UNICORE and S3: Difference between revisions
Diana.gudu (talk | contribs) (Created page with "==UNICORE== ==UNICORE Commandline Client== ==UNICORE REST API== ===Basic operations on storage in Python=== ''requests'' is a simple HTTP library for Python that provi...") |
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headers = {'Accept': 'application/json'} |
headers = {'Accept': 'application/json'} |
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r = rauth_session.delete(object2upUrl, headers=headers, verify=False) |
r = rauth_session.delete(object2upUrl, headers=headers, verify=False) |
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print 'Object ' + object2up + ' deleted' |
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The whole Python script can be |
The whole Python script can be found [http://wiki.scc.kit.edu/lsdf/upload/7/70/Rest.txt here]. |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 19:04, 12 February 2015
UNICORE
UNICORE Commandline Client
UNICORE REST API
Basic operations on storage in Python
requests is a simple HTTP library for Python that provides most of the functionality you need. However, it is not suited for OAuth authentication.
rauth is built on top of requests and supports OAuth 1.0, OAuth 2.0 and OFly authentication. There are many other libraries implementing OAuth, such as requests_oauthlib, but in examples below we settled on rauth.
To install rauth:
$ pip install rauth
First, we can set-up a basic OAuth2 session and check if we can access the server. In setting up the authentication using an OIDC token, we assume we have the token saved in the 'oidcToken' file. rauth also supports obtaining the access token from the OAuth service, if the client has an id and a secret.
#!/usr/bin/env python import json import time from rauth import OAuth2Session base = "https://unicore.data.kit.edu:8080/DEFAULT-SITE/rest/core" print "Accessing REST API at ", base clientId = "portal-client" # the client id for HBP Portal users file = open("oidcToken","r") btoken = file.read().replace('\n',) rauth_session = OAuth2Session(client_id=clientId, access_token=btoken) headers = {'Accept': 'application/json'} r = rauth_session.get(base, headers=headers, verify=False) if r.status_code!=200: print "Error accessing the server!" else: print "Ready." print json.dumps(r.json(), indent=4)
Listing the existing storages can be done by a simple get request to the url BASE/storages:
headers = {'Accept': 'application/json'} r = rauth_session.get(base+"/storages", headers=headers, verify=False) storagesList = r.json() print json.dumps(r.json(), indent=4)
The code outputs something like:
{ "storages": [ "https://unicore.data.kit.edu:8080/DEFAULT-SITE/rest/core/storages/f13b3ffa-413a-4ab7-a620-e8e04291a5f5", "https://unicore.data.kit.edu:8080/DEFAULT-SITE/rest/core/storages/52126d09-8ea6-4b06-84f8-205839bb5bdc" ] }
Getting information on the second storage listed:
headers = {'Accept': 'application/json'} s3storageUrl = storagesList['storages'][1] r = rauth_session.get(s3storageUrl, headers=headers, verify=False) s3storageProps = r.json() print json.dumps(r.json(), indent=4)
This will print:
{ "resourceStatus": "READY", "currentTime": "2015-02-12T17:41:52+0100", "terminationTime": "2015-02-20T14:39:03+0100", "umask": "77", "_links": { "files": { "href": "https://unicore.data.kit.edu:8080/DEFAULT-SITE/rest/core/storages/52126d09-8ea6-4b06-84f8-205839bb5bdc/files", "description": "Files" }, "self": { "href": "https://unicore.data.kit.edu:8080/DEFAULT-SITE/rest/core/storages/52126d09-8ea6-4b06-84f8-205839bb5bdc" } }, "uniqueID": "52126d09-8ea6-4b06-84f8-205839bb5bdc", "owner": "CN=Diana Gudu 123456,O=HBP", "protocols": [ "BFT" ] }
Listing the files (in case of S3 storage, the buckets) in the previously selected storage:
headers = {'Accept': 'application/json'} bucketBase = s3storageProps['_links']['files']['href'] r = rauth_session.get(bucketBase, headers=headers, verify=False) bucketList = r.json() print json.dumps(r.json(), indent=4)
The code will output:
{ "isDirectory": true, "children": [ "/bucket2", "/unicore", "/testbucket" ], "size": 0 }
Listing the objects in the first bucket:
headers = {'Accept': 'application/json'} bucket = bucketList['children'][0] bucketUrl = bucketBase + bucket r = rauth_session.get(bucketUrl, headers=headers, verify=False) objectList = r.json() print json.dumps(r.json(), indent=4)
This will print a similar list as for the buckets. Note that the paths listed are relative to the storage root and not the parent directory:
{ "isDirectory": true, "children": [ "/bucket2/object2" ], "size": 0 }
Downloading the first file in the first bucket and then saving it locally:
headers = {'Content type': 'application/octet-stream'} object2down = objectList['children'][0] object2downUrl = bucketBase + object2down r = rauth_session.get(object2downUrl, headers=headers, verify=False) objectName = object2down.split('/')[-1] fileOut = open(objectName, "wb") fileOut.write(r.content) fileOut.close()
To only get the file info, not the data, the media type should be json instead of octet-stream
headers = {'Accept': 'application/json'} r = rauth_session.get(object2downUrl, headers=headers, verify=False) print json.dumps(r.json(), indent=4)
Uploading a file in the first bucket. In the code below, we upload the file 'test' from the current directory:
headers = {'Content': 'application/octet-stream'} object2up = "test" object2upUrl = bucketUrl + "/" + object2up bytes2up = open(object2up, "rb") r = rauth_session.put(object2upUrl, data=bytes2up, headers=headers, verify=False) print 'Object ' + object2up + ' uploaded' bytes2up.close()
To delete the uploaded object:
headers = {'Accept': 'application/json'} r = rauth_session.delete(object2upUrl, headers=headers, verify=False)
The whole Python script can be found here.