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Pusher HTTP Python Library

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The new Python library for interacting with the Pusher HTTP API. This version, 1.x.x, is a major breaking change from versions <= 0.8. Version 0.8 can be found on the 0.8 branch. Notes on the changes can be found on this blog post

This package lets you trigger events to your client and query the state of your Pusher channels. When used with a server, you can validate Pusher webhooks and authenticate private- or presence-channels.

In order to use this library, you need to have a free account on http://pusher.com. After registering, you will need the application credentials for your app.

Features

  • Python 2.6, 2.7 and 3.3 support
  • Adapters for various http libraries like requests, urlfetch, aiohttp and tornado.
  • WebHook validation
  • Signature generation for socket subscriptions

###Table of Contents

Installation

You can install this module using your package management method or choice, normally easy_install or pip. For example:

pip install pusher

Users on Python 2.x and older versions of pip may get a warning, due to pip compiling the optional pusher.aiohttp module, which uses Python 3 syntax. However, as pusher.aiohttp is not used by default, this does not affect the library's functionality. See our Github issue, as well as this issue from Gunicorn for more details.

Getting started

The minimum configuration required to use the Pusher object are the three constructor arguments which identify your Pusher app. You can find them by going to "API Keys" on your app at https://app.pusher.com.

from pusher import Pusher
pusher = Pusher(app_id=u'4', key=u'key', secret=u'secret')

You can then trigger events to channels. Channel and event names may only contain alphanumeric characters, - and _:

pusher.trigger(u'a_channel', u'an_event', {u'some': u'data'})

Configuration

from pusher import Pusher
pusher = Pusher(app_id, key, secret)
Argument Description
app_id String Required
The Pusher application ID
key String Required
The Pusher application key
secret String Required
The Pusher application secret token
host String Default:None
The host to connect to
port int Default:None
Which port to connect to
ssl bool Default:True
Use HTTPS
cluster String Default:None
Convention for other clusters than the main Pusher-one. Eg: 'eu' will resolve to the api-eu.pusherapp.com host
backend Object an object that responds to the send_request(request) method. If none is provided, a pusher.requests.RequestsBackend instance is created.
json_encoder Object Default: None
Custom JSON encoder.
json_decoder Object Default: None
Custom JSON decoder.
Example
from pusher import Pusher
pusher = Pusher(app_id=u'4', key=u'key', secret=u'secret', ssl=True, cluster=u'eu')

Triggering Events

To trigger an event on one or more channels, use the trigger method on the Pusher object.

Pusher::trigger

Argument Description
channels String or Collection Required
The name or list of names of the channel you wish to trigger events on
event String Required
The name of the event you wish to trigger.
data JSONable data Required
The event's payload
socket_id String Default:None
The socket_id of the connection you wish to exclude from receiving the event. You can read more here.
Return Values Description
buffered_events Dict A parsed response that includes the event_id for each event published to a channel. See example.
Example

This call will trigger to 'a_channel' and 'another_channel', and exclude the recipient with socket_id "1234.12".

pusher.trigger([u'a_channel', u'another_channel'], u'an_event', {u'some': u'data'}, "1234.12")

Event Buffer

Version 1.0.0 of the library introduced support for event buffering. The purpose of this functionality is to ensure that events that are triggered during whilst a client is offline for a short period of time will still be delivered upon reconnection.

Note: this requires your Pusher application to be on a cluster that has the Event Buffer capability.

As part of this the trigger function now returns a set of event_id values for each event triggered on a channel. These can then be used by the client to tell the Pusher service the last event it has received. If additional events have been triggered after that event ID the service has the opportunity to provide the client with those IDs.

Example
events = pusher.trigger([u'a_channel', u'another_channel'], u'an_event', {u'some': u'data'}, "1234.12")

#=> {'event_ids': {'another_channel': 'eudhq17zrhfbwc', 'a_channel': 'eudhq17zrhfbtn'}}

Querying Application State

Getting Information For All Channels

Pusher::channels_info

Argument Description
prefix_filter String Default: None
Filter the channels returned by their prefix
attributes Collection Default: []
A collection of attributes which should be returned for each channel. If empty, an empty dictionary of attributes will be returned for each channel.
Available attributes: "user_count".
Return Values Description
channels Dict A parsed response from the HTTP API. See example.
Example
channels = pusher.channels_info(u"presence-", [u'user_count'])

#=> {u'channels': {u'presence-chatroom': {u'user_count': 2}, u'presence-notifications': {u'user_count': 1}}}

Getting Information For A Specific Channel

Pusher::channel_info

Argument Description
channel String Required
The name of the channel you wish to query
attributes Collection Default: []
A collection of attributes to be returned for the channel.

Available attributes:
"user_count" : Number of distinct users currently subscribed. Applicable only to presence channels.
"subscription_count": [BETA]: Number of connections currently subscribed to the channel. Please contact us to enable this feature.
Return Values Description
channel Dict A parsed response from the HTTP API. See example.
Example
channel = pusher.channel_info(u'presence-chatroom', [u"user_count"])
#=> {u'user_count': 42, u'occupied': True}

Getting User Information For A Presence Channel

Pusher::users_info

Argument Description
channel String Required
The name of the presence channel you wish to query
Return Values Description
users Dict A parsed response from the HTTP API. See example.
Example
pusher.users_info(u'presence-chatroom')
#=> {u'users': [{u'id': u'1035'}, {u'id': u'4821'}]}

Authenticating Channel Subscription

Pusher::authenticate

In order for users to subscribe to a private- or presence-channel, they must be authenticated by your server.

The client will make a POST request to an endpoint (either "/pusher/auth" or any which you specify) with a body consisting of the channel's name and socket_id.

Using your Pusher instance, with which you initialized Pusher, you can generate an authentication signature. Having responded to the request with this signature, the subscription will be authenticated.

Argument Description
channel String Required
The name of the channel, sent to you in the POST request
socket_id String Required
The channel's socket_id, also sent to you in the POST request
custom_data Dict Required for presence channels
This will be a dictionary containing the data you want associated with a member of a presence channel. A "user_id" key is required, and you can optionally pass in a "user_info" key. See the example below.
Return Values Description
response Dict A dictionary to send as a response to the authentication request.
Example
Private Channels
auth = pusher.authenticate(

  channel=u"private-channel",

  socket_id=u"1234.12"
)
# return `auth` as a response
Presence Channels
auth = pusher.authenticate(

  channel=u"presence-channel",

  socket_id=u"1234.12",

  custom_data={
    u'user_id': u'1',
    u'user_info': {
      u'twitter': '@pusher'
    }
  }
)
# return `auth` as a response

Receiving Webhooks

If you have webhooks set up to POST a payload to a specified endpoint, you may wish to validate that these are actually from Pusher. The Pusher object achieves this by checking the authentication signature in the request body using your application credentials.

Pusher::validate_webhook

Argument Description
key String Required
Pass in the value sent in the request headers under the key "X-PUSHER-KEY". The method will check this matches your app key.
signature String Required
This is the value in the request headers under the key "X-PUSHER-SIGNATURE". The method will verify that this is the result of signing the request body against your app secret.
body String Required
The JSON string of the request body received.
Return Values Description
body_data Dict If validation was successful, the return value will be the parsed payload. Otherwise, it will be None.
Example
webhook = pusher.validate_webhook(

  key="key_sent_in_header",

  signature="signature_sent_in_header",

  body="{ \"time_ms\": 1327078148132  \"events\": [ { \"name\": \"event_name\", \"some\": \"data\" }  ]}"
)

print webhook["events"]

Request Library Configuration

Users can configure the library to use different backends to send calls to our API. The HTTP libraries we support are:

  • Requests (pusher.requests.RequestsBackend). This is used by default.
  • Tornado (pusher.tornado.TornadoBackend).
  • AsyncIO (pusher.aiohttp.AsyncIOBackend).
  • Google App Engine (pusher.gae.GAEBackend).

Upon initializing a Pusher instance, pass in any of these options to the backend keyword argument.

Google App Engine

GAE users are advised to use the pusher.gae.GAEBackend backend to ensure compatability.

Feature Support

Feature Supported
Trigger event on single channel
Trigger event on multiple channels
Excluding recipients from events
Authenticating private channels
Authenticating presence channels
Get the list of channels in an application
Get the state of a single channel
Get a list of users in a presence channel
WebHook validation
Heroku add-on support
Debugging & Logging
Cluster configuration
Timeouts
HTTPS
HTTP Proxy configuration
HTTP KeepAlive

Helper Functionality

These are helpers that have been implemented to to ensure interactions with the HTTP API only occur if they will not be rejected e.g. channel naming conventions.

Helper Functionality Supported
Channel name validation
Limit to 10 channels per trigger
Limit event name length to 200 chars

Running the tests

To run the tests run python setup.py test

Making a release

  • Update the CHANGELOG.md file. git changelog from the git-extras package can be useful to pull commits from the release.
  • Update the setup.py version
  • git tag v$VERSION
  • git push && git push --tags
  • make - publishes to pypi

If you get the error: invalid command 'bdist_wheel' message on the last step pip install wheel and re-run make.

License

Copyright (c) 2015 Pusher Ltd. See LICENSE for details.

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Python library for interacting with the Pusher HTTP API

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