Skip to content

vulekamali/os-api

 
 

Repository files navigation

OpenSpending API

Gitter Build Status Coverage Status Issues Docs

An API to explore the OpenSpending database.

  • An analytical API powered by Babbage
  • A search API to access package-level meta data
  • A search API to access fiscal line-level data

The API is written in Python 3 and uses Flask blueprints.

Quick start

Clone the repo, install dependencies from pypi, and run the server.

For development, create a .env file and add environmental variables:

# Address for the postgres instance, e.g. postgresql://postgres@db/postgres
OS_API_ENGINE=postgresql://postgres@db/postgres
# Address of elasticsearch server
OS_ELASTICSEARCH_ADDRESS=localhost:9200
# Address of Redis instance
OS_API_CACHE=redis

# Check health of ElasticSearch before starting app (optional)
OS_CHECK_ES_HEALTHY='True'

With the backing services available, a development server can be started with: python dev_server.py

Available Endpoints

  • /api/3/info/<dataset>/package
    • Returns the Fiscal Data-Pacakge for this dataset
  • /api/3/cubes:
    • Returns a list of the available datasets in the store
  • /api/3/cubes/<dataset>/model:
    • Returns the babbage model for the dataset. This is the model which is used when querying the data.
  • /api/3/cubes/<dataset>/facts:
    • Returns individual entries from the dataset in non-aggregated form.
    • Parameters:
      • cut - filters on the data (field_name:value, field_name:value|field_name:value etc.)
      • fields - fields to return
      • order - data ordering (e.g. field_name:desc)
      • pagesize - number of entries in one batch of returned data
      • page - page selection
  • /api/3/cubes/<dataset>/members/<dimension>
    • Returns the distinct set of values for a specific dimension.
    • Parameters: cut, order, page and pagesize as above
  • /api/3/cubes/<dataset>/aggregate
    • Returns an aggregate of the data in the specified dataset.
    • Parameters:
      • cut, order, page and pagesize as above
      • drilldown - group by these dimensions (e.g. field_name_1|field_name_2)
      • aggregates - which measures to aggregate (and what function to perform (e.g. amount.sum, count)

Testing

You need a few services running, namely Elasticsearch v5.x running on localhost:9200 and PostgreSQL.

Then set a few environment variables (your DB connection string might vary):

$ export OS_API_ENGINE=postgresql://postgres@/postgres
$ export DPP_DB_ENGINE=postgresql://postgres@/postgres
$ export OS_ELASTICSEARCH_ADDRESS=localhost:9200
$ export ELASTICSEARCH_ADDRESS=localhost:9200

Install a few dependencies:

$ npm install -g os-types
$ sudo apt-get install libleveldb-dev libleveldb1 libpq-dev python3-dev
$ pip3 install tox coveralls 'datapackage-pipelines[speedup]>=2.0.0' 'datapackage-pipelines-fiscal>=1.2.0' psycopg2-binary

# or for MacOS
$ npm install -g os-types
$ brew install leveldb
$ pip3 install tox coveralls 'datapackage-pipelines[speedup]>=2.0.0' 'datapackage-pipelines-fiscal>=1.2.0' psycopg2-binary

Fill the local DB with a sample fiscal data:

$ cd tests/sample_data && dpp run --verbose --concurrency=8 all

Then run:

$ tox

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 76.1%
  • Shell 11.8%
  • Makefile 6.5%
  • Dockerfile 5.6%