grlc, the git repository linked data API constructor
Project description
grlc, the git repository linked data API constructor, automatically builds Web APIs using shared SPARQL queries. http://grlc.io/
If you use grlc in your work, please cite it as:
@InProceedings{merono2016grlc,
author = {Mero{\~{n}}o-Pe{\~{n}}uela, Albert and Hoekstra, Rinke},
title = {{grlc Makes GitHub Taste Like Linked Data APIs}},
booktitle = {The Semantic Web: ESWC 2016 Satellite Events, Heraklion, Crete, Greece, May 29 -- June 2, 2016},
year = {2016},
publisher = {Springer},
pages = {342--353},
isbn = {978-3-319-47602-5},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-47602-5_48}
}
What is grlc?
grlc is a lightweight server that takes SPARQL queries (stored in a GitHub repository, in your local filesystem, or listed in a URL), and translates them to Linked Data Web APIs. This enables universal access to Linked Data. Users are not required to know SPARQL to query their data, but instead can access a web API.
Quick tutorial
For a quick usage tutorial check out our wiki walkthrough and list of features.
Usage
grlc assumes that you have a collection of SPARQL queries as .rq files (like this). grlc will create one API operation for each SPARQL query/.rq file in the collection.
Your queries can add API parameters to each operation by using the parameter mapping syntax. This allows your query to define query variables which will be mapped to API parameters for your API operation (see here for an example).
Your queries can include special decorators to add extra functionality to your API.
Query location
grlc can load your query collection from different locations: from a GitHub repository (api-git
), from local storage (api-local
), and from a specification file (api-url
). Each type of location has specific features and is accessible via different paths. However all location types produce the same beautiful APIs.
From a GitHub repository
API path:
http://grlc-server/api-git/<user>/<repo>
grlc can build an API from any Github repository, specified by the GitHub user name of the owner (<user>
) and repository name (<repo>
).
For example, assuming your queries are stored on a Github repo: https://github.com/CLARIAH/grlc-queries/
, point your browser to the following location
http://grlc.io/api-git/CLARIAH/grlc-queries/
grlc can make use of git's version control mechanism to generate an API based on a specific version of queries in the repository. This can be done by including the commit sha in the URL path (http://grlc-server/api-git/<user>/<repo>/commit/<sha>
), for example: http://grlc.io/api-git/CLARIAH/grlc-queries/commit/79ceef2ee814a12e2ec572ffaa2f8212a22bae23
grlc can also use a subdirectory inside your Github repo. This can be done by including a subdirectory in the URL path (http://grlc-server/api-git/<user>/<repo>/subdir/<subdir>
).
From local storage
API path:
http://grlc-server/api-local/
grlc can generate an API from a local directory in the computer where your grlc server runs. You can configure the location of this directory in your grlc server configuration file. See also how to install and run your own grlc instance.
When the API is generated from a local directory, API information can be loaded from a configuration file in that folder. This file must be called local-api-config.ini
and it has the following format:
[repo_info]
repo_title = Some title
api_description = Description of my API
contact_name = My name
contact_url = https://mypage/
licence_url = https://mylicence/
From a specification file
API path:
http://grlc-server/api-url/?specUrl=<specUrl>
grlc can generate an API from a yaml specification file accessible on the web.
For example, assuming your queries are listed on spec file: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/CLARIAH/grlc-queries/master/urls.yml
, point your browser to the following location
http://grlc.io/api-url?specUrl=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/CLARIAH/grlc-queries/master/urls.yml
Specification file syntax
A grlc API specification file is a YAML file which includes the necessary information to create a grlc API, most importantly a list of URLs to decorated and HTTP-dereferenceable SPARQL queries. This file should contain the following fields
title
: Title of my APIdescription
: API descriptioncontact
: Contact details of the API owner. This should include thename
andurl
properties.licence
: A URL pointing to the licence file for the API.queries
: A list of URLs of SPARQL queries (with header decorators).
For example:
title: Title of my API
description: Description of my API
contact:
name: Contact Name
url: https://www.mywebsite.org
licence: http://example.org/licence.html
queries:
- https://www.mywebsite.org/query1.rq
- https://www.mywebsite.org/query2.rq
- https://www.otherwebsite.org/query3.rq
grlc generated API
The API paths of all location types point to the generated swagger-ui style API documentation. On the API documentation page, you can explore available API calls and execute individual API calls.
You can also view the swagger spec of your API, by visiting <API-path>/spec/
, for example: http://grlc.io/api-git/CLARIAH/grlc-queries/spec/
grlc query execution
When you call an API endpoint, grlc executes the SPARQL query for that endpoint by combining supplied parameters and decorators.
There are 4 options to specify your own endpoint:
- Add a
sparql_endpoint
on yourconfig.ini
- Add a
endpoint
parameter to your request: 'http://grlc.io/user/repo/query?endpoint=http://sparql-endpoint/'. You can add a#+ endpoint_in_url: False
decorator if you DO NOT want to see theendpoint
parameter in the swagger-ui of your API. - Add the
#+ endpoint:
decorator. - Add the URL of the endpoint on a single line in an
endpoint.txt
file within the GitHub repository that contains the queries.
The endpoint call will return the result of executing the query as a json representation of rdflib.query.QueryResult (for other result formats, you can use content negotiation via HTTP Accept
headers). For json responses, the schema of the response can be modified by using the #+ transform:
decorator.
Decorator syntax
Special decorators are available to make your swagger-ui look nicer and to increase functionality. These are provided as comments at the start of your query file, making it still syntactically valid SPARQL. All decorators start with #+
, for example:
#+ decorator_1: decorator value
#+ decorator_1: decorator value
SELECT * WHERE {
?s ?p ?o .
}
The following is a list of available decorators and their function:
summary
Creates a summary of your query/operation. This is shown next to your operation name in the swagger-ui.
Syntax:
#+ summary: This is the summary of my query/operation
Example query and the equivalent API operation.
description
Creates a description of your query/operation. This is shown as the description of your operation in the swagger-ui.
Syntax:
#+ description: Extended description of my query/operation.
Example query and the equivalent API operation.
endpoint
Specifies a query-specific endpoint.
Syntax:
#+ endpoint: http://example.com/sparql
Example query and the equivalent API operation.
pagination
Paginates the results in groups of (for example) 100. Links to previous, next, first, and last result pages are provided as HTTP response headers to avoid polluting the payload (see details here)
Syntax:
#+ pagination: 100
Example query and the equivalent API operation.
method
Indicates the HTTP request method (GET
and POST
are supported).
Syntax:
#+ method: GET
Example query and the equivalent API operation.
tags
Assign tags to your query/operation. Query/operations with the same tag are grouped together in the swagger-ui.
Syntax:
#+ tags:
#+ - firstTag
#+ - secondTag
Example query and the equivalent API operation.
enumerate
Indicates which parameters of your query/operation should get enumerations (and get dropdown menus in the swagger-ui) using the given values from the SPARQL endpoint. The values for each enumeration variable can also be specified into the query decorators to save endpoint requests and speed up the API generation.
Syntax:
#+ enumerate:
#+ - var1:
#+ - value1
#+ - value2
Example query and the equivalent API operation.
Notice that these should be plain variable names without SPARQL/BASIL conventions (so var1
instead of ?_var1_iri
)
endpoint_in_url
Allows/disallows the endpoint
parameter from being provided as a URL parameter (allowed by default).
Syntax:
#+ endpoint_in_url: False
Example query and the equivalent API operation.
transform
Allows query results to be converted to the specified JSON structure, by using SPARQLTransformer syntax.
Syntax:
#+ transform: {
#+ "key": "?p",
#+ "value": "?o",
#+ "$anchor": "key"
#+ }
Example query and the equivalent API operation.
Example APIs
Check these out:
- http://grlc.io/api-git/CLARIAH/grlc-queries
- http://grlc.io/api-url?specUrl=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/CLARIAH/grlc-queries/master/urls.yml
- http://grlc.io/api-git/CLARIAH/wp4-queries-hisco
- http://grlc.io/api-git/albertmeronyo/lodapi
- http://grlc.io/api-git/albertmeronyo/lsq-api
- https://grlc.io/api-git/CEDAR-project/Queries
You'll find the sources of these and many more in GitHub
Use this GitHub search to see examples from other grlc users.
Install and run
You can use grlc in different ways:
- Via grlc.io: you can use the grlc.io service
- Via Docker: you can use the grlc docker image and start your own grlc server.
- Via pip: you can install the grlc Python package and start your own grlc server or use grlc as a Python library.
More details for each of these options are given below.
grlc.io
The easiest way to use grlc is by visiting grlc.io and using this service to convert SPARQL queries into a RESTful API. Your queries can be stored on a github repo or can be listed on a specification file.
Docker
To run grlc via docker, you'll need a working installation of docker. To deploy grlc, just pull the latest image from Docker hub. :
docker run -it --rm -p 8088:80 clariah/grlc
The docker image allows you to setup several environment variable such as GRLC_SERVER_NAME
GRLC_GITHUB_ACCESS_TOKEN
and GRLC_SPARQL_ENDPOINT
:
docker run -it --rm -p 8088:80 -e GRLC_SERVER_NAME=grlc.io -e GRLC_GITHUB_ACCESS_TOKEN=xxx -e GRLC_SPARQL_ENDPOINT=http://dbpedia.org/sparql -e DEBUG=true clariah/grlc
Pip
If you want to run grlc locally or use it as a library, you can install grlc on your machine. Grlc is registered in PyPi so you can install it using pip.
Prerequisites
grlc has the following requirements:
- Python3
- development files (depending on your OS):
sudo apt-get install libevent-dev python-all-dev
pip install
Once the base requirements are satisfied, you can install grlc like this:
pip install grlc
Once grlc is installed, you have several options:
Standalone server
grlc includes a command line tool which you can use to start your own grlc server:
grlc-server
Using a WSGI server
You can run grlc using a WSGI server such as gunicorn as follows:
gunicorn grlc.server:app
If you want to use your own gunicorn configuration, for example gunicorn_config.py
:
workers = 5
worker_class = 'gevent'
bind = '0.0.0.0:8088'
Then you can run it as:
gunicorn -c gunicorn_config.py grlc.server:app
Note: Since gunicorn
does not work under Windows, you can use waitress
instead:
waitress-serve --port=8088 grlc.server:app
If you want to run grlc at system boot as a service, you can find example upstart scripts at upstart/
grlc library
You can use grlc as a library directly from your own python script. See the usage example to find out more.
grlc server configuration
Regardless of how you are running your grlc server, you will need to configure it using the config.ini
file. Have a look at the example config file to see how it this file is structured.
The configuration file contains the following variables:
github_access_token
access token to communicate with Github API.local_sparql_dir
local storage directory where local queries are located.server_name
name of the server (e.g. grlc.io)sparql_endpoint
default SPARQL endpointuser
andpassword
SPARQL endpoint default authentication (if required, specify'none'
if not required)debug
enable debug level logging.
GitHub access token
In order for grlc to communicate with GitHub, you'll need to tell grlc what your access token is:
- Get a GitHub personal access token. In your GitHub's profile page, go to Settings, then Developer settings, Personal access tokens, and Generate new token
- You'll get an access token string, copy it and save it somewhere safe (GitHub won't let you see it again!)
- Edit your
config.ini
ordocker-compose.yml
as value of the environment variableGRLC_GITHUB_ACCESS_TOKEN
.
Contribute!
grlc needs you to continue bringing Semantic Web content to developers, applications and users. No matter if you are just a curious user, a developer, or a researcher; there are many ways in which you can contribute:
- File in bug reports
- Request new features
- Set up your own environment and start hacking
Check our contributing guidelines for these and more, and join us today!
If you cannot code, that's no problem! There's still plenty you can contribute:
- Share your experience at using grlc in Twitter (mention the handler @grlcldapi)
- If you are good with HTML/CSS, let us know
Related tools
- SPARQL2Git is a Web interface for editing SPARQL queries and saving them in GitHub as grlc APIs.
- grlcR is a package for R that brings Linked Data into your R environment easily through grlc.
- Hay's tools lists grlc as a Wikimedia-related tool :-)
This is what grlc users are saying
- Flavour your Linked Data with grlc, by Carlos Martinez
- Converting any SPARQL endpoint to an OpenAPI by Egon Willighagen
Quotes from grlc users:
A cool project that can convert a random SPARQL endpoint into an OpenAPI endpoint
It enables us to quickly integrate any new API requirements in a matter of seconds, without having to worry about configuration or deployment of the system
You can store your SPARQL queries on GitHub and then you can run your queries on your favourite programming language (Python, Javascript, etc.) using a Web API (including swagger documentation) just as easily as loading data from a web page
Contributors: Albert Meroño, Rinke Hoekstra, Carlos Martínez
Copyright: Albert Meroño, VU University Amsterdam
License: MIT License (see LICENSE.txt)
Academic publications
- Albert Meroño-Peñuela, Rinke Hoekstra. “grlc Makes GitHub Taste Like Linked Data APIs”. The Semantic Web – ESWC 2016 Satellite Events, Heraklion, Crete, Greece, May 29 – June 2, 2016, Revised Selected Papers. LNCS 9989, pp. 342-353 (2016). (PDF)
- Albert Meroño-Peñuela, Rinke Hoekstra. “SPARQL2Git: Transparent SPARQL and Linked Data API Curation via Git”. In: Proceedings of the 14th Extended Semantic Web Conference (ESWC 2017), Poster and Demo Track. Portoroz, Slovenia, May 28th – June 1st, 2017 (2017). (PDF)
- Albert Meroño-Peñuela, Rinke Hoekstra. “Automatic Query-centric API for Routine Access to Linked Data”. In: The Semantic Web – ISWC 2017, 16th International Semantic Web Conference. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 10587, pp. 334-339 (2017). (PDF)
- Pasquale Lisena, Albert Meroño-Peñuela, Tobias Kuhn, Raphaël Troncy. “Easy Web API Development with SPARQL Transformer”. In: The Semantic Web – ISWC 2019, 18th International Semantic Web Conference. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 11779, pp. 454-470 (2019). (PDF)
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