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SAS Event Stream Processing Python Interface

Project description

SAS Event Stream Processing Python Interface

The ESPPy package enables you to create SAS Event Stream Processing (ESP) models programmatically in Python. Using ESPPy, you can connect to an ESP server and interact with projects and their components as Python objects. These objects include projects, continuous queries, windows, events, loggers, SAS Micro Analytic Service modules, routers, and analytical algorithms.

ESPPy has full integration with Jupyter notebooks including visualizing diagrams of your ESP projects, and support for streaming charts and images. This allows you to easily explore and prototype your ESP projects in a familiar notebook interface.

Installation

To install ESPPy, you can use either pip or conda. This will install ESPPy as well as the Python package dependencies.

pip install sas-esppy==5.2

or, if you are using an Anaconda distribution:

conda install -c sas-institute sas-esppy=5.2

Additional Requirements

In addition to the Python package dependencies, you will also need the graphviz command-line tools to fully take advantage of ESPPy. These can be downloaded from http://www.graphviz.org/download/.

Performance Enhancement

Also, ESPPy uses the ws4py websocket Python package. In some cases you can improve performance greatly by installing the wsaccel package. This may not be available on all platforms though, and is left up to the user to install.

The Basics

Importing the package is done just as it is with any other Python package.

>>> import esppy

To connect to an ESP server, you use the ESP class. In most cases, the only information that is needed is the hostname and port.

>>> esp = esppy.ESP('http://myesp.com:8777')

Getting Information about the Server

Now that we have a connection to the server, we can get information about the server and projects.

>>> esp.server_info
{'analytics-license': True,
 'engine': 'esp',
 'http-admin': 8777,
 'pubsub': 8778,
 'version': '5.2'}

# Currently no projects are loaded
>>> esp.get_projects()
{}

Loading a Project

Loading a project is done with the load_project method.

>>> esp.load_project('project.xml')

>>> esp.get_projects()
{'project': Project(name='project')}

Continous queries and windows within projects can be accessed using the queries and windows attributes of the Project and ContinuousQuery objects, respectively.

>>> proj = esp.get_project('project')
>>> proj.queries
{'contquery': ContinuousQuery(name='contquery', project='project')}

>>> proj.queries['contquery'].windows
{'w_data': CopyWindow(name='w_data', continuous_query='contquery', project='project'),
 'w_request': SourceWindow(name='w_request', continuous_query='contquery', project='project'),
 'w_calculate': CalculateWindow(name='w_calculate', continuous_query='contquery', project='project')}

>>> dataw = proj.queries['contquery'].windows['w_data']

You can even drop the queries and windows attribute name as a shortcut. projects and continuous queries act like dictionaries of those components.

>>> dataw = proj['contquery']['w_data']

Publishing Event Data

To publish events to a window, you simply use the publish_events method. It will accept a file name, file-like object, DataFrame, or a string of CSV, XML, or JSON data.

>>> dataw.publish_events('data.csv')

Monitoring Events

You can subscribe to the events of any window in a project. By default, all event data will be cached in the local window object.

>>> dataw.subscribe()
>>> dataw
       time        x        y        z
id                                    
6   0.15979 -2.30180  0.23155  10.6510
7   0.18982 -1.41650  1.18500  11.0730
8   0.22040 -0.27241  2.22010  11.9860
9   0.24976 -0.61292  2.22010  11.9860
10  0.27972  1.33480  4.24950  11.4140
11  0.31802  3.44590  7.58650  12.5990

You can limit the number of cached events using the limit parameter. For example, to only keep the last 20 events, you would do the following.

>>> dataw.subscribe(limit=20)

You can also limit the amount of time that events are collected using the horizon parameter. It will take a datetime, date, time, or timedelta object.

>>> dataw.subscribe(horizon=datetime.timedelta(hours=1))

You can also perform any DataFrame operation on your ESP windows.

>>> dataw.info()
<class 'pandas.core.frame.DataFrame'>
Int64Index: 2108 entries, 6 to 2113
Data columns (total 4 columns):
time    2108 non-null float64
x       2108 non-null float64
y       2108 non-null float64
z       2108 non-null float64
dtypes: float64(4)
memory usage: 82.3 KB

>>> dataw.describe()
            time          x          y          z
count  20.000000  20.000000  20.000000  20.000000
mean   69.655050  -4.365320   8.589630  -1.675292
std     0.177469   1.832482   2.688911   2.108300
min    69.370000  -7.436700   4.862500  -5.175700
25%    69.512500  -5.911250   7.007675  -3.061150
50%    69.655000  -4.099700   7.722700  -1.702500
75%    69.797500  -2.945400   9.132350  -0.766110
max    69.940000  -1.566300  14.601000   3.214400

Documentation

The full API documentation of ESPPy is available at https://sassoftware.github.io/python-esppy/.

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