Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: fluke-api
Version: 0.5.0
Summary: Cloud-agnostic Python API
Author: Manos Stoumpos
Author-email: manosstoumpos@gmail.com
License: MIT
Project-URL: Homepage, https://github.com/manoss96/fluke
Project-URL: Bug Tracker, https://github.com/manoss96/fluke/issues
Project-URL: Documentation, https://fluke.rtfd.io
Project-URL: Changelog, https://github.com/manoss96/fluke/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md
Keywords: cloud,storage,message-queues,aws,azure,gcp
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Requires-Python: >=3.9
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
Provides-Extra: tests
License-File: LICENSE

<!-- PROJECT BADGES -->
[![Python Version][python-shield]][python-url]
[![MIT License][license-shield]][license-url]
[![Coverage][coverage-shield]][coverage-url]

![Fluke Logo](docs/source/logo.png)

<!-- What is Fluke? -->
## What is Fluke?

Fluke is a Python package that acts as a higher-level API to
cloud services that primarily relate to object storage and
messaging. Fluke manages to hide away much of the complexity
that derives from working with said services, aiding you in
completing your tasks fast and hassle-free! Fluke achieves this by:

* Wrapping object storage services within a *File/Dir* API
  inspired by the more familiar file storage, through which
  you are able to interact with your data no matter where
  they reside, be it the local file system, a remote server,
  or a bucket in the cloud.

* Greatly reducing the intricacies of working with message
  queues by viewing them as mere data structures that support
  three elementary operations, that is, *push*, *peek*, and *poll*.


<!-- Installation -->
## Installation

You can start using Fluke by installing it via pip.
Note that *fluke* requires Python >= 3.9.

```sh
pip install fluke-api
```


<!-- Usage example -->
## Usage Example

In this example, we will be using Fluke in order to:

1. Poll an Amazon SQS queue every minute for new messages. Each of these messages
   contains the path of a newly uploaded file to an Amazon S3 bucket.
2. Use said messages in order to locate the corresponding files and transfer
   them to a remote server.

First things first, we need to be able to authenticate with both AWS
and the remote server. In order to achieve this, we will be importing
from ``fluke.auth``:

```python
from fluke.auth import AWSAuth, RemoteAuth

# This object will be used to authenticate
# with AWS.
aws_auth = AWSAuth(
    aws_access_key_id="aws_access_key",
    aws_secret_access_key="aws_secret_key")

# This object will be used to authenticate
# with the remote machine.
rmt_auth = RemoteAuth.from_password(
    hostname="host",
    username="user",
    password="password")
```

Next, we just need to import from ``fluke.queues`` and ``fluke.storage``
so that we gain access to any necessary resources in order to perform
the data transfer:

```python
from fluke.queues import AmazonSQSQueue
from fluke.storage import AmazonS3Dir, RemoteDir

with (
    AmazonSQSQueue(auth=aws_auth, queue='queue') as queue,
    AmazonS3Dir(auth=aws_auth, bucket='bucket') as bucket,
    RemoteDir(auth=rmt_auth, path='/home/user/dir', create_if_missing=True) as rmt_dir
):
    for batch in queue.poll(polling_frequency=60):
        for msg in batch:
            bucket.get_file(path=msg).transfer_to(dst=rmt_dir)
```

And that's basically it!

You can learn more about Fluke by visiting the [Fluke Documentation Page][docs-url].


<!-- MARKDOWN LINKS & IMAGES -->
[python-shield]: https://img.shields.io/badge/python-3.9+-blue
[python-url]: https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-390/
[license-shield]: https://img.shields.io/badge/license-MIT-red
[license-url]: https://github.com/manoss96/fluke/blob/main/LICENSE
[coverage-shield]: https://coveralls.io/repos/github/manoss96/fluke/badge.svg?branch=main&service=github
[coverage-url]: https://coveralls.io/github/manoss96/fluke?branch=main
[docs-url]: https://fluke.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
