Skip to main content

A client library for accessing policyengine-api-simulation

Project description

policyengine-api-simulation-client

A client library for accessing policyengine-api-simulation

Usage

First, create a client:

from policyengine_api_simulation_client import Client

client = Client(base_url="https://api.example.com")

If the endpoints you're going to hit require authentication, use AuthenticatedClient instead:

from policyengine_api_simulation_client import AuthenticatedClient

client = AuthenticatedClient(base_url="https://api.example.com", token="SuperSecretToken")

Now call your endpoint and use your models:

from policyengine_api_simulation_client.models import MyDataModel
from policyengine_api_simulation_client.api.my_tag import get_my_data_model
from policyengine_api_simulation_client.types import Response

with client as client:
    my_data: MyDataModel = get_my_data_model.sync(client=client)
    # or if you need more info (e.g. status_code)
    response: Response[MyDataModel] = get_my_data_model.sync_detailed(client=client)

Or do the same thing with an async version:

from policyengine_api_simulation_client.models import MyDataModel
from policyengine_api_simulation_client.api.my_tag import get_my_data_model
from policyengine_api_simulation_client.types import Response

async with client as client:
    my_data: MyDataModel = await get_my_data_model.asyncio(client=client)
    response: Response[MyDataModel] = await get_my_data_model.asyncio_detailed(client=client)

By default, when you're calling an HTTPS API it will attempt to verify that SSL is working correctly. Using certificate verification is highly recommended most of the time, but sometimes you may need to authenticate to a server (especially an internal server) using a custom certificate bundle.

client = AuthenticatedClient(
    base_url="https://internal_api.example.com", 
    token="SuperSecretToken",
    verify_ssl="/path/to/certificate_bundle.pem",
)

You can also disable certificate validation altogether, but beware that this is a security risk.

client = AuthenticatedClient(
    base_url="https://internal_api.example.com", 
    token="SuperSecretToken", 
    verify_ssl=False
)

Things to know:

  1. Every path/method combo becomes a Python module with four functions:

    1. sync: Blocking request that returns parsed data (if successful) or None
    2. sync_detailed: Blocking request that always returns a Request, optionally with parsed set if the request was successful.
    3. asyncio: Like sync but async instead of blocking
    4. asyncio_detailed: Like sync_detailed but async instead of blocking
  2. All path/query params, and bodies become method arguments.

  3. If your endpoint had any tags on it, the first tag will be used as a module name for the function (my_tag above)

  4. Any endpoint which did not have a tag will be in policyengine_api_simulation_client.api.default

Advanced customizations

There are more settings on the generated Client class which let you control more runtime behavior, check out the docstring on that class for more info. You can also customize the underlying httpx.Client or httpx.AsyncClient (depending on your use-case):

from policyengine_api_simulation_client import Client

def log_request(request):
    print(f"Request event hook: {request.method} {request.url} - Waiting for response")

def log_response(response):
    request = response.request
    print(f"Response event hook: {request.method} {request.url} - Status {response.status_code}")

client = Client(
    base_url="https://api.example.com",
    httpx_args={"event_hooks": {"request": [log_request], "response": [log_response]}},
)

# Or get the underlying httpx client to modify directly with client.get_httpx_client() or client.get_async_httpx_client()

You can even set the httpx client directly, but beware that this will override any existing settings (e.g., base_url):

import httpx
from policyengine_api_simulation_client import Client

client = Client(
    base_url="https://api.example.com",
)
# Note that base_url needs to be re-set, as would any shared cookies, headers, etc.
client.set_httpx_client(httpx.Client(base_url="https://api.example.com", proxies="http://localhost:8030"))

Building / publishing this package

This project uses Poetry to manage dependencies and packaging. Here are the basics:

  1. Update the metadata in pyproject.toml (e.g. authors, version)
  2. If you're using a private repository, configure it with Poetry
    1. poetry config repositories.<your-repository-name> <url-to-your-repository>
    2. poetry config http-basic.<your-repository-name> <username> <password>
  3. Publish the client with poetry publish --build -r <your-repository-name> or, if for public PyPI, just poetry publish --build

If you want to install this client into another project without publishing it (e.g. for development) then:

  1. If that project is using Poetry, you can simply do poetry add <path-to-this-client> from that project
  2. If that project is not using Poetry:
    1. Build a wheel with poetry build -f wheel
    2. Install that wheel from the other project pip install <path-to-wheel>

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

File details

Details for the file policyengine_api_simulation_client-0.20251001.18.tar.gz.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for policyengine_api_simulation_client-0.20251001.18.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 201ec74aef4dd63fb1aea59edcf94d5f53e639c34d1c0ff426b81631f50cd192
MD5 4526bba320ae7e58a22b65cb2e5b80a2
BLAKE2b-256 f1e568138f31324488bbab529302d0ba938a5a658881841a626d28d413166d4c

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file policyengine_api_simulation_client-0.20251001.18-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for policyengine_api_simulation_client-0.20251001.18-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 83ee9f93e4cb805219f20dccced7d5499ef929efa06ae801f89a2393accb5ee3
MD5 4ad71aece22c73c6ce24629480cbb5c5
BLAKE2b-256 7c3c0de0ee9b5cc562c674ddc60fd4204b7d69945f24ffcff0cbe209f8f6aa42

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page