ckan-api-client

Client for the Ckan API


License
BSD-3-Clause
Install
pip install ckan-api-client==0.1-beta3

Documentation

Ckan API client

This package provides an improved client for the Ckan API.

Build status:

Branch Status
master Build Status
develop Build Status

Ckan API client logo

This package provides:

  • a low-level client, which is pretty much just a wrapper around HTTP calls, handling serialization and exception-raising.

  • a high-level client, attempting to make it easier / safer to perform certain operations on a ckan catalog.

  • a synchronization client, used to provide some automation for synchronization tasks of collections of datasets into a catalog (commonly referred to as "harvesting").

Other than that, it attempts to get work around some common issues with that API, such as inconsistencies and bugs, trying to make sure problems are discovered earlier.

Documentation

Documentation is available on Read The Docs:

http://ckan-api-client.readthedocs.org

a mirror copy is currently available on GitHub pages:

https://opendatatrentino.github.io/ckan-api-client/

Installation

Latest stable version, from pypi:

pip install ckan-api-client

Latest from git master:

pip install http://git.io/ckan-api-client.tar.gz

Example usage

>>> from ckan_api_client.high_level import CkanHighlevelClient
>>> from ckan_api_client.objects import CkanDataset
>>> client = CkanHighlevelClient('http://127.0.0.1:5000', api_key='e70c15cc-2f07-4845-8c6e-3607df88e905')

We don't have datasets yet on our clean instance:

>>> client.list_datasets()
[]

Let's create a new dataset:

>>> new_dataset = client.create_dataset(CkanDataset({
...     'name': 'example-dataset',
...     'title': 'My example dataset'}))

>>> new_dataset
CkanDataset({'maintainer': u'', 'name': u'example-dataset', 'author': u'', 'author_email': u'', 'title': 'My example dataset', 'notes': u'', 'owner_org': None, 'private': False, 'maintainer_email': u'', 'url': u'', 'state': u'active', 'extras': {}, 'groups': [], 'license_id': u'', 'type': u'dataset', 'id': u'dfe41b34-5114-47be-8d94-759f942938fc', 'resources': []})

>>> client.list_datasets()
[u'dfe41b34-5114-47be-8d94-759f942938fc']

Now, let's change its title:

>>> new_dataset.title = 'NEW TITLE'

>>> client.update_dataset(new_dataset)
CkanDataset({'maintainer': u'', 'name': u'example-dataset', 'author': u'', 'author_email': u'', 'title': 'NEW TITLE', 'notes': u'', 'owner_org': None, 'private': False, 'maintainer_email': u'', 'url': u'', 'state': u'active', 'extras': {}, 'groups': [], 'license_id': u'', 'type': u'dataset', 'id': u'dfe41b34-5114-47be-8d94-759f942938fc', 'resources': []})

Get it back:

>>> client.get_dataset('dfe41b34-5114-47be-8d94-759f942938fc')
(same result as above)

Delete it:

>>> client.wipe_dataset(new_dataset.id)

Trying to get the dataset again will raise a "simulated" 404: Ckan will never delete datasets, it just marks them as "state: deleted", for administrative users, and returns a 403 for anonymous ones. We want to provide more consistency so we raise an exception.

If you really want to get the deleted dataset, add allow_deleted=True.

>>> client.get_dataset('dfe41b34-5114-47be-8d94-759f942938fc')
HTTPError: HTTPError(404, '(logical) dataset state is deleted', original=None)

Running tests (new way)

We use gnu make to better automate things:

make -f scripts/tests.mk run-tests

or

make -f scripts/tests.mk run-tests \
CKAN_POSTGRES_ADMIN=postgresql://localhost/postgres \
CKAN_SOLR=http://127.0.0.1:8983/solr \
CKAN_ENV_NAME=ckan-master \
REPO_URL=https://github.com/ckan/ckan \
REPO_BRANCH=master \
PYTHON=/usr/bin/python2.7

This will automatically create a suitable environment in ./ckan-envs/, install the selected Ckan branch and run tests using that instance.

Running tests (old way)

You'll need:

  • Python virtualenv, with Ckan installed
  • PostgreSQL instance, with administrative access
  • Solr instance, with Ckan schema installed

To configure & run tests:

export CKAN_VIRTUALENV=$VIRTUAL_ENV
export CKAN_POSTGRES_ADMIN=postgresql://postgres:pass@localhost/postgres
export CKAN_SOLR=http://127.0.0.1:8983/solr

python ./simple_api_testing/run_tests.py

(I usually put lines above in a simple bash script, just to make it easier to remember :))

Debugging

To compare objects from the debugger, use functions from pytest::

from ckan_api_client.tests.conftest import diff_eq