readyapi 0.112.0

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readyapi 0.112.0

ReadyAPI

ReadyAPI framework, high performance, easy to learn, fast to code, ready for production
















Documentation: https://readyapi.khulnasoft.com
Source Code: https://github.com/readyapi/readyapi

ReadyAPI is a modern, fast (high-performance), web framework for building APIs with Python based on standard Python type hints.
The key features are:

Fast: Very high performance, on par with NodeJS and Go (thanks to Starlette and Pydantic). One of the fastest Python frameworks available.
Fast to code: Increase the speed to develop features by about 200% to 300%. *
Fewer bugs: Reduce about 40% of human (developer) induced errors. *
Intuitive: Great editor support. Completion everywhere. Less time debugging.
Easy: Designed to be easy to use and learn. Less time reading docs.
Short: Minimize code duplication. Multiple features from each parameter declaration. Fewer bugs.
Robust: Get production-ready code. With automatic interactive documentation.
Standards-based: Based on (and fully compatible with) the open standards for APIs: OpenAPI (previously known as Swagger) and JSON Schema.

* estimation based on tests on an internal development team, building production applications.
Sponsors




















Other sponsors
Opinions
"[...] I'm using ReadyAPI a ton these days. [...] I'm actually planning to use it for all of my team's ML services at Microsoft. Some of them are getting integrated into the core Windows product and some Office products."
Kabir Khan - Microsoft (ref)

"We adopted the ReadyAPI library to spawn a REST server that can be queried to obtain predictions. [for Ludwig]"
Piero Molino, Yaroslav Dudin, and Sai Sumanth Miryala - Uber (ref)

"Netflix is pleased to announce the open-source release of our crisis management orchestration framework: Dispatch! [built with ReadyAPI]"
Kevin Glisson, Marc Vilanova, Forest Monsen - Netflix (ref)

"I’m over the moon excited about ReadyAPI. It’s so fun!"
Brian Okken - Python Bytes podcast host (ref)

"Honestly, what you've built looks super solid and polished. In many ways, it's what I wanted Hug to be - it's really inspiring to see someone build that."
Timothy Crosley - Hug creator (ref)

"If you're looking to learn one modern framework for building REST APIs, check out ReadyAPI [...] It's fast, easy to use and easy to learn [...]"
"We've switched over to ReadyAPI for our APIs [...] I think you'll like it [...]"
Ines Montani - Matthew Honnibal - Explosion AI founders - spaCy creators (ref) - (ref)

"If anyone is looking to build a production Python API, I would highly recommend ReadyAPI. It is beautifully designed, simple to use and highly scalable, it has become a key component in our API first development strategy and is driving many automations and services such as our Virtual TAC Engineer."
Deon Pillsbury - Cisco (ref)

Cligenius, the ReadyAPI of CLIs

If you are building a CLI app to be used in the terminal instead of a web API, check out Cligenius.
Cligenius is ReadyAPI's little sibling. And it's intended to be the ReadyAPI of CLIs. ⌨️ 🚀
Requirements
ReadyAPI stands on the shoulders of giants:

Starlette for the web parts.
Pydantic for the data parts.

Installation

$ pip install "readyapi[standard]"

---> 100%


Note: Make sure you put "readyapi[standard]" in quotes to ensure it works in all terminals.
Example
Create it

Create a file main.py with:

from typing import Union

from readyapi import ReadyAPI

app = ReadyAPI()


@app.get("/")
def read_root():
return {"Hello": "World"}


@app.get("/items/{item_id}")
def read_item(item_id: int, q: Union[str, None] = None):
return {"item_id": item_id, "q": q}


Or use async def...
If your code uses async / await, use async def:
from typing import Union

from readyapi import ReadyAPI

app = ReadyAPI()


@app.get("/")
async def read_root():
return {"Hello": "World"}


@app.get("/items/{item_id}")
async def read_item(item_id: int, q: Union[str, None] = None):
return {"item_id": item_id, "q": q}

Note:
If you don't know, check the "In a hurry?" section about async and await in the docs.

Run it
Run the server with:

$ readyapi dev main.py

╭────────── ReadyAPI CLI - Development mode ───────────╮
│ │
│ Serving at: http://127.0.0.1:8000 │
│ │
│ API docs: http://127.0.0.1:8000/docs │
│ │
│ Running in development mode, for production use: │
│ │
│ readyapi run │
│ │
╰─────────────────────────────────────────────────────╯

INFO: Will watch for changes in these directories: ['/home/user/code/awesomeapp']
INFO: Uvicorn running on http://127.0.0.1:8000 (Press CTRL+C to quit)
INFO: Started reloader process [2248755] using WatchFiles
INFO: Started server process [2248757]
INFO: Waiting for application startup.
INFO: Application startup complete.



About the command readyapi dev main.py...
The command readyapi dev reads your main.py file, detects the ReadyAPI app in it, and starts a server using Uvicorn.
By default, readyapi dev will start with auto-reload enabled for local development.
You can read more about it in the ReadyAPI CLI docs.

Check it
Open your browser at http://127.0.0.1:8000/items/5?q=somequery.
You will see the JSON response as:
{"item_id": 5, "q": "somequery"}

You already created an API that:

Receives HTTP requests in the paths / and /items/{item_id}.
Both paths take GET operations (also known as HTTP methods).
The path /items/{item_id} has a path parameter item_id that should be an int.
The path /items/{item_id} has an optional str query parameter q.

Interactive API docs
Now go to http://127.0.0.1:8000/docs.
You will see the automatic interactive API documentation (provided by Swagger UI):

Alternative API docs
And now, go to http://127.0.0.1:8000/redoc.
You will see the alternative automatic documentation (provided by ReDoc):

Example upgrade
Now modify the file main.py to receive a body from a PUT request.
Declare the body using standard Python types, thanks to Pydantic.
from typing import Union

from readyapi import ReadyAPI
from pydantic import BaseModel

app = ReadyAPI()


class Item(BaseModel):
name: str
price: float
is_offer: Union[bool, None] = None


@app.get("/")
def read_root():
return {"Hello": "World"}


@app.get("/items/{item_id}")
def read_item(item_id: int, q: Union[str, None] = None):
return {"item_id": item_id, "q": q}


@app.put("/items/{item_id}")
def update_item(item_id: int, item: Item):
return {"item_name": item.name, "item_id": item_id}

The readyapi dev server should reload automatically.
Interactive API docs upgrade
Now go to http://127.0.0.1:8000/docs.

The interactive API documentation will be automatically updated, including the new body:



Click on the button "Try it out", it allows you to fill the parameters and directly interact with the API:



Then click on the "Execute" button, the user interface will communicate with your API, send the parameters, get the results and show them on the screen:


Alternative API docs upgrade
And now, go to http://127.0.0.1:8000/redoc.

The alternative documentation will also reflect the new query parameter and body:


Recap
In summary, you declare once the types of parameters, body, etc. as function parameters.
You do that with standard modern Python types.
You don't have to learn a new syntax, the methods or classes of a specific library, etc.
Just standard Python.
For example, for an int:
item_id: int

or for a more complex Item model:
item: Item

...and with that single declaration you get:

Editor support, including:

Completion.
Type checks.


Validation of data:

Automatic and clear errors when the data is invalid.
Validation even for deeply nested JSON objects.


Conversion of input data: coming from the network to Python data and types. Reading from:

JSON.
Path parameters.
Query parameters.
Cookies.
Headers.
Forms.
Files.


Conversion of output data: converting from Python data and types to network data (as JSON):

Convert Python types (str, int, float, bool, list, etc).
datetime objects.
UUID objects.
Database models.
...and many more.


Automatic interactive API documentation, including 2 alternative user interfaces:

Swagger UI.
ReDoc.




Coming back to the previous code example, ReadyAPI will:

Validate that there is an item_id in the path for GET and PUT requests.
Validate that the item_id is of type int for GET and PUT requests.

If it is not, the client will see a useful, clear error.


Check if there is an optional query parameter named q (as in http://127.0.0.1:8000/items/foo?q=somequery) for GET requests.

As the q parameter is declared with = None, it is optional.
Without the None it would be required (as is the body in the case with PUT).


For PUT requests to /items/{item_id}, Read the body as JSON:

Check that it has a required attribute name that should be a str.
Check that it has a required attribute price that has to be a float.
Check that it has an optional attribute is_offer, that should be a bool, if present.
All this would also work for deeply nested JSON objects.


Convert from and to JSON automatically.
Document everything with OpenAPI, that can be used by:

Interactive documentation systems.
Automatic client code generation systems, for many languages.


Provide 2 interactive documentation web interfaces directly.


We just scratched the surface, but you already get the idea of how it all works.
Try changing the line with:
return {"item_name": item.name, "item_id": item_id}

...from:
... "item_name": item.name ...

...to:
... "item_price": item.price ...

...and see how your editor will auto-complete the attributes and know their types:

For a more complete example including more features, see the Tutorial - User Guide.
Spoiler alert: the tutorial - user guide includes:

Declaration of parameters from other different places as: headers, cookies, form fields and files.
How to set validation constraints as maximum_length or regex.
A very powerful and easy to use Dependency Injection system.
Security and authentication, including support for OAuth2 with JWT tokens and HTTP Basic auth.
More advanced (but equally easy) techniques for declaring deeply nested JSON models (thanks to Pydantic).
GraphQL integration with Strawberry and other libraries.
Many extra features (thanks to Starlette) as:

WebSockets
extremely easy tests based on HTTPX and pytest
CORS
Cookie Sessions
...and more.



Performance
Independent TechEmpower benchmarks show ReadyAPI applications running under Uvicorn as one of the fastest Python frameworks available, only below Starlette and Uvicorn themselves (used internally by ReadyAPI). (*)
To understand more about it, see the section Benchmarks.
Dependencies
ReadyAPI depends on Pydantic and Starlette.
standard Dependencies
When you install ReadyAPI with pip install "readyapi[standard]" it comes the standard group of optional dependencies:
Used by Pydantic:

email_validator - for email validation.

Used by Starlette:

httpx - Required if you want to use the TestClient.
jinja2 - Required if you want to use the default template configuration.
python-multipart - Required if you want to support form "parsing", with request.form().

Used by ReadyAPI / Starlette:

uvicorn - for the server that loads and serves your application. This includes uvicorn[standard], which includes some dependencies (e.g. uvloop) needed for high performance serving.
readyapi-cli - to provide the readyapi command.

Without standard Dependencies
If you don't want to include the standard optional dependencies, you can install with pip install readyapi instead of pip install "readyapi[standard]".
Additional Optional Dependencies
There are some additional dependencies you might want to install.
Additional optional Pydantic dependencies:

pydantic-settings - for settings management.
pydantic-extra-types - for extra types to be used with Pydantic.

Additional optional ReadyAPI dependencies:

orjson - Required if you want to use ORJSONResponse.
ujson - Required if you want to use UJSONResponse.

License
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.

License

For personal and professional use. You cannot resell or redistribute these repositories in their original state.

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