Metadata-Version: 2.4
Name: aidbox-python-sdk
Version: 0.2.3
Summary: Aidbox SDK for python
Author-email: "beda.software" <aidbox-python-sdk@beda.software>
License: MIT License
        
        Copyright (c) 2019 Ilya Beda
        
        Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
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Project-URL: homepage, https://github.com/Aidbox/aidbox-python-sdk
Project-URL: documentation, https://github.com/Aidbox/aidbox-python-sdk#readme
Project-URL: repository, https://github.com/Aidbox/aidbox-python-sdk.git
Keywords: fhir
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Environment :: Web Environment
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.12
Classifier: Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules
Requires-Python: >=3.9
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
License-File: LICENSE.md
Requires-Dist: aiohttp>=3.11.0
Requires-Dist: SQLAlchemy>=1.3.10
Requires-Dist: fhirpy>=1.3.0
Requires-Dist: jsonschema>=4.4.0
Provides-Extra: test
Requires-Dist: pytest~=8.4.1; extra == "test"
Requires-Dist: pytest-asyncio~=1.1.0; extra == "test"
Requires-Dist: pytest-aiohttp~=1.1.0; extra == "test"
Requires-Dist: pytest-cov~=6.2.1; extra == "test"
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Requires-Dist: autohooks-plugin-ruff; extra == "dev"
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Dynamic: license-file

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# aidbox-python-sdk

1. Create a python 3.9+ environment `pyenv `
2. Set env variables and activate virtual environment `source activate_settings.sh`
2. Install the required packages with `pipenv install --dev`
3. Make sure the app's settings are configured correctly (see `activate_settings.sh` and `aidbox_python_sdk/settings.py`). You can also
 use environment variables to define sensitive settings, eg. DB connection variables (see example `.env-ptl`)
4. You can then run example with `python example.py`.

# Getting started

## Minimal application

main.py
```python
from aidbox_python_sdk.main import create_app as _create_app
from aidbox_python_sdk.settings import Settings
from aidbox_python_sdk.sdk import SDK


settings = Settings(**{})
sdk = SDK(settings, resources={}, seeds={})


def create_app():
    app = await _create_app(SDK)
    return app


async def create_gunicorn_app() -> web.Application:
    return create_app()
```

## Register handler for operation
```python
import logging
from aiohttp import web
from aidbox_python_sdk.types import SDKOperation, SDKOperationRequest

from yourappfolder import sdk 


@sdk.operation(
    methods=["POST", "PATCH"],
    path=["signup", "register", {"name": "date"}, {"name": "test"}],
    timeout=60000  ## Optional parameter to set a custom timeout for operation in milliseconds
)
def signup_register_op(_operation: SDKOperation, request: SDKOperationRequest):
    """
    POST /signup/register/21.02.19/testvalue
    PATCH /signup/register/22.02.19/patchtestvalue
    """
    logging.debug("`signup_register_op` operation handler")
    logging.debug("Operation data: %s", operation)
    logging.debug("Request: %s", request)
    return web.json_response({"success": "Ok", "request": request["route-params"]})

```

## Usage of AppKeys

To access Aidbox Client, SDK, settings, DB Proxy the `app` (`web.Application`) is extended by default with the following app keys that are defined in `aidbox_python_sdk.app_keys` module:

```python
from aidbox_python_sdk import app_keys as ak
from aidbox_python_sdk.types import SDKOperation, SDKOperationRequest

@sdk.operation(["POST"], ["example"])
async def update_organization_op(_operation: SDKOperation, request: SDKOperationRequest):
    app = request.app
    client = app[ak.client] # AsyncAidboxClient
    sdk = app[ak.sdk] # SDK
    settings = app[ak.settings] # Settings
    db = app[ak.db] # DBProxy
    return web.json_response()
```

## Usage of FHIR Client

FHIR Client is not plugged in by default, however, to use it you can extend the app by adding new AppKey

app/app_keys.py
```python
from fhirpy import AsyncFHIRClient

fhir_client: web.AppKey[AsyncFHIRClient] = web.AppKey("fhir_client", AsyncFHIRClient)
```

main.py
```python
from collections.abc import AsyncGenerator

from aidbox_python_sdk.main import create_app as _create_app
from aidbox_python_sdk.settings import Settings
from aidbox_python_sdk.sdk import SDK
from aiohttp import BasicAuth, web
from fhirpy import AsyncFHIRClient

from app import app_keys as ak

settings = Settings(**{})
sdk = SDK(settings, resources={}, seeds={)

def create_app():
    app = await _create_app(SDK)
    app.cleanup_ctx.append(fhir_clients_ctx)
    return app


async def create_gunicorn_app() -> web.Application:
    return create_app()


async def fhir_clients_ctx(app: web.Application) -> AsyncGenerator[None, None]:
    app[ak.fhir_client] = await init_fhir_client(app[ak.settings], "/fhir")

    yield


async def init_fhir_client(settings: Settings, prefix: str = "") -> AsyncFHIRClient:
    basic_auth = BasicAuth(
        login=settings.APP_INIT_CLIENT_ID,
        password=settings.APP_INIT_CLIENT_SECRET,
    )

    return AsyncFHIRClient(
        f"{settings.APP_INIT_URL}{prefix}",
        authorization=basic_auth.encode(),
        dump_resource=lambda x: x.model_dump(),
    )
```

After that, you can use `app[ak.fhir_client]` that has the type `AsyncFHIRClient` everywhere where the app is available.


## Usage of request_schema
```python
from aidbox_python_sdk.types import SDKOperation, SDKOperationRequest

schema = {
    "required": ["params", "resource"],
    "properties": {
        "params": {
            "type": "object",
            "required": ["abc", "location"],
            "properties": {"abc": {"type": "string"}, "location": {"type": "string"}},
            "additionalProperties": False,
        },
        "resource": {
            "type": "object",
            "required": ["organizationType", "employeesCount"],
            "properties": {
                "organizationType": {"type": "string", "enum": ["profit", "non-profit"]},
                "employeesCount": {"type": "number"},
            },
            "additionalProperties": False,
        },
    },
}


@sdk.operation(["POST"], ["Organization", {"name": "id"}, "$update"], request_schema=schema)
async def update_organization_op(_operation: SDKOperation, request: SDKOperationRequest):
    location = request["params"]["location"]
    return web.json_response({"location": location})
```

### Valid request example
```shell
POST /Organization/org-1/$update?abc=xyz&location=us

organizationType: non-profit
employeesCount: 10
```

## Testing with the pytest plugin

The SDK provides a pytest plugin that starts your app, exposes fixtures for the SDK and Aidbox client, and helps isolate tests that create resources.

### Activating the plugin

In your project’s **`conftest.py`** (e.g. `tests/conftest.py`), register the plugin:

```python
pytest_plugins = ["aidbox_python_sdk.pytest_plugin"]
```

### Configuring the app factory

The plugin needs your app factory (the callable that returns the `web.Application`). You can set it in pytest ini:

**`pyproject.toml`**
```toml
[tool.pytest.ini_options]
aidbox_create_app = "main:create_app"
```

Use the dotted path to your callable: either `module:name` (e.g. `main:create_app`) or `module.submodule.name` (e.g. `mypackage.main.create_app`). The default is `main:create_app`.

To use a different factory without changing ini, override the fixture in your `conftest.py`:

```python
@pytest.fixture(scope="session")
def create_app():
    from myapp.entry import create_app
    return create_app
```

### Fixtures provided

| Fixture          | Description |
|------------------|-------------|
| `app`            | The running `web.Application` (server in a background thread on port 8081). |
| `client`         | HTTP client for the app + `client.server.app` for the application instance. |
| `sdk`            | The SDK instance: `app[ak.sdk]`. |
| `aidbox_client`  | `AsyncAidboxClient` for calling Aidbox (operations, `/$psql`, etc.). |
| `aidbox_db`      | DB proxy: `app[ak.db]`. |
| `safe_db`        | Isolated DB for the test; see below. |

### Using `safe_db` for tests that create resources

Use the **`safe_db`** fixture in tests that create or change data. It records the current transaction id, runs your test, then rolls back everything created in that test so the DB stays clean.

**NOTE:** Without `safe_db`, all subscriptions are implicitly ignored for that test.

Example:

```python
@pytest.mark.asyncio
async def test_create_patient(aidbox_client, safe_db):
    patient = await aidbox_client.resource("Patient", name=[{"family": "Test"}]).save()
    patients = await aidbox_client.resources("Patient").fetch_all()
    assert len(patients) >= 1
    # after the test, safe_db rolls back and the patient is not persisted
```

### Subscription trigger helper (`was_subscription_triggered`)

Use **`sdk.was_subscription_triggered(entity)`** (or `was_subscription_triggered_n_times(entity, n)`) only together with the **`safe_db`** fixture. Without `safe_db`, subscription handling is skipped for the test and the returned future is never completed, so the test will hang until the timeout.

Example:

```python
@pytest.mark.asyncio
async def test_patient_subscription(aidbox_client, safe_db, sdk):
    was_patient_sub_triggered = sdk.was_subscription_triggered("Patient")
    patient = await aidbox_client.resource("Patient", name=[{"family": "Test"}]).save()
    await was_patient_sub_triggered
    # assertions...
```


