The pyonep package is an API library with Python bindings to the following Exosite One Platform APIs:
Check out our docs on Read The Docs.
Warning: version 0.8.0 requires changes to applications that used earlier versions of the provision module. See below for information about migrating your applications from 0.7.x to 0.8.0
Note that this library does not yet support the HTTP Data Interface. See below for more information.
Supports Python 2.5 through 3.3.
License is BSD, Copyright 2014, Exosite LLC (see LICENSE file)
For installation instructions, check out Read The Docs.
The pyonep library includes a module that provides buffered access to the RPC API, which may offer better performance in some cases.
See examples/read_write_record.py for more details.
To run the tests:
cd test
pip install -r requirements.txt
cp testconfig.py.template testconfig.py
# insert test config values
./test.sh
Version 0.8.0 includes some breaking changes to provision module API to provide more consistent return values and error information. To migrate an existing application to pyonep 0.8.0 you will need to make a few changes to the way provision methods are called.
-
Previously, methods in provision module either returned a.)
True
(success) orFalse
(failure) or b.)<response body string>
(success) orNone
(failure). HTTP response details (e.g. status code) were not available to the caller without turning on logging and parsing stdout. With 0.8.0 all methods return aProvisionResponse
object with the following properties:ProvisionResponse.body
is the response body, a string. The contents of this depend on the specific call, and may be of length 0. See provision API documentation for details.ProvisionResponse.status
is the HTTP status codeProvisionResponse.isok
is a boolean representing whether the call succeeded (i.e. if the status code is < 400)
-
Previously all exceptions associated with a call were being caught but not rethrown. With 0.8.0, HTTP exceptions are thrown to the caller. For example, if no connection is available, previously this would have written a message to the log and returned
None
. Now, a subclass ofHTTPException
is thrown to the caller. This allows the caller to take appropriate action based on exactly what happened.
Here's an example of code based pyonep before 0.8.0:
import pyonep
provision = pyonep.Provision('http://m2.exosite.com', manage_by_cik=False)
# create a model
response = provision.model_create(vendortoken, model, clonerid, aliases=False)
if not response:
print('Unknown error occurred in model_create')
# list models
model_list = provision.model_list(vendortoken)
if model_list is not None:
print(model_list)
else:
print('Unknown error occurred in model_list')
Here's how that would be written to work with 0.8.0+:
import sys
import httplib
import pyonep
# the leading 'http://' is now optional but should be omitted
provision = pyonep.Provision('m2.exosite.com', manage_by_cik=False)
try:
# create a model
response = provision.model_create(vendortoken, model, clonerid, aliases=False)
if not response.isok:
print('Error in model_create: {0} {1}'.format(response.status(), response.reason()))
# list models
response = provision.model_list(vendortoken)
if response.isok:
print(response.body)
else:
print('Error in model_list: {0} {1}'.format(response.status(), response.reason()))
except httplib.HTTPException:
ex = sys.exc_info()[1]
print('HTTPException: {0}'.format(ex))
You can also ask the provision module to raise an exception for HTTP statuses of 400 and above by passing raise_api_exceptions=True
to the Provision
constructore. This can consolidate code that handles API errors for a large number of provision calls. See the provisioning example to see how to do this.
The RPC listing command now includes a resource identifier, which makes it possible to do multiple listing calls in a single request. The old form of listing is deprecated, and upgrading to pyonep 0.10.0 will require some changes to code. Using the old form will produce an exception. For example:
onep.listing(auth, ['dataport'], options={})
...should be changed to:
onep.listing(auth, {'alias': ''}, ['dataport'], options={})
The options
parameter is now required, too.
In order to provide better backward compatibility we've backed out the breaking changes to the listing command from 0.10.0. New code should call with both the options
and rid
parameters.
onep.listing(auth, ['dataport'], options={}, rid={'alias': ''})
To anyone who updated code in the 8 days 0.10.0 was up and now needs to update it again-- sorry about the thrashing. There's a fair bit of Python code in production that isn't able to tie to a particular version.