A Python library for OAuth 1.0/a, 2.0, and Ofly.
Project description
# Rauth: OAuth 1.0/a, 2.0, and Ofly for Python
This package provides OAuth 1.0/a, 2.0, and Ofly consumer support. The
package is wrapped around the superb Python Requests.
[![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/litl/rauth.png?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/#!/litl/rauth)
## Installation
Install the package with one of the following commands:
$ easy_install rauth
or
$ pip install rauth
## Features
* Built on [Requests](https://github.com/kennethreitz/requests)
* Supports OAuth 1.0, 1.0a, 2.0 and [Ofly](http://www.shutterfly.com/documentation/start.sfly)
* Service wrappers for convenient connection initialization
* Well tested (100% coverage)
## Example Usage
Using the package is quite simple. Ensure that Python Requests is installed.
Import the relevant module and start utilizing OAuth endpoints!
Let's get a user's Twitter timeline. Start by creating a service container
object:
```python
from rauth.service import OAuth1Service
# Get a real consumer key & secret from https://dev.twitter.com/apps/new
twitter = OAuth1Service(
name='twitter',
consumer_key='YOUR_CONSUMER_KEY',
consumer_secret='YOUR_CONSUMER_SECRET',
request_token_url='https://api.twitter.com/oauth/request_token',
access_token_url='https://api.twitter.com/oauth/access_token',
authorize_url='https://api.twitter.com/oauth/authorize',
header_auth=True)
```
Then get an OAuth 1.0 request token:
```python
request_token, request_token_secret = \
twitter.get_request_token(method='GET')
```
Go through the authentication flow. Since our example is a simple console
application, Twitter will give you a PIN to enter.
```python
authorize_url = twitter.get_authorize_url(request_token)
print 'Visit this URL in your browser: ' + authorize_url
pin = raw_input('Enter PIN from browser: ')
```
Exchange the authorized request token for an access token:
```python
response = twitter.get_access_token('GET',
request_token=request_token,
request_token_secret=request_token_secret,
params={'oauth_verifier': pin})
data = response.content
access_token = data['oauth_token']
access_token_secret = data['oauth_token_secret']
```
And now we can fetch our Twitter timeline!
```python
params = {'include_rts': 1, # Include retweets
'count': 10} # 10 tweets
response = twitter.get('https://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/home_timeline.json',
params=params,
access_token=access_token,
access_token_secret=access_token_secret,
header_auth=True)
for i, tweet in enumerate(response.content, 1):
handle = tweet['user']['screen_name'].encode('utf-8')
text = tweet['text'].encode('utf-8')
print '{0}. @{1} - {2}'.format(i, handle, text)
```
The full example is in [examples/twitter-timeline.py](https://github.com/litl/rauth/blob/master/examples/twitter-timeline.py).
## Documentation
The Sphinx-compiled documentation is available here: [http://readthedocs.org/docs/rauth/en/latest/](http://readthedocs.org/docs/rauth/en/latest/)
## Contribution
Anyone who would like to contribute to the project is more than welcome.
Basically there's just a few steps to getting started:
1. Fork this repo
2. Make your changes and write a test for them
3. Add yourself to the AUTHORS file and submit a pull request!
Note: it's important that the code base remain well-tested so to this end it's
generaly advisable to include a unit test. To make sure that we retain 100%
coverage run `python setup.py test` before making a pull request. You'll need
to make sure you have pyflakes, pep8, coverage, mock, and nose installed; `pip install
pyflakes pep8 coverage mock nose`.
## Copyright and License
Rauth is Copyright (c) 2012 litl, LLC and licensed under the MIT license.
See the LICENSE file for full details.
This package provides OAuth 1.0/a, 2.0, and Ofly consumer support. The
package is wrapped around the superb Python Requests.
[![build status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/litl/rauth.png?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/#!/litl/rauth)
## Installation
Install the package with one of the following commands:
$ easy_install rauth
or
$ pip install rauth
## Features
* Built on [Requests](https://github.com/kennethreitz/requests)
* Supports OAuth 1.0, 1.0a, 2.0 and [Ofly](http://www.shutterfly.com/documentation/start.sfly)
* Service wrappers for convenient connection initialization
* Well tested (100% coverage)
## Example Usage
Using the package is quite simple. Ensure that Python Requests is installed.
Import the relevant module and start utilizing OAuth endpoints!
Let's get a user's Twitter timeline. Start by creating a service container
object:
```python
from rauth.service import OAuth1Service
# Get a real consumer key & secret from https://dev.twitter.com/apps/new
twitter = OAuth1Service(
name='twitter',
consumer_key='YOUR_CONSUMER_KEY',
consumer_secret='YOUR_CONSUMER_SECRET',
request_token_url='https://api.twitter.com/oauth/request_token',
access_token_url='https://api.twitter.com/oauth/access_token',
authorize_url='https://api.twitter.com/oauth/authorize',
header_auth=True)
```
Then get an OAuth 1.0 request token:
```python
request_token, request_token_secret = \
twitter.get_request_token(method='GET')
```
Go through the authentication flow. Since our example is a simple console
application, Twitter will give you a PIN to enter.
```python
authorize_url = twitter.get_authorize_url(request_token)
print 'Visit this URL in your browser: ' + authorize_url
pin = raw_input('Enter PIN from browser: ')
```
Exchange the authorized request token for an access token:
```python
response = twitter.get_access_token('GET',
request_token=request_token,
request_token_secret=request_token_secret,
params={'oauth_verifier': pin})
data = response.content
access_token = data['oauth_token']
access_token_secret = data['oauth_token_secret']
```
And now we can fetch our Twitter timeline!
```python
params = {'include_rts': 1, # Include retweets
'count': 10} # 10 tweets
response = twitter.get('https://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/home_timeline.json',
params=params,
access_token=access_token,
access_token_secret=access_token_secret,
header_auth=True)
for i, tweet in enumerate(response.content, 1):
handle = tweet['user']['screen_name'].encode('utf-8')
text = tweet['text'].encode('utf-8')
print '{0}. @{1} - {2}'.format(i, handle, text)
```
The full example is in [examples/twitter-timeline.py](https://github.com/litl/rauth/blob/master/examples/twitter-timeline.py).
## Documentation
The Sphinx-compiled documentation is available here: [http://readthedocs.org/docs/rauth/en/latest/](http://readthedocs.org/docs/rauth/en/latest/)
## Contribution
Anyone who would like to contribute to the project is more than welcome.
Basically there's just a few steps to getting started:
1. Fork this repo
2. Make your changes and write a test for them
3. Add yourself to the AUTHORS file and submit a pull request!
Note: it's important that the code base remain well-tested so to this end it's
generaly advisable to include a unit test. To make sure that we retain 100%
coverage run `python setup.py test` before making a pull request. You'll need
to make sure you have pyflakes, pep8, coverage, mock, and nose installed; `pip install
pyflakes pep8 coverage mock nose`.
## Copyright and License
Rauth is Copyright (c) 2012 litl, LLC and licensed under the MIT license.
See the LICENSE file for full details.
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