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Python client for sunra.ai

Project description

sunra.ai Python Client

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This is a Python client library for interacting with ML models deployed on sunra.ai.

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Getting Started

To install the client, run:

pip install sunra-client

Before using the client, you'll need to:

  1. Sign up at sunra.ai
  2. Get your API key from the dashboard
  3. Set your API key as an environment variable: export SUNRA_KEY=your-api-key

Configuration

There are two ways to configure your API key:

Method 1: Global Configuration (Recommended)

import sunra_client

# Configure the client with your API key
sunra_client.config(credentials="your-api-key")

# Now you can use the client without passing the key explicitly
response = sunra_client.subscribe(
    "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/text-to-image",
    arguments={"prompt": "a cute cat, realistic, orange"}
)

Method 2: Environment Variable

Set your API key as an environment variable:

export SUNRA_KEY=your-api-key

Method 3: Explicit Client Configuration

import sunra_client

# Create a client with explicit API key
client = sunra_client.SyncClient(key="your-api-key")

# Or for async client
async_client = sunra_client.AsyncClient(key="your-api-key")

Advanced Configuration

Custom HTTP Client Support

The Python SDK supports custom HTTP clients, allowing you to configure proxies, timeouts, and other HTTP settings. This is useful for enterprise environments or when you need specific network configurations.

Global HTTP Client Configuration

You can configure HTTP clients globally using the config function:

import httpx
import sunra_client

# Create custom HTTP clients with proxy settings
proxy_url = "http://proxy.company.com:8080"

sync_client = httpx.Client(
    proxy=proxy_url,
    timeout=30.0,
    headers={'User-Agent': 'my-app/1.0'}
)

async_client = httpx.AsyncClient(
    proxy=proxy_url,
    timeout=30.0,
    headers={'User-Agent': 'my-app/1.0'}
)

# Configure globally - affects all subsequent API calls
sunra_client.config(
    credentials="your-api-key",
    http_client=sync_client,
    async_http_client=async_client
)

# Now all calls will use the configured HTTP clients
response = sunra_client.subscribe(
    "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/text-to-image",
    {"prompt": "a beautiful landscape"}
)

# Async calls will use the configured async client
response = await sunra_client.subscribe_async(
    "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/text-to-image",
    {"prompt": "a beautiful landscape"}
)

Per-Client HTTP Configuration

You can also configure HTTP clients per individual client instance:

import httpx
import sunra_client

# Create a custom HTTP client with specific settings
custom_client = httpx.Client(
    proxy="http://proxy.company.com:8080",
    timeout=60.0,
    verify="/path/to/cert.pem",  # Custom SSL certificate
    headers={'User-Agent': 'my-app/1.0'}
)

# Create Sunra client with custom HTTP client
client = sunra_client.SyncClient(
    key="your-api-key",
    http_client=custom_client
)

# For async clients
async_custom_client = httpx.AsyncClient(
    proxy="http://proxy.company.com:8080",
    timeout=60.0,
    verify="/path/to/cert.pem"
)

async_client = sunra_client.AsyncClient(
    key="your-api-key", 
    http_client=async_custom_client
)

Common HTTP Client Configurations

Proxy Configuration:

import httpx

# HTTP proxy
client = httpx.Client(proxy="http://proxy.example.com:8080")

# HTTPS proxy
client = httpx.Client(proxy="https://proxy.example.com:8080")

# SOCKS proxy
client = httpx.Client(proxy="socks5://proxy.example.com:1080")

Timeout Configuration:

import httpx

# Set custom timeout (in seconds)
client = httpx.Client(timeout=30.0)

# More granular timeout control
client = httpx.Client(
    timeout=httpx.Timeout(
        connect=5.0,    # Time to establish connection
        read=30.0,      # Time to read response
        write=10.0,     # Time to send request
        pool=60.0       # Time to acquire connection from pool
    )
)

SSL/TLS Configuration:

import httpx

# Custom SSL certificate
client = httpx.Client(verify="/path/to/cert.pem")

# Disable SSL verification (not recommended for production)
client = httpx.Client(verify=False)

# Client certificate authentication
client = httpx.Client(cert="/path/to/client-cert.pem")

Connection Limits:

import httpx

# Configure connection pool limits
limits = httpx.Limits(
    max_keepalive_connections=20,
    max_connections=100
)

client = httpx.Client(limits=limits)

For more httpx configuration options, see the httpx documentation.

Usage Examples

Now you can use the client to interact with your models. Here's an example of how to use it:

import sunra_client

response = sunra_client.subscribe(
    "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/text-to-image",
    arguments={
      "prompt": "a cute cat, realistic, orange"
    },
    with_logs=True,
    on_enqueue=print,
    on_queue_update=print
)
print(response["images"][0]["url"])

Streaming Responses

You can stream real-time updates as your request is being processed:

import sunra_client

application = "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/text-to-image"
arguments = {"prompt": "a cute cat, realistic, orange"}

for event in sunra_client.stream(application, arguments):
    print(f"Received event: {event}")

Asynchronous Requests

The client also supports asynchronous requests out of the box. Here's an example:

import asyncio
import sunra_client

async def main():
    response = await sunra_client.subscribe_async(
        "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/text-to-image",
        arguments={"prompt": "a cute cat, realistic, orange"}
        with_logs=True,
        on_enqueue=print,
        on_queue_update=print
    )
    print(response["images"][0]["url"])

asyncio.run(main())

Queuing Requests

When you want to send a request and keep receiving updates on its status, you can use the submit method:

import asyncio
import sunra_client

async def main():
    response = await sunra_client.submit_async(
        "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/text-to-image",
        arguments={"prompt": "a cute cat, realistic, orange"}
    )

    async for event in response.iter_events():
        if isinstance(event, sunra_client.Queued):
            print("Queued. Position:", event.position)
        elif isinstance(event, (sunra_client.InProgress, sunra_client.Completed)):
            print(event)

    result = await response.get()
    print(result["images"][0]["url"])

asyncio.run(main())

File Upload Support

The client supports uploading files to sunra.ai:

import sunra_client
import io

# It is recommended to configure the client once,
# possibly in a central part of your application.
# This way you won't have to pass the key every time.
sunra_client.config(credentials="your-api-key")


# Upload a file from a local path
# The content type will be inferred from the file extension
file_url = sunra_client.upload_file("path/to/your/image.jpg")

# Upload raw binary data, e.g. from an in-memory image
with open("path/to/your/image.png", "rb") as f:
    image_data = f.read()

data_url = sunra_client.upload(
    data=image_data,
    content_type="image/png",
)

# You can then use the returned URL as input to a model
response = sunra_client.subscribe(
    "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/image-to-image",
    arguments={
        "image": file_url,
        "prompt": "a cat",
    },
)

File Upload Limits:

  • Maximum file size: 100MB
  • Supported formats: Images, videos, audio, documents, and other file types as supported by the specific model

Automatic Input Transformation

The Python SDK automatically transforms file inputs when you call submit() or subscribe(). This means you can pass various file types directly in your input arguments, and they will be automatically uploaded and replaced with URLs.

Supported Input Types

The SDK automatically handles:

  • PIL Image objects - Automatically uploaded as images
  • Base64 data URIs - Decoded and uploaded with appropriate content type
  • File paths - Local files uploaded to CDN
  • File-like objects - Objects with read() method (e.g., io.BytesIO, open file handles)

Automatic Transformation Example

import sunra_client
from PIL import Image
import io

# It is recommended to configure the client once.
sunra_client.config(credentials="your-api-key")

# Create a sample PIL image
image = Image.new("RGB", (1024, 1024), color="purple")

# You can pass the image directly - it will be automatically uploaded
# and the input will be updated with the returned URL.
response = sunra_client.subscribe(
    "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/image-to-image",
    arguments={
        "prompt": "A purple square",
        "image": image,  # The SDK will upload this PIL Image
    }
)

Manual Input Transformation

You can also manually transform inputs if needed:

# For async client
async_client = sunra_client.AsyncClient()
transformed = await async_client.transform_input({
    "image": pil_image,
    "files": ["file1.txt", "file2.jpg"],
    "data": data_uri,
    "metadata": {"nested": {"file": "path/to/file.pdf"}}
})

# For sync client
sync_client = sunra_client.SyncClient()
transformed = sync_client.transform_input({
    "image": pil_image,
    "document": "path/to/document.pdf"
})

Nested Object Support

The transformation works recursively on nested objects and arrays:

input_data = {
    "prompt": "Process these images",
    "images": [image1, image2, image3],  # All PIL images will be uploaded
    "settings": {
        "reference": "path/to/reference.jpg",  # Nested file path will be uploaded
        "masks": [mask1_data_uri, mask2_data_uri]  # Nested data URIs will be uploaded
    }
}

# All file inputs will be automatically transformed when submitted.

Example with an actual model:

```python
import sunra_client
from PIL import Image

sunra_client.config(credentials="your-api-key")

# Create a sample PIL image
image = Image.new("RGB", (512, 512), color = 'red')

# All file-like inputs will be automatically transformed when submitted
response = sunra_client.subscribe(
    "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/image-to-image",
    arguments={
        "prompt": "A red square",
        "image": image,
    }
)

print(response)

Error Handling

The client provides comprehensive error handling with detailed error information:

import sunra_client

try:
    response = sunra_client.subscribe(
        "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/text-to-image",
        arguments={
            "prompt": "a cute cat, realistic, orange",
            "seed": -2  # Invalid seed (should be >= 0)
        },
        with_logs=True,
        on_enqueue=print,
        on_queue_update=print
    )
    print(response["images"][0]["url"])
    
except sunra_client.SunraClientError as e:
    print(f"Error: {e}")
    
    # Access detailed error information
    print(f"Error Code: {e.code}")           # e.g., "invalid_input"
    print(f"Error Message: {e.message}")     # e.g., "Validation error: seed must be >= 0"
    print(f"Error Details: {e.details}")     # Additional error details
    print(f"Timestamp: {e.timestamp}")       # When the error occurred

Error Types

The client handles different types of errors:

Validation Errors (from model processing):

try:
    response = sunra_client.subscribe(
        "black-forest-labs/flux-kontext-pro/text-to-image",
        arguments={"prompt": "test", "seed": -1}  # Invalid seed
    )
except sunra_client.SunraClientError as e:
    # e.code: "invalid_input"
    # e.message: "Validation error: seed must be >= 0"
    pass

HTTP Errors (from API requests):

try:
    response = sunra_client.subscribe(
        "non-existent-model/endpoint",
        arguments={"prompt": "test"}
    )
except sunra_client.SunraClientError as e:
    # e.code: "Bad Request"
    # e.message: "Model endpoint is required"
    # e.timestamp: "2025-01-16T12:00:00.000Z"
    pass

Conditional Error Handling:

try:
    response = sunra_client.subscribe("model/endpoint", arguments={})
except sunra_client.SunraClientError as e:
    if e.code == "invalid_input":
        print("Please check your input parameters")
    elif e.code == "Bad Request":
        print("Invalid API request")
    else:
        print(f"Unexpected error: {e}")

Credits

This project is derived from:

and adapted to work with sunra.ai. The original projects are licensed under the MIT/Apache 2.0 License. We extend our gratitude to the original authors for their contributions.

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