Skip to main content

Generic asynchronous i/o python utilities for AWS services (SQS, S3, DynamoDB, Secrets Manager), Redis, MSSQL (pyodbc), JIRA and more

Project description

aioradio

Generic asynchronous i/o python utilities for AWS services (SQS, S3, DynamoDB, Secrets Manager), Redis, MSSQL (pyodbc), JIRA and more.

AWS S3 example code

aioradio abstracts using aiobotocore and aioboto3 making async AWS funtion calls simple one liners. Besides what is shown below in the examples, there is also support for SQS, DynamoDB and Secrets Manager.

import asyncio

from aioradio.aws.s3 import (
    create_bucket,
    delete_s3_object,
    download_file,
    get_object,
    list_s3_objects,
    upload_file
)

async def main():
    s3_bucket = 'aioradio'
    s3_prefix = 'test'
    filename = 'hello_world.txt'
    s3_key = f'{s3_prefix}/{filename}'

    # create an s3 bucket called aioradio
    await create_bucket(bucket=s3_bucket)

    # create hello_world.txt file
    with open(filename, 'w') as file_handle:
        file_handle.write('hello world of aioradio!')

    # upload the file from s3 and confirm it now exists in s3
    await upload_file(bucket=s3_bucket, filepath=filename, s3_key=s3_key)
    assert s3_key in await list_s3_objects(bucket=s3_bucket, s3_prefix=s3_prefix)

    # test downloading the file
    await download_file(bucket=s3_bucket, filepath=filename, s3_key=s3_key)

    # test getting file data to object
    result = await get_object(bucket=s3_bucket, s3_key=s3_key)
    assert result == b'hello world of aioradio!'

    # delete the file from s3
    await delete_s3_object(bucket=s3_bucket, s3_prefix=s3_key)
    assert s3_key not in await list_s3_objects(bucket=s3_bucket, s3_prefix=s3_prefix)

asyncio.get_event_loop().run_until_complete(main())

MSSQL example code

aioredis uses the pyodbc library to work with ODBC databases. It currently has support for connecting and sending queries to mssql.

import asyncio

from aioradio.pyodbc import establish_pyodbc_connection
from aioradio.pyodbc import pyodbc_query_fetchone
from aioradio.pyodbc import pyodbc_query_fetchall

def main():
    conn = establish_pyodbc_connection(host='your-host', user='your-user', pwd='your-password')

    query = "SELECT homeruns FROM MLB.dbo.LosAngelesAngels WHERE lastname = 'Trout' AND year = '2020'"
    row = pyodbc_query_fetchone(conn=conn, query=query)
    print(row)

    query = "SELECT homeruns FROM MLB.dbo.LosAngelesAngels WHERE lastname = 'Trout'"
    rows = pyodbc_query_fetchall(conn=conn, query=query)
    print(rows)


asyncio.get_event_loop().run_until_complete(main())

Jira example code

Jira uses the async library httpx behind the scene to send http requests.

import asyncio

from aioradio.jira import add_comment_to_jira
from aioradio.jira import get_jira_issue
from aioradio.jira import post_jira_issue

async def main():

    # create a jira ticket
    url = 'https://aioradio.atlassian.net/rest/api/2/issue/'
    payload = {
        "fields": {
            "project": {"key": "aioradio"},
            "issuetype": {"name": "Task"},
            "reporter": {"accountId": "somebodies-account-id"},
            "priority": {"name": "Medium"},
            "summary": "Aioradio rocks!",
            "description": "Aioradio Review",
            "labels": ["aioradio"],
            "assignee": {"accountId": "somebodies-account-id"}
        }
    }
    resp = await post_jira_issue(url=url, jira_user='your-user', jira_token='your-password', payload=payload)
    jira_id = resp.json()['key']

    # get jira ticket info
    resp = await get_jira_issue(url=f'{url}/{jira_id}', jira_user='your-user', jira_token='your-password')

    # add comment to jira ticket
    comment = 'aioradio rocks!'
    response = await add_comment_to_jira(url=url, jira_user='your-user', jira_token='your-password', comment=comment)

asyncio.get_event_loop().run_until_complete(main())

INSTALLING FOR DIRECT DEVELOPMENT OF AIORADIO

Install python 3.11.X

Make sure you've installed ODBC drivers, required for using the python package pyodbc.

Clone aioradio locally and navigate to the root directory

Install and activate python VirtualEnv

python3.11 -m venv env
source env/bin/activate

Install python modules included in requirements.txt

pip install cython
pip install -r aioradio/requirements.txt

Run Makefile command from the root directory to test all is good before issuing push to master

make all

AUTHORS

See also the list of contributors who participated in this project.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  • Pedro Artiga - Developer contributing to aioradio.

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

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

Source Distribution

aioradio-0.20.16.tar.gz (33.4 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

aioradio-0.20.16-py3-none-any.whl (36.9 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Python 3

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