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DNAnexus Platform API bindings for Python

Project description

dxpy: DNAnexus Python API

API Documentation

Building

From the dx-toolkit root directory:

make python

Debugging

Set the _DX_DEBUG environment variable to a positive integer before running a dxpy-based program (such as dx) to display the input and output of each API call. Supported values are 1, 2, and 3 with increasing numbers producing successively more verbose output.

Example:

$ _DX_DEBUG=1 dx ls

Python coding style

  • Conform to PEP-8.
    • Relax the line length requirement to 120 characters per line, where you judge readability not to be compromised.
    • Relax other PEP-8 requirements at your discretion if it simplifies code or is needed to follow conventions established elsewhere at DNAnexus.
  • Document your code in a format usable by Sphinx Autodoc.
  • Run pylint -E on your code before checking it in.
  • Do not introduce module import-time side effects.
    • Do not add module-level attributes into the API unless you are absolutely certain they will remain constants. For example, do not declare an attribute dxpy.foo (dxpy._foo is OK), or any other non-private variable in the global scope of any module. This is because unless the value is a constant, it may need to be updated by an initialization method, which may need to run lazily to avoid side effects at module load time. Instead, use accessor methods that can perform the updates at call time:

      _foo = None
      
      def get_foo():
          initialize()
          return _foo
      

Other useful resources:

Python version compatibility

dxpy is supported on Python 2 (2.7+) and Python 3 (3.5+)

Code going into the Python codebase should be written in Python 3.5 style, and should be compatible with Python 2.7. Python 2.7 support will end on March 1, 2021.

To facilitate Python 2 compatibility, we have the compat module in https://github.com/dnanexus/dx-toolkit/blob/master/src/python/dxpy/compat.py. Also, the following boilerplate should be inserted into all Python source files:

from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function, unicode_literals
  • dxpy.compat has some simple shims that mirror Python 3 builtins and redirect them to Python 2.7 equivalents when on 2.7. Most critically, from dxpy.compat import str will import the unicode builtin on 2.7 and the str builtin on python 3. Use str wherever you would have used unicode. To convert unicode strings to bytes, use .encode('utf-8').
  • Use from __future__ import print_function and use print as a function. Instead of print >>sys.stderr, write print(..., file=sys.stderr).
  • The next most troublesome gotcha after the bytes/unicode conversions is that many iterables operators return generators in Python 3. For example, map() returns a generator. This breaks places that expect a list, and requires either explicit casting with list(), or the use of list comprehensions (usually preferred).
  • Instead of raw_input, use from dxpy.compat import input.
  • Instead of .iteritems(), use .items(). If this is a performance concern on 2.7, introduce a shim in compat.py.
  • Instead of StringIO.StringIO, use from dxpy.compat import BytesIO (which is StringIO on 2.7).
  • Instead of <iterator>.next(), use next(<iterator>).
  • Instead of x.has_key(y), use y in x.
  • Instead of sort(x, cmp=lambda x, y: ...), use x=sorted(x, key=lambda x: ...).

Other useful resources:

Convention for Python scripts that are also modules

Some scripts, such as format converters, are useful both as standalone executables and as importable modules.

We have the following convention for these scripts:

  • Install the script into src/python/dxpy/scripts with a name like dx_useful_script.py. This will allow importing with import dxpy.scripts.dx_useful_script.

  • Include in the script a top-level function called main(), which should be the entry point processor, and conclude the script with the following stanza:

    if __name__ == '__main__':
        main()
    
  • The dxpy installation process (invoked through setup.py or with make -C src python at the top level) will find the script and install a launcher for it into the executable path automatically. This is done using the entry_points facility of setuptools/distribute.

    • Note: the install script will replace underscores in the name of your module with dashes in the name of the launcher script.
  • Typically, when called on the command line, main() will first parse the command line arguments (sys.argv). However, when imported as a module, the arguments need to instead be passed as inputs to a function. The following is a suggestion for how to accommodate both styles simultaneously with just one entry point (main):

    def main(**kwargs):
        if len(kwargs) == 0:
            kwargs = vars(arg_parser.parse_args(sys.argv[1:]))
        ...
    
    if __name__ == '__main__':
        main()
    

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