Python processor is a tool for creating chained pipelines for dataprocessing. It have very few key concepts:
- Data object
- Any python dict with two required fields:
source
andtype
. - Source
- An iterable sequence of
data objects
or a function which returnsdata objects
. See full list of sources in the docs. - Output
- A function which accepts a
data object
as input and could output another. See full list of outputs in the docs. (or same)data object
as result. - Predicate
- Pipeline consists from sources outputs, but
predicate
decides whichdata object
should be processed by whichoutput
.
Here is example of pipeline which reads IMAP folder and sends all emails to Slack chat:
run_pipeline(
sources.imap('imap.gmail.com'
'username',
'password'
'INBOX'),
[prepare_email_for_slack, outputs.slack(SLACK_URL)])
Here you construct a pipeline, which uses sources.imap
for reading imap folder
"INBOX" of [email protected]
. In more complex case outputs.fanout
can be used for routing dataobjects to different processors and sources.mix
can
be used to merge items two or more sources into a one stream.
Functions prepare_email_to_slack
and outputs.slack(SLACK_URL)
are processors. First one
is a simple function which accepts data object, returned by imap source and transforming
it to the data object which could be used by slack.output. We need that because slack
requires a different set of fields. Call to outputs.slack(SLACK_URL)
returns a
function which gets an object and send it to the specified Slack's endpoint.
It is just example, for working snippets, continue reading this documention ;-)
Note
By the way, did you know there is a Lisp dialect which runs on Python virtual machine? It's name is HyLang, and python processor is written in this language.
Create a virtual environment with python3::
virtualenv --python=python3 env source env/bin/activate
Install required version of hylang (this step is necessary because Hy syntax is not final yet and frequently changed by language maintainers)::
pip install -U 'git+git://github.com/hylang/hy.git@a3bd90390cb37b46ae33ce3a73ee84a0feacce7d#egg=hy'
If you are on OSX, then install lxml on OSX separately::
STATIC_DEPS=true pip install lxml
Then install the processor
::
pip install processor
Now create an executable python script, where you'll place your pipline's configuration. For example, this simple code creates a process line which searches new results in Twitter and outputs them to console. Of cause, you can output them not only to console, but also post by email, to Slack chat or everywhere else if there is an output for it:
#!env/bin/python3
import os
from processor import run_pipeline, sources, outputs
from twiggy_goodies.setup import setup_logging
for_any_message = lambda msg: True
def prepare(tweet):
return {'text': tweet['text'],
'from': tweet['user']['screen_name']}
setup_logging('twitter.log')
run_pipeline(
sources=[sources.twitter.search(
'My Company',
consumer_key='***', consumer_secret='***',
access_token='***', access_secret='***',
)],
rules=[(for_any_message, [prepare, outputs.debug()])])
Running this code, will fetch new results for search by query My Company
and output them on the screen. Of course, you could use any other output
,
supported by the processor
. Browse online documentation to find out
which sources and outputs are supported and for to configure them.
web-hook
endpoint (in progress).tail
source which reads file and outputs lines appeared in a file between invocations or is able to emulatetail -f
behaviour. Python module tailer could be used here.grep
output -- a filter to grep some fields using patterns. Withtail
andgrep
you could build a pipeline which watch on a log and send errors by email or to the chat.xmpp
output.irc
output.rss/atom feed reader
.weather
source which tracks tomorrow's weather forecast and outputs a message if it was changed significantly, for example from "sunny" to "rainy".github
some integrations with github API?jira
or other task tracker of your choice?- suggest your ideas!
https://python-processor.readthedocs.org/
To run the all tests run:
tox