- Builds Reusable Objects for Consuming Web APIs.
- Works with Requests, aiohttp, and Twisted.
- Inspired by Retrofit.
Uplink turns your HTTP API into a Python class.
from uplink import Consumer, get, Path, Query
class GitHub(Consumer):
"""A Python Client for the GitHub API."""
@get("users/{user}/repos")
def get_repos(self, user: Path, sort_by: Query("sort")):
"""Retrieves the user's public repositories."""
Build an instance to interact with the webservice.
github = GitHub(base_url="https://api.github.com/")
Then, executing an HTTP request is as simply as invoking a method.
repos = github.get_repos(user="octocat", sort_by="created")
The returned object is a friendly requests.Response
:
print(repos.json())
# Output: [{'id': 64778136, 'name': 'linguist', ...
For sending non-blocking requests, Uplink comes with support for
aiohttp
and twisted
.
Ready to launch your first API client with Uplink? Start with this quick tutorial!
- Quickly Define Structured API Clients
- Use decorators and type hints to describe each HTTP request
- JSON, URL-encoded, and multipart request body and file upload
- URL parameter replacement, request headers, and query parameter support
- Bring Your Own HTTP Library
- Non-blocking I/O support for Aiohttp and Twisted
- Supply your own session (e.g.,
requests.Session
) for greater control
- Easy and Transparent Deserialization/Serialization
- Define custom converters for your own objects
- Support for
marshmallow
schemas,pydantic
models, and handling collections (e.g., list of Users)
- Extendable
- Install optional plugins for additional features (e.g., protobuf support)
- Compose custom response and error handling functions as middleware
- Authentication
- Built-in support for Basic Authentication
- Use existing auth libraries for supported clients (e.g.,
requests-oauthlib
)
Uplink officially supports Python 2.7 and 3.5 .
Note: Python 2.7 suport will be removed in v0.10.0.
To install the latest stable release, you can use pip
(or pipenv
):
$ pip install -U uplink
If you are interested in the cutting-edge, preview the upcoming release with:
$ pip install https://github.com/prkumar/uplink/archive/master.zip
Further, uplink has optional integrations and features. You can view a full list of available extras here.
When installing Uplink with pip
, you can select extras using the format:
$ pip install -U uplink[extra1, extra2, ..., extraN]
For instance, to install aiohttp
and marshmallow
support:
$ pip install -U uplink[aiohttp, marshmallow]
Michael Kennedy (@mkennedy), host of Talk Python and Python Bytes podcasts-
Of course our first reaction when consuming HTTP resources in Python is to reach for Requests. But for structured APIs, we often want more than ad-hoc calls to Requests. We want a client-side API for our apps. Uplink is the quickest and simplest way to build just that client-side API. Highly recommended.
Or Carmi (@liiight), notifiers maintainer-
Uplink's intelligent usage of decorators and typing leverages the most pythonic features in an elegant and dynamic way. If you need to create an API abstraction layer, there is really no reason to look elsewhere.
Check out the library's documentation at https://uplink.readthedocs.io/.
For new users, a good place to start is this quick tutorial.
Use the Discussions tab on GitHub to join the conversation! Ask questions, provide feedback, and meet other users!
We're migrating our community from Gitter to GitHub Discussions. Feel free to search our Gitter lobby for past questions and answers. However, to help us transition, please start new threads/posts in GitHub Discussions instead of Gitter.
Want to report a bug, request a feature, or contribute code to Uplink? Checkout the Contribution Guide for where to start. Thank you for taking the time to improve an open source project 💜