Skip to main content

Institutional-grade Python SDK for the Viper Execution trading API on Hyperliquid.

Project description

Viper Execution Python SDK

Institutional-grade Python client for the Viper Execution trading API on Hyperliquid.

Status: SDK 0.1.4 (beta). Ships the resilient WebSocket client and the resync REST-fetch mapping. The full typed REST client lands in a subsequent release. The SDK version is independent of the API version — this is SDK 0.x against API v1.

Install

pip install viper-execution

Requires Python ≥ 3.10.

Quickstart

import os
import asyncio
from viper import ViperWSClient

async def main():
    # from_env() reads VIPER_API_KEY / VIPER_API_SECRET / VIPER_HANDLE /
    # VIPER_WALLET. Pass anything explicitly to override the environment.
    wallet = os.environ["VIPER_WALLET"].lower()
    client = ViperWSClient.from_env(
        on_event=lambda f: print(f["channel"], f.get("event")),
    )
    await client.start()
    await client.subscribe("account.state", wallet)
    await asyncio.sleep(30)
    await client.close()

asyncio.run(main())

Using credentials

ViperWSClient takes credentials two ways, both first-class — pick whichever fits how your process gets its secrets.

From the environment (quickest, and production-correct). from_env() reads VIPER_API_KEY, VIPER_API_SECRET, VIPER_HANDLE, and VIPER_WALLET. This is also the right pattern for deployment: containers, CI, and secret managers all inject secrets as env vars, so the same code runs unchanged from laptop to production. Anything passed explicitly overrides the environment:

client = ViperWSClient.from_env(handle="override-handle")

Explicitly (your own secret store). If your keys live in Vault, AWS Secrets Manager, an HSM, or a config file, fetch them in your code and pass them to the constructor directly — from_env() is never required:

api_key_id, api_secret = my_secret_store.get("viper")  # however you fetch them
client = ViperWSClient(
    api_key_id=api_key_id,
    api_secret=api_secret,
    handle="your-handle",
    wallet="0x...",
    on_event=lambda f: print(f["channel"], f.get("event")),
)

Runnable examples

Examples ship inside the package — no extra downloads. List the catalog and run one by name or number:

viper-examples                          # list the catalog
viper-examples stream-account-state     # run by name
viper-examples 01                       # ...or by number

Set the env vars the examples read — bash/zsh:

export VIPER_API_KEY=vk_...
export VIPER_API_SECRET=vs_...
export VIPER_HANDLE=your-handle     # optional
export VIPER_WALLET=0x...           # the wallet to stream

…or PowerShell:

$env:VIPER_API_KEY = "vk_..."
$env:VIPER_API_SECRET = "vs_..."
$env:VIPER_HANDLE = "your-handle"   # optional
$env:VIPER_WALLET = "0x..."         # the wallet to stream

The source for each example lives in src/viper/examples/.

What the WebSocket client handles for you

The /v1/ws stream has a number of behaviors a naive client gets wrong. ViperWSClient handles them as a built-in contract:

  • Liveness — transport ping/pong plus a data-staleness watchdog; silent half-open connections are detected and reconnected.
  • Reconnect with resume — on drop, it reconnects with exponential backoff and resubscribes every scope carrying its last_seq cursor, so you resume exactly where you left off (replay from the per-scope ring buffer).
  • Resync recovery — when the server can't satisfy a cursor (buffer_overflow / last_seq_ahead_of_server / scope_not_found), it REST-fetches authoritative current state and resubscribes fresh.
  • Multi-wallet attribution — every data frame is routed by data.wallet, so one socket can carry many wallets without cross-attribution. (Control markers such as hydrated carry no data.wallet; route those by scope_id.)
  • Slow hydrationaccount.state hydration is server-slow (~5s; it gathers balance + HIP-3 collateral across all dexes, then bursts frames). The client does not mistake that for a dead stream, and neither should your application logic.
  • Terminal conditions — credential revocation (close 4013), a handshake auth rejection (HTTP 401/403 — revoked/invalid key or insufficient scope), or an exhausted reconnect budget all stop the loop permanently via on_terminal rather than reconnect-hammering.

Callbacks

Callback Fires on
on_event(frame) Every classified data frame (the main path)
on_meta(frame) _meta frames: welcome + upstream connectivity events
on_terminal(code) Terminal stop. code is the WS close code (4013 = credentials revoked), the handshake HTTP status (401/403), or -1 (reconnect budget exhausted)
on_command_result(frame) Subscribe acks / command errors (no correlation id)
on_raw(frame) Optional advanced tap: every frame pre-classification (audit/metrics)

License

MIT — see LICENSE.

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

viper_execution-0.1.4.tar.gz (16.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

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

viper_execution-0.1.4-py3-none-any.whl (19.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file viper_execution-0.1.4.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: viper_execution-0.1.4.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 16.9 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.12

File hashes

Hashes for viper_execution-0.1.4.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 088085c6d63e79e7820be4e74600b4c289aca8f0e37340e35d1fdb6c1efb0b26
MD5 22891cdaf77133873b76d5ad7e0a212a
BLAKE2b-256 f0e82a2cffb86ed92d62fded7cf9eef44790d3a2fedd75bcd8d817a1e50a470d

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for viper_execution-0.1.4.tar.gz:

Publisher: release.yml on viperexecution/viper-sdk-python

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file viper_execution-0.1.4-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: viper_execution-0.1.4-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 19.2 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.12

File hashes

Hashes for viper_execution-0.1.4-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 4d981266517054c7c0530b21d07cbc97fcc091cc0a368358995185e9c1290278
MD5 9d9f0cd9fd55eb90a557b9a6d9ef2265
BLAKE2b-256 35a2dce2b2efb49edbd0580c9210a008c76eebe2a1391a4d7db769c9f4de7856

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for viper_execution-0.1.4-py3-none-any.whl:

Publisher: release.yml on viperexecution/viper-sdk-python

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

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