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Hook for adding Open Authentication support to Python-requests HTTP library.

Project description

# requests-oauth

This is a hook for <a href=”http://github.com/kennethreitz/requests”>python-requests</a> great python HTTP library by <a href=”https://github.com/kennethreitz”>Kenneth Reitz</a>, that makes python-requests support Open Authentication version 1.0. The intention of this project is to provide the easiest way to do OAuth connections with Python.

This hook was initially based on <a href=”https://github.com/simplegeo/python-oauth2”>python-oauth2</a>, which looks unmaintained, kudos to the authors and contributors for doing a huge effort in providing OAuth to python httplib2.

## Installation

You can install requests-oauth by simply doing:

pip install requests-oauth

## Usage

You can initialize the hook passing it 4 parameters: access_token, access_token_secret, consumer_key, consumer_secret. First two access_token and access_token_secret are optional, in case you want to retrieve those from the API service (see later for an example). There are two ways to do initialize the hook. First one:

oauth_hook = OAuthHook(access_token, access_token_secret, consumer_key, consumer_secret)

If you are using the same consumer_key and consumer_secret all the time, you probably want to setup those fixed, so that you only have to pass the token parameters for setting the hook:

OAuthHook.consumer_key = consumer_key OAuthHook.consumer_secret = consumer_secret oauth_hook = OAuthHook(access_token, access_token_secret)

Now you need to pass the hook to python-requests, you probably want to do it as a session, so you don’t have to do this every time:

client = requests.session(hooks={‘pre_request’: oauth_hook})

What you get is python-requests client which you can use the same way as you use requests API. Let’s see a GET example:

response = client.get(’http://api.twitter.com/1/account/rate_limit_status.json’) results = json.loads(response.content)

And a POST example:

response = client.post(’http://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/update.json’, {‘status’: “Yay! It works!”, ‘wrap_links’: True})

Beware that you are not forced to pass the token information to the hook. That way you can retrieve it from the API. Let’s see a Twitter example:

client = requests.session(hooks={‘pre_request’: OAuthHook(consumer_key=consumer_key, consumer_secret=consumer_secret)}) response = client.get(’https://api.twitter.com/oauth/request_token’) response = parse_qs(response.content) print “Token: %s Secret: %s” % (response[‘oauth_token’], response[‘oauth_token_secret’])

## Testing

If you want to run the tests, you will need to copy test_settings.py.template into test_settings.py. This file is in the .gitignore index, so it won’t be committed:

cp test_settings.py.template test_settings.py

Then fill in the information there. At the moment, the testing of the library is done in a functional way, doing a GET and a POST request against OAuth API services, so use a test account and not your personal account:

./tests.py

## Contributing

If you’d like to contribute, simply fork the repository, commit your changes to the dev branch (or branch off of it), and send a pull request. Make sure you add yourself to AUTHORS.

## TODO

  • Improve testing suite.

  • Support for python3.

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