Skip to main content

Python REST kit

Project description

About

Restkit is an HTTP resource kit for Python. It allows you to easily access to HTTP resource and build objects around it. It’s the base of couchdbkit a Python CouchDB framework.

Restkit is a full HTTP client using pure socket calls and its own HTTP parser. It’s not based on httplib or urllib2.

Installation

Restkit requires Python 2.x superior to 2.5.

Install from sources:

$ python setup.py install

Or from Pypi:

$ easy_install -U restkit

Usage

Perform HTTP call support with restkit.request.

Usage example, get friendpaste page:

from restkit import request
resp = request('http://friendpaste.com')
print resp.body_string()
print resp.status_int

Create a simple Twitter Search resource

Building a resource object is easy using restkit.Resource class. We use simplejson to handle deserialisation of data.

Here is the snippet:

from restkit import Resource

try:
    import simplejson as json
except ImportError:
    import json # py2.6 only

class TwitterSearch(Resource):

    def __init__(self,  pool_instance=None, **kwargs):
        search_url = "http://search.twitter.com"
        super(TwitterSearch, self).__init__(search_url, follow_redirect=True,
                                        max_follow_redirect=10,
                                        pool_instance=pool_instance,
                                        **kwargs)

    def search(self, query):
        return self.get('search.json', q=query)

    def request(self, *args, **kwargs):
        resp = super(TwitterSearch, self).request(*args, **kwargs)
        return json.loads(resp.body)

if __name__ == "__main__":
    s = TwitterSearch()
    print s.search("gunicorn")

Reuses connections

Reusing connections is good. Restkit can maintain for you the http connections and reuse them if the server allows it. To do that you can pass to any object a pool instance inheriting reskit.pool.PoolInterface. By default a threadsafe pool is used in any application:

from restkit import Resource, TConnectionManager

mgr = TConnectionManager(nb_connections=10)
res = Resource('http://friendpaste.com', conn_manager=mgr)

or if you use Gevent:

from restkit import Resource
from restkit.conn.gevent_manager import GeventConnectionManager

mgr = GeventConnectionManager(timeout=300, nb_connections=10)
res = Resource('http://friendpaste.com', conn_manager=mgr)

Authentication

Restkit support for now basic authentication and OAuth. But any other authentication schema can easily be added using http filters.

Basic authentication

To use basic authentication in a Resource object you can do:

from restkit import Resource, BasicAuth

auth = BasicAuth("username", "password")
r = Resource("http://friendpaste.com", filters=[auth])

Or simply use an authentication url:

r = Resource("http://username:password@friendpaste.com")

OAuth

Restkit OAuth is based on simplegeo python-oauth2 module So you don’t need other installation to use OAuth (you can also simply use restkit.oauth2 module in your applications).

The OAuth filter restkit.oauth2.filter.OAuthFilter allow you to associate a consumer per resource (path). Initalize Oauth filter with:

path, consumer, token, signaturemethod

token and method signature are optionnals. Consumer should be an instance of restkit.oauth2.Consumer, token an instance of restkit.oauth2.Token signature method an instance of oauth2.SignatureMethod (restkit.oauth2.Token is only needed for three-legged requests.

The filter is appleid if the path match. It allows you to maintain different authorization per path. A wildcard at the indicate to the filter to match all path behind.

Example the rule /some/resource/* will match /some/resource/other and /some/resource/other2, while the rule /some/resource will only match the path /some/resource.

Simple client example:
from restkit import OAuthFilter, request
import restkit.oauth2 as oauth

# Create your consumer with the proper key/secret.
consumer = oauth.Consumer(key="your-twitter-consumer-key",
  secret="your-twitter-consumer-secret")

# Request token URL for Twitter.
request_token_url = "http://twitter.com/oauth/request_token"

# Create our filter.
auth = oauth.OAuthFilter('*', consumer)

# The request.
resp = request(request_token_url, filters=[auth])
print resp.body_string()

If you want to add OAuth to your TwitterSearch resource:

# Create your consumer with the proper key/secret.
consumer = oauth.Consumer(key="your-twitter-consumer-key",
  secret="your-twitter-consumer-secret")

# Create our filter.
client = oauth.OAuthfilter('*', consumer)

s = TwitterSearch(filters=[client])

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

restkit-2.3.2.tar.gz (1.3 MB view details)

Uploaded Source

File details

Details for the file restkit-2.3.2.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: restkit-2.3.2.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 1.3 MB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for restkit-2.3.2.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 61ec27f01f9930e924cac088a839886d6b87ab925bc6c1d9017010cda8f8c407
MD5 15ed1c4983ab0e292b3a8327c3d3f22f
BLAKE2b-256 d6093d3da907fac0bac668f3c43171c64c67e829f85922449b789e395b6debdd

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page