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Python client for the EPICS Channel Archiver.

Project description

A python client for retrieving data from an EPICS Channel Archiver.

To get started just import the Archiver class and specify the address of your Channel Archiver server:

from channelarchiver import Archiver
archiver = Archiver('http://cr01arc01/cgi-bin/ArchiveDataServer.cgi')

You then fetch data with the archiver.get() method:

>>> data = archiver.get('SR00IE01:INJECTION_EFFICIENCY_MONITOR', '2013-08-11', '2013-08-12')
>>> print data
               time        value     status      severity
2013-08-11 00:00:02   96.9351518   NO_ALARM      NO_ALARM
2013-08-11 00:04:20   94.5171233   NO_ALARM      NO_ALARM
2013-08-11 00:08:38   85.0604361  LOW_ALARM         MINOR
...
>>> data.values
[96.935, 94.517, ..., 97.253]

The returned ChannelData object has the following fields:

  • channel: The channel name.

  • times: A list of datetimes.

  • values: A list of the channel’s values corresponding to times.

  • severities and statuses: Diagnostic information about the channel state for each time.

  • units: The units of values.

  • states: String values for enum type channels.

  • data_type: Whether the channel values are string, enum, int or double (see codes.data_type).

  • elements: The number of elements in an array type channel.

  • display_limits, warn_limits, alarm_limits: Low and high limits

  • display_precision: The recommended number of decimal places to to display values with in user interfaces.

  • archive_key: The archive the data was retrieved from.

  • interpolation: The interpolation method that was used (see codes.interpolation).

Get multiple channels

If you pass a list of channel names to .get() you will get a list of data objects back:

>>> channels = ['SR00TUM01:X_TUNE', 'SR00TUM01:Y_TUNE']
>>> x, y = archiver.get(channels, '2013-08-24 09:00', '2013-08-24 19:00')
>>> print x.values
[ 0.291, 0.290, ..., 0.289]
>>> print y.values
[ 0.216, 0.217, ..., 0.213]

Times and timezones

The start and end times over which to fetch data can be datetimes or strings in ISO 8601 format (eg 2013-08-10T21:30:00).

If no timezone is specified, your local timezone will be used. If a timezone is given, the returned channel data times will also be in this timezone.

>>> start = datetime.datetime(2012, 6, 1, tzinfo=pytz.UTC)
>>> end = datetime.datetime(2012, 6, 30, tzinfo=pytz.UTC)
>>> data_in_utc = archiver.get('BR00EXS01:TUNNEL_TEMPERATURE_MONITOR', start, end)

Interpolating

You can control how much data is returned from the archiver with the limit parameter. This is roughly equal to how many data points will be returned but the actual value will differ depending on how much data is available and the interpolation method.

The interpolation method is determined by the interpolation parameter. The allowed values are the 'raw', 'spreadsheet', 'averaged', 'plot-binning' and 'linear'. The default value is 'linear'.

>>> from channelarchiver import codes
>>> channel = 'SR00MOS01:FREQUENCY_MONITOR'
>>> data = archiver.get(channel, '2012', '2013', limit=10000, interpolation='raw')

Speeding up data retrieval

By default, for each .get call Archive will scan the archives to determine which one contains data for the specified channels. This will cause a slight delay in retrieving the data. This can be avoided by calling the .scan_archives() method once and then passing scan_archives=False to .get():

>>> archiver.scan_archives()
>>> d1 = archiver.get('SR02GRM01:DOSE_RATE_MONITOR', '2013-07', '2013-08', scan_archives=False)
>>> d2 = archiver.get('SR11BCM01:LIFETIME_MONITOR', '2013-07', '2013-08', scan_archives=False)

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