Skip to main content

A python module for rspmsg

Project description

# What is it?

A python rspmsg module with simplication and modification attached.


# Note:
python version: >=3.6

(For python2.7 version, use rspmsg_version < 0.9, eg: https://github.com/darkdarkfruit/rspmsg/releases/tag/v_0.7.1)


# Rspmsg specification

|--------+--------+-----------+-----------+------------+-------------------------------------------------------|
| Field | type | Required? | Optional? | value | Meaning |
|--------+--------+-----------+-----------+------------+-------------------------------------------------------|
| status | string | * | | "S" or "F" | Is the response successful? |
| code | any | | * | | CODE for application logic(Normally it is an integer) |
| data | any | | * | | Data(payload) of the response |
| desc | any | | * | | Description: normally it's a helping infomation |
| meta | any | | * | | Meta info. eg: servers/ips chain in distributed env. |
| | | | | | |
|--------+--------+-----------+-----------+------------+-------------------------------------------------------|

* Field:status is always in state: "S" or "F"(represents "Successful", "Failed"), no 3th state.

## Decide essage type responded in server side

#### When do we set the message as successful or faild? It varies. Here are some suggestions.
* If the server can reponse with correspondent resource right now, we should mark the message as a 'S' (SUCCESSFUL) message.
* If the server can **NOT** response with correspondent resource right now, we should mark the message as a 'F' (FAILED) message while setting a meaningful code.
* eg1:

rspmsg_successful = {
status : "S",
...
}

* eg2:

# If we want to return a response message to tell client that:
# 1. debug info: the message has flowed to nodes: ["192.168.1.6", "192.168.1.7"]
# 2. Please wait 5 seconds to retry.
# we might response a message like below:
rspmsg_failed = {
status : "F",
code : 100,
data : {
seconds: 5
},
desc : "Server is busy, please wait 5 seconds to continue",
meta : {
nodes: ["192.168.1.6", "192.168.1.7"]
}




# Install:
* pip install rspmsg or (pip3 install rspmsg)
Or
* download the tarbal, decompress it, then run "python setup.py install"

# Test:
# ensure you have the pytest for python3
> pip3 install pytest
> whereis pytest
> pytest: /usr/local/bin/pytest
> pytest --version
> This is pytest version 3.3.2, imported from /usr/local/lib/python3.6/site-packages/pytest.py
>
> pytest rspmsg/

# API: (only 1 class and 2 functions)
* class

* Message
* functions:

* make_successful_message
* make_failed_message

# FAQ
* Why use "S" and "F" to represents "SUCCESSFUL" and "FAILED"? How about 1 or 0, or true or false.


1. "S" and "F" is clear and presentative.
2. 1 or 0? In many programing languages, 1 stands for true, 0 stands for false; while in linux return code,
triditionally, 0 stands for successful-code, non-0(eg:1) stands for error-code.
3. true or false? In interactive envirenment, we might confuse boolean value: (true, false) with string value
("true", "false"), and that will make us misarable in large project.

# Usage: (sample)


Python 3.6.2 (default, Aug 10 2017, 10:07:10)
Type 'copyright', 'credits' or 'license' for more information
IPython 6.1.0 -- An enhanced Interactive Python. Type '?' for help.

In [1]: import rspmsg
...:

In [2]: rspmsg.__version__
...:
Out[2]: '0.6.0'

In [3]: msg = rspmsg.make_successful_message(code=0, data={'payload' : 'yes'})
...:

In [4]: msg
Out[4]:
{'code': 0,
'data': {'payload': 'yes'},
'desc': None,
'meta': None,
'status': 'S'}

In [5]: msg.dumps()
Out[5]: '{"status": "S", "code": 0, "data": {"payload": "yes"}, "desc": null, "meta": null}'

In [6]: msg.dumps(skip_none=True)
Out[6]: '{"status": "S", "code": 0, "data": {"payload": "yes"}}'

In [7]: msg_failed = rspmsg.make_failed_message()
...:

In [8]: msg_failed
Out[8]: {'code': None, 'data': None, 'desc': None, 'meta': None, 'status': 'F'}

In [9]: msg_failed.dumps()
Out[9]: '{"status": "F", "code": null, "data": null, "desc": null, "meta": null}'

In [10]: msg_failed.dumps(skip_none=True)
Out[10]: '{"status": "F"}'

In [11]: msg_loaded = rspmsg.Message.loads(msg.dumps())
...:

In [12]: msg_loaded
Out[12]:
{'code': 0,
'data': {'payload': 'yes'},
'desc': None,
'meta': None,
'status': 'S'}

In [13]: msg_loaded.data = 0

In [14]: msg_loaded = rspmsg.Message.loads(msg.dumps())
...:

In [15]: msg_loaded
Out[15]:
{'code': 0,
'data': {'payload': 'yes'},
'desc': None,
'meta': None,
'status': 'S'}

In [16]: msg_loaded.dumps()
Out[16]: '{"status": "S", "code": 0, "data": {"payload": "yes"}, "desc": null, "meta": null}'

In [17]: msg_loaded.dumps(skip_none=True)
Out[17]: '{"status": "S", "code": 0, "data": {"payload": "yes"}}'

In [18]: rspmsg.loads(json.dumps({'status' : 'S', 'code' : 0, 'data' : {'payload' : 'yes'}}))
Out[18]:
{'code': 0,
'data': {'payload': 'yes'},
'desc': None,
'meta': None,
'status': 'S'}

Project details


Download files

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

Source Distribution

rspmsg-0.6.2.tar.gz (6.2 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Supported by

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