A library for ingesting data provided by paginated HTTP APIs
Project description
bezalel
A library for ingesting data provided by paginated HTTP APIs
Usage
Basic use case
If you have to pull data from HTTP API that has an endpoint accepting parameters:
pageNumber=1,2,...
And returning JSON:
{
"pageCount": 5,
"entities": [
{"key": "val1", ...},
{"key": "val2", ...},
...
]
}
Then you can iterate over all pages with following code:
import requests
from bezalel import PaginatedApiIterator
for page in PaginatedApiIterator(requests.Session(), url=f"http://localhost:5000/page-api",
request_page_number_param_name="pageNumber",
response_page_count_field_name="pageCount",
response_records_field_name="entities"):
print(f"Page: {page}")
It will print:
Page: [{"key": "val1", ...}, {"key": "val2", ...}, ...]
Page: [{"key": "val100", ...}, {"key": "val101", ...}, ...]
Page: [{"key": "val200", ...}, {"key": "val201", ...}, ...]
...
Grouping with BufferingIterator
If HTTP API doesn't allow you setting high number of records per page, use BufferingIterator
.
import requests
from bezalel import PaginatedApiIterator, BufferingIterator
for page in BufferingIterator(PaginatedApiIterator(requests.Session(), url=f"http://localhost:5000/page-api",
request_page_number_param_name="pageNumber",
response_page_count_field_name="pageCount",
response_records_field_name="entities"), buffer_size=2):
print(f"Page: {page}")
It will combine multiple pages into one array, so that
Page: [{"key": "val1", ...}, {"key": "val2", ...}, ..., {"key": "val100", ...}, {"key": "val101", ...}, ...]
Page: [{"key": "val200", ...}, {"key": "val201", ...}, ..., {"key": "val300", ...}, {"key": "val301", ...}, ...]
...
This is useful for fetching many records and storing them in fewer files (every file would be bigger).
Iterating over all records
TODO: this API will be improved in future release.
import itertools
import requests
from bezalel import PaginatedApiIterator
all_elems = list(itertools.chain.from_iterable(PaginatedApiIterator(requests.Session(), url=f"https://your/api",
request_page_number_param_name="pageNumber",
response_page_count_field_name="pageCount",
response_records_field_name="entities"))):
print(f"len={len(all_elems)}: {all_elems}")
will print
len=12300: [{"key": "val1", ...}, {"key": "val2", ...}, ...]
Helper function: normalize_with_prototype()
Normalize python dict, so that it has all the fields and only the fields specified in a prototype dict.
from bezalel import normalize_with_prototype
object_from_api = {
"id": 123,
"name:": "John",
"country": "Poland",
# city is not provided here (but present in prototype)
"pets": [
{"id": 101, "type": "dog", "name": "Barky"},
{"id": 102, "type": "snail"}, # name is not provided here (but present in prototype)
],
"unspecifiedField": 123 # this field is not present in prototype below
}
prototype_from_swagger = {
"id": 0,
"name:": "",
"country": "",
"city": "",
"pets": [
{"id": 0, "type": "", "name": ""},
]
}
result = normalize_with_prototype(prototype_from_swagger, object_from_api)
would return
result = {
"id": 123,
"name:": "John",
"country": "Poland",
"city": None, # city was added
"pets": [
{"id": 101, "type": "dog", "name": "Barky"},
{"id": 102, "type": "snail", "name": None}, # name was added
]
}
Helper function: normalize_dicts()
Normalize list of nested python dicts to a list of one-level dicts.
Example:
from bezalel import normalize_dicts
data = [
{
"id": 1, "name": "John Smith",
"pets": [
{"id": 101, "type": "cat", "name": "Kitty", "toys": [{"name": "toy1"}, {"name": "toy2"}]},
{"id": 102, "type": "dog", "name": "Barky", "toys": [{"name": "toy3"}]}
]
},
{
"id": 2, "name": "Sue Smith",
"pets": [
{"id": 201, "type": "cat", "name": "Kitten", "toys": [{"name": "toy4"}, {"name": "toy5"}, {"name": "toy6"}]},
{"id": 202, "type": "dog", "name": "Fury", "toys": []}
]
},
]
normalize_dicts(data, ["pets", "toys"])
would return:
[{'id': 1, 'name': 'John Smith', 'pets.id': 101, 'pets.type': 'cat', 'pets.name': 'Kitty', 'pets.toys.name': 'toy1'},
{'id': 1, 'name': 'John Smith', 'pets.id': 101, 'pets.type': 'cat', 'pets.name': 'Kitty', 'pets.toys.name': 'toy2'},
{'id': 1, 'name': 'John Smith', 'pets.id': 102, 'pets.type': 'dog', 'pets.name': 'Barky', 'pets.toys.name': 'toy3'},
{'id': 2, 'name': 'Sue Smith', 'pets.id': 201, 'pets.type': 'cat', 'pets.name': 'Kitten', 'pets.toys.name': 'toy4'},
{'id': 2, 'name': 'Sue Smith', 'pets.id': 201, 'pets.type': 'cat', 'pets.name': 'Kitten', 'pets.toys.name': 'toy5'},
{'id': 2, 'name': 'Sue Smith', 'pets.id': 201, 'pets.type': 'cat', 'pets.name': 'Kitten', 'pets.toys.name': 'toy6'},
{'id': 2, 'name': 'Sue Smith', 'pets.id': 202, 'pets.type': 'dog', 'pets.name': 'Fury'}]
Presence of the last record can be controlled by flag return_incomplete_records
. If return_incomplete_records=False
then last record in the example would not have been returned.
Additional options:
- jsonify_lists - when set to True, then if a list is encountered (not in main path), it is dumped as a JSON string.
- jsonify_dicts - list of paths for where to expect a dict. That dict will be then dumped as a JSON string.
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