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REST API manager for Binance API. Manages weights and credentials simply and securely.

Project description

Panzer: Binance API Connection Manager

Panzer is a Python-based library designed to manage Binance API interactions efficiently, handling both signed and unsigned requests. It includes features like secure credential management, automatic request signing, and a sophisticated rate-limiting and weight-control system.

Key Features

  • Secure Credential Management: AES-encrypted storage for API credentials. Credentials are decrypted just-in-time for security, meaning you never handle decrypted keys directly.
  • Request Signing: Automatic signing for secure Binance API endpoints.
  • Rate-Limiting System: Dynamic control of API request weight and order limits.
  • Weight Control: Tracks and logs changes in Binance API request weights, enabling visibility of weight fluctuations.
  • Exception Handling: Centralized error management for API requests.

Installation

You can install Panzer via pip:

pip install panzer

Alternatively, clone the repository:

git clone https://github.com/nand0san/panzer.git

And then install the dependencies:

pip install -r requirements.txt

Quick Start

Panzer is meant to manage all the ugly API things like, reate limits, manage secure credentials and keep track of API endpoint weights updates automatically. But also you can manage objects from the module if you want to.

Rate-Limit Control

The BinanceRateLimiter fetches rate limits directly from Binance and adapts accordingly.

from panzer.limits import BinanceRateLimiter

rate_limiter = BinanceRateLimiter()

# Show automatically fetched rate limits
rate_limiter.get()

   {'orders_limit_per_ten_seconds': 100,
    'orders_limit_per_day': 200000,
    'weight_limit_per_minute': 6000,
    'raw_limit_per_5_minutes': 61000,
    'server_time_offset': 113,
    'five_minutes_counts': {5755608: 2},
    'minutes_weights': {28778040: 21},
    'ten_seconds_orders_counts': {},
    'daily_orders_count': {}}

Error Handling

Panzer offers centralized exception handling for all API requests.

from panzer.errors import BinanceAPIException
from panzer.request import get

try:
    # missing symbol example
    response = get(url="https://api.binance.com/api/v3/klines", params=[("interval", "1m"),])

except BinanceAPIException as e:
    print(f"Error: {e}")

Error: BinanceAPIException(code=-1102, status_code=400): Mandatory parameter 'symbol' was not sent, was empty/null, or malformed.

Manage Credentials Securely

Panzer manages creds in a very automated way. It will save securely to a file: ' "~/.panzer_creds"' for every future API request if needed.

First call to API that requires credentials, will prompt the user to enter credentials if necessary. Also can be added to the credential manager.

from panzer.keys import CredentialManager

credentials = CredentialManager()
credentials.add("api_key", "your_api_key", is_sensitive=True)

Retrieve Kline Data (Public API)

from panzer.request import get

url = 'https://api.binance.com/api/v3/klines'
weight=2
params = {
    "symbol": "BTCUSDT",  # Par BTCUSDT
    "interval": "1m",     # Intervalo de 1 minuto
    "limit": 3            # Limitar a las últimas 5 velas
}

if rate_limiter.can_make_request(url=url, params_qty=len(params), weight=weight, is_order=False):
   
   response, headers = get(params=params, 
                           url=url,
                           full_sign=False,
                           server_time_offset=rate_limiter.server_time_offset)
   
    rate_limiter.update_from_headers(url=url, params_qty=len(params), headers=headers, expected_weight=weight)
   
print(response)

Place a Test Order (Signed API)

from panzer.request import post

url = 'https://api.binance.com/api/v3/order/test'
weight = 1

# timestamp is automatically added when signed call
params = {'symbol': "BTCUSDT",
          'side': "SELL",
          'type': "LIMIT",
          'timeInForce': 'GTC',
          'quantity': 0.001,
          'price': 80000,
          'recvWindow': 10000}

if rate_limiter.can_make_request(url=url, params_qty=len(params), weight=weight, is_order=False):
   
    response, headers = post(params=params, 
                            url=url,
                            full_sign=True,
                            server_time_offset=rate_limiter.server_time_offset,)
    
rate_limiter.update_from_headers(url=url, params_qty=len(params), headers=headers, expected_weight=weight)

print(response)

Retrieve Trade History (Signed API)

from panzer.request import get

url = 'https://api.binance.com/api/v3/myTrades'
weight = 20
params = {
    'symbol': 'BTCUSDT',                   # The trading pair
    'limit': 3,                            # Optional: Limit the number of trades to retrieve (default 500)
    'recvWindow': 5000                     # Optional: Time window for the request (default 5000 ms)
}

if rate_limiter.can_make_request(url=url, params_qty=len(params), weight=weight, is_order=False):
   
    response, headers = get(params=params, 
                            url=url,
                            full_sign=True,
                            server_time_offset=rate_limiter.server_time_offset,)
    
rate_limiter.update_from_headers(url=url, params_qty=len(params), headers=headers, expected_weight=weight)

print(response)

Some classes

1. Setup Credentials

Panzer securely manages Binance credentials. Credentials are stored encrypted in the home directory (~/panzer_creds). If a credential is requested and not found, it will be prompted automatically. You can also manually add credentials if needed.

Example:

from panzer.keys import CredentialManager

# Initialize the credential manager
credentials = CredentialManager()

# The keys are always decrypted just-in-time, meaning you don't need to manually decrypt them.
api_key = credentials.get("api_key", decrypt=True)  # Prompted if not available
api_secret = credentials.get("api_secret", decrypt=True)  # Prompted if not available

You can add credentials manually using:

credentials.add("api_key", "your_api_key", is_sensitive=True)
credentials.add("api_secret", "your_api_secret", is_sensitive=True)

2. Make API Requests

Panzer simplifies both public and private Binance API requests.

Public API Request (Unsigned)

from panzer.request import get

url = "https://api.binance.com/api/v3/ticker/price"
params = [('symbol', 'BTCUSDT')]
response, headers = get(url=url, params=params)
print(response)

Private API Request (Signed)

from panzer.request import get

url = "https://api.binance.com/api/v3/account"
response, headers = get(url=url, full_sign=True)
print(response)

3. Rate Limiting

The BinanceRateLimiter manages rate limits dynamically to ensure compliance with Binance's rules.

from panzer.limits import BinanceRateLimiter

rate_limiter = BinanceRateLimiter()

# Check if a request can be made
url = "https://api.binance.com/api/v3/account"
params = {}

if rate_limiter.can_make_request(url=url, params_qty=len(params), weight=10, is_order=False):
    print("Request can proceed")
else:
    print("Rate limit exceeded, waiting...")

4. Weight Control

Panzer includes a feature that tracks and logs changes in Binance API request weights. The WeightControl class stores these weights in a file (~/.panzer_weights.csv), and updates them automatically as API requests are made. Initially, no weights are stored, but entries will accumulate as requests are logged.

Example:

from panzer.weights import WeightControl

# Initialize the weight control system
weight_control = WeightControl()

# Fetch the current weight for a specific API call
url = "https://api.binance.com/api/v3/ticker/price"
params_qty = 1  # Number of parameters in the request
weight = weight_control.get(url, params_qty)
print(f"Current weight for {url} with {params_qty} params: {weight}")

# If the weight changes, update it
new_weight = 5  # New weight as observed
weight_control.update_weight(url, params_qty, new_weight)
print(f"Updated weight for {url} to {new_weight}")

As you use the API, the weights file will accumulate more entries, logging the weights for various API calls and parameter combinations. This will help you track changes in Binance’s rate-limiting policies.

5. Logging

Panzer logs all API interactions for debugging purposes, with logs stored in the logs/ directory.

from panzer.logs import LogManager

logger = LogManager(filename='logs/request.log', info_level='DEBUG')
logger.info("Logging API request details")

Conclusion

Panzer is a robust and secure solution for interacting with Binance's API. It provides request signing, secure credential management, built-in rate-limiting controls, and now a weight control system for tracking API weight changes. Install via pip and start using it to manage Binance API interactions efficiently.

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