Python 3Di command line client
Project description
The 3Di command line client
The 3Di command line client allows for
- Defining and running 3Di scenarios from the command line.
- Assembling different scenarios as a "suite" that will be run in batch.
- Management commands, for instance to list currently running simulations.
Entry points
There are different entry points for the 3Di command line client. The main one being
$ 3Di_cmd --help
Usage: 3Di_cmd [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Options:
--install-completion [bash|zsh|fish|powershell|pwsh]
Install completion for the specified shell.
--show-completion [bash|zsh|fish|powershell|pwsh]
Show completion for the specified shell, to
copy it or customize the installation.
--help Show this message and exit.
Commands:
api Interact with with the 3Di API
live Get real time updates of running simulations
scenarios Manage your local scenarios
The output above shows the three sub-commands api
, live
and scenarios
. Those are all commands from
the main client. Whenever you install plugins this list can be appended. You can even append this list yourself
by writing your own plugin! How to go about doing that, explains the plugins section.
You can invoke the sub-commands also directly, e.g.
$ api --help
Usage: api [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Options:
--endpoint [localhost|staging|production]
[default: production]
--install-completion [bash|zsh|fish|powershell|pwsh]
Install completion for the specified shell.
--show-completion [bash|zsh|fish|powershell|pwsh]
Show completion for the specified shell, to
copy it or customize the installation.
--help Show this message and exit.
Commands:
models List available threedimodels
organisations List available organisations
results Download results of a simulation
run-scenario Run a scenario
settings Set default settings
simulations List simulations
Dependencies
python >= 3.8
Installation
pip install --user threedi-cmd
Plugins
The 3Di command client has it's own plugin ecosystem. The commands described above are the client core that can be extended by installing 3Di command client packages into the same environment.
An example: You have a virtual environment /home/you/.virtualenvs/3di/bin/python
and you install the 3Di command client
using pip
pip install threedi-cmd
If you want to add the statistics commands, you'll install the threedi-cmd-statistics package
pip install threedi-cmd-statistics
Now run 3Di_cmd api
again. Notice the statistics
and customers
commands that has been added to the commands
overview; they have added through the plugin you just installed.
Usage: 3Di_cmd api [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]...
Interact with with the 3Di API
Options:
--endpoint [localhost|staging|production]
[default: production]
--help Show this message and exit.
Commands:
customers List 3Di customers
models List available threedimodels
organisations List available organisations
results Download results of a simulation
run-scenario Run a scenario
settings Set default settings
simulations List simulations
statistics 3Di API statistics, like session counts etc
Available plugins
Writing your own plugin
The first thing to know is that the plugin discovering mechanism is based on a naming convention. All plugin packages must start with threedi_cmd_, otherwise the main programme will not be able to discover the package and add the commands to the client.
The commands of the plugin package itself must be typer apps.
The threedi-cmd packages ships with two objects that are used to define and register the plugin apps.
@dataclass
class AppMeta:
app: typer.Typer
name: str
help: str
add_to: Optional[str] = ""
@dataclass
class AppRegistry:
apps: Dict[str, AppMeta]
So let's say you have an plugin package that is called threedi-cmd-queue
that implements a single app called queue_app
.
You would need to the following for the threedi-cmd client to pick the command up.
AppMeta
"""threedi_cmd_queue/app_definitions.py"""
# these classes are shiped with the threedi-cmd package
from threedi_cmd.plugins.models import AppMeta, AppRegistry
# import your won app
from threedi_cmd_queue.commands.apps import queue_app
queues_meta = AppMeta(
app=queue_app,
name="queues",
help="3Di API queues",
add_to="api"
)
# fill the registry; we use the name "queues" for the registry as well
registry = AppRegistry(
apps={queues_meta.name : queues_meta}
)
Lastly, make sure the registry is available through your top level __init__.py
. Following our example the
method would reside in threedi-cmd-queue/threedi_cmd_queue/__init__.py
"""Top-level package for threedi_cmd_queue."""
from threedi_cmd_queue.app_definitions import registry
That's it. Publish your package to pypi so that is pip installable.
History
0.0.13 (2021-08-03)
- Upgraded from
openapi_client
tothreed_api_client
0.0.12 (2021-08-02)
- Added support for schematisations scenarios
0.0.11 (2021-06-15)
- Changed import paths
0.0.10 (2021-06-15)
- Removed unused imports
0.0.9 (2021-05-05)
- Renamed general settings to physical settings
0.0.8 (2021-04-28)
- Use auth refresh method from upstream package.
0.0.7 (2021-04-14)
- Added settings to scenario-test-framework
0.0.6 (2021-03-24)
- Added leakage and bumped threedi-openapi-client
0.0.5 (2021-02-05)
-
Specify arrow version, as newer versions don't work well with 'days' directive in YAML (arrow is used in jinja2-time).
-
Caches the config per endpoint. This includes a scenario folder option to supply a custom scenario folder location (per endpoint).
0.0.4 (2021-02-04)
-
Fixed saving 'organisation_uuid' and 'result_folder' with the
api settings
command. -
First official release candidate as a typer app that introduces a plugin system.
0.0.3 (2020-12-21)
- Fixed settings context if config file is not yet available.
0.0.1b (2020-12-18)
- First (beta) pypi release.
Project details
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