This repo hosts Aevo's Python SDK, which simplifies the common operations around signing and creating orders.
Please see the documentation for more details:
Signing and API Keys can be generated through the Aevo UI:
Signing Keys: https://app.aevo.xyz/settings or https://testnet.aevo.xyz/settings
API Keys: https://app.aevo.xyz/settings/api-keys or https://testnet.aevo.xyz/settings/api-keys
NOTE: For security purposes, signing keys automatically expire 1 week after generation
It is recommended that you use a virtual environment to install the dependencies. The code has specifically been tested on Python 3.11.4.
virtualenv -p python3 .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
Then, install the dependencies for the Python SDK.
pip install -r requirements.txt
Next, create an AevoClient instance with your credentials.
from client import AevoClient
client = AevoClient(
signing_key="",
wallet_address="",
api_key="",
api_secret="",
env="testnet",
)
markets = aevo.get_markets("ETH")
print(markets) # This should work if your client is setup right
The variables that you have to pass into AevoClient are:
signing_key
- The private key of the signing key, used to sign orders.
wallet_address
- Ethereum address of the account.
api_key
- API key for the account. Used for private operations.
api_secret
- API secret for the account.
env
- Either testnet
or mainnet
.
Subscribing to orderbook updates
async def main():
aevo = AevoClient(
signing_key="",
wallet_address="",
api_key="",
api_secret="",
env="testnet",
)
await aevo.open_connection() # need to do this first to open wss connections
await aevo.subscribe_ticker("ticker:ETH:PERPETUAL")
async for msg in aevo.read_messages():
print(msg)
if __name__ == "__main__":
asyncio.run(main())
Subscribing to index price
await aevo.open_connection()
await aevo.subscribe_index(asset="ETH")
(Authenticated) Subscribing to private trades
await aevo.open_connection()
await aevo.subscribe_fills()
See order_ws_example.py
for an example flow of how to create, edit and cancel an order via websocket. Due to the use of websockets
library it is recommended that you implement your code using asyncio
as well.
It can be tested by running python order_ws_example.py
.
See order_rest_example.py
for an example flow of how to create and cancel an order via REST API.
It can be tested by running python order_rest_example.py
.
Normally signing keys generated via the UI expire after 1 week. However, you can generate a signing key that never expires by using the generate_infinite_expiry_signing_key.py
script.
You will need to extract your private key from your wallet and paste it into the code in the section indicated before running it.