiguration
import os
from azure.appconfiguration.aio import AzureAppConfigurationClient
CONNECTION_STRING = os.environ["APPCONFIGURATION_CONNECTION_STRING"]
# Create app config client
client = AzureAppConfigurationClient.from_connection_string(CONNECTION_STRING)
This async AzureAppConfigurationClient has the same method signatures as the sync ones except that they're async. For instance, to retrieve a Configuration Setting asynchronously, async_client can be used:
fetched_config_setting = await client.get_configuration_setting(key="MyKey", label="MyLabel")
To use list_configuration_settings, call it synchronously and iterate over the returned async iterator asynchronously
config_settings = client.list_configuration_settings(label_filter="MyLabel")
async for item in config_settings:
print_configuration_setting(item)
from azure.appconfiguration import ConfigurationSettingsFilter
filters = [ConfigurationSettingsFilter(key="my_key1", label="my_label1")]
response = await client.begin_create_snapshot(name=snapshot_name, filters=filters)
created_snapshot = await response.result()
print_snapshot(created_snapshot)
received_snapshot = await client.get_snapshot(name=snapshot_name)
archived_snapshot = await client.archive_snapshot(name=snapshot_name)
print_snapshot(archived_snapshot)
recovered_snapshot = await client.recover_snapshot(name=snapshot_name)
print_snapshot(recovered_snapshot)
async for snapshot in client.list_snapshots():
print_snapshot(snapshot)
async for config_setting in client.list_configuration_settings(snapshot_name=snapshot_name):
print_configuration_setting(config_setting)
Troubleshooting
See the troubleshooting guide for details on how to diagnose various failure scenarios.
Next steps
More sample code
Several App Configuration client library samples are available to you in this GitHub repository. These include:
- Hello world / Async version
- Hello world with labels / Async version
- Make a configuration setting readonly / Async version
- Read revision history / Async version
- Get a setting if changed / Async version
- Create, retrieve and update status of a configuration settings snapshot / Async version
For more details see the samples README.
Contributing
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.microsoft.com.
When you submit a pull request, a CLA-bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., label, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information, see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
Release History
1.6.0 (2024-04-09)
Features Added
- Exposed
send_request()
method in each client to send custom requests using the client's existing pipeline. - Supported to get page ETag while iterating
list_configuration_setting()
result by page.
Bugs Fixed
- Fixed a bug in consuming "etag" value in sync operation
set_configuration_setting()
. - Changed invalid default value
None
toFalse
for propertyenabled
inFeatureFlagConfigurationSetting
. - Fixed the issue that
description
,display_name
and other customer fields are missing when de/serializingFeatureFlagConfigurationSetting
objects.
1.6.0b2 (2024-03-21)
Bugs Fixed
- Changed invalid default value
None
toFalse
for propertyenabled
inFeatureFlagConfigurationSetting
. - Fixed the issue that
description
,display_name
and other customer fields are missing when de/serializingFeatureFlagConfigurationSetting
objects.
1.6.0b1 (2024-03-14)
Features Added
- Exposed
send_request()
method in each client to send custom requests using the client's existing pipeline. - Supported to get page ETag while iterating
list_configuration_setting()
result by page.
Bugs Fixed
- Fixed a bug in consuming "etag" value in sync operation
set_configuration_setting()
.
1.5.0 (2023-11-09)
Other Changes
- Supported datetime type for keyword argument
accept_datetime
inget_snapshot_configuration_settings()
,list_snapshot_configuration_settings()
andlist_revisions()
. - Bumped minimum dependency on
azure-core
to>=1.28.0
. - Updated the default
api_version
to "2023-10-01". - Removed
etag
keyword documentation inset_read_only()
as it's not in use. - Added support for Python 3.12.
- Python 3.7 is no longer supported. Please use Python version 3.8 or later.
1.5.0b3 (2023-10-10)
Breaking Changes
- Renamed parameter
name
inlist_snapshot_configuration_settings()
tosnapshot_name
. - Removed keyword argument
accept_datetime
inlist_snapshot_configuration_settings()
. - Moved operation
list_snapshot_configuration_settings()
to an overload oflist_configuration_settings()
, and moved the parametersnapshot_name
to keyword. - Published enum
SnapshotStatus
, and accepted the type forstatus
parameter inlist_snapshots()
andstatus
property inSnapshot
model. - Renamed model
Snapshot
toConfigurationSnapshot
. - Renamed model
ConfigurationSettingFilter
toConfigurationSettingsFilter
.
1.5.0b2 (2023-08-02)
Bugs Fixed
- Fixed a bug in deserializing and serializing Snapshot when
filters
property isNone
. - Fixed a bug when creating
FeatureFlagConfigurationSetting
from SDK but having an error in portal.(#31326)
1.5.0b1 (2023-07-11)
Features Added
- Added support for
Snapshot
CRUD operations.
Bugs Fixed
- Fixed async
update_sync_token()
to use async/await keywords.
Other Changes
- Bumped minimum dependency on
azure-core
to>=1.25.0
. - Updated the default
api_version
to "2022-11-01-preview".
1.4.0 (2022-02-13)
Other Changes
- Python 2.7 is no longer supported. Please use Python version 3.7 or later.
- Bumped minimum dependency on
azure-core
to>=1.24.0
. - Changed the default async transport from
AsyncioRequestsTransport
to the one used in currentazure-core
(AioHttpTransport
). (#26427) - Dropped
msrest
requirement. - Added dependency
isodate
with version range>=0.6.0
.
1.3.0 (2021-11-10)
Bugs Fixed
-
Fixed the issue that data was persisted according to an incorrect schema/in an incorrect format (#20518)
SecretReferenceConfigurationSetting
in 1.2.0 used "secret_uri" rather than "uri" as the schema keywords which broken inter-operation ofSecretReferenceConfigurationSetting
between SDK and the portal.Please:
- Use 1.3.0+ for any
SecretReferenceConfigurationSetting
uses. - Call a get method for existing
SecretReferenceConfigurationSetting
s and set them back to correct the format.
- Use 1.3.0+ for any
1.2.0 (2021-07-06)
Features Added
- Added
FeatureFlagConfigurationSetting
andSecretReferenceConfigurationSetting
models AzureAppConfigurationClient
can now be used as a context manager.- Added
update_sync_token()
to update sync tokens from Event Grid notifications.
1.2.0b2 (2021-06-08)
Features
- Added context manager functionality to the sync and async
AzureAppConfigurationClient
s.
Fixes
- Fixed a deserialization bug for
FeatureFlagConfigurationSetting
andSecretReferenceConfigurationSetting
.
1.2.0b1 (2021-04-06)
Features
- Added method
update_sync_token()
to include sync tokens from EventGrid notifications. - Added
SecretReferenceConfigurationSetting
type to represent a configuration setting that references a KeyVault Secret. - Added
FeatureFlagConfigurationSetting
type to represent a configuration setting that controls a feature flag.
1.1.1 (2020-10-05)
Features
- Improved error message if Connection string secret has incorrect padding. (#14140)
1.1.0 (2020-09-08)
Features
- Added match condition support for
set_read_only()
method. (#13276)
1.0.1 (2020-08-10)
Fixes
- Doc & Sample fixes
1.0.0 (2020-01-06)
Features
- Added AAD auth support. (#8924)
Breaking changes
list_configuration_settings()
&list_revisions()
now take string key/label filter instead of keys/labels list. (#9066)
1.0.0b6 (2019-12-03)
Features
- Added sync-token support. (#8418)
Breaking changes
- Combined set_read_only & clear_read_only to be set_read_only(True/False). (#8453)
1.0.0b5 (2019-10-30)
Breaking changes
etag
andmatch_condition
ofdelete_configuration_setting()
are now keyword argument only. (#8161)
1.0.0b4 (2019-10-07)
- Added conditional operation support
- Added
set_read_only()
andclear_read_only()
methods
1.0.0b3 (2019-09-09)
- New azure app configuration
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
Built Distribution
File details
Details for the file azure-appconfiguration-1.6.0.tar.gz
.
File metadata
- Download URL: azure-appconfiguration-1.6.0.tar.gz
- Upload date:
- Size: 108.9 kB
- Tags: Source
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: RestSharp/106.13.0.0
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | cf628a3e1ea6643479643cd246dda464edc4ab785743339a6a8fe809bc137fec |
|
MD5 | 20f7444678b84ce2b2a40c85bd154396 |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | 8236b27acedbcd25a852250da95d93f59a046f8b23bda2ee4ad84ddb2caf28cf |
File details
Details for the file azure_appconfiguration-1.6.0-py3-none-any.whl
.
File metadata
- Download URL: azure_appconfiguration-1.6.0-py3-none-any.whl
- Upload date:
- Size: 89.5 kB
- Tags: Python 3
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
- Uploaded via: RestSharp/106.13.0.0
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | 80145574e6b8d28e13096e70b281d502c29553a68f635e4526722999d9f13477 |
|
MD5 | 86eceabfdebaaadda3a0928530a5fdcd |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | 2194ef6085648728d9147c382a8c5e71b6cd13181aa3ae1fff94fed49ef93443 |