python-sdk | UPYUN Python SDK,集合 UPYUN HTTP REST 接口,UPYUN HTTP FORM 接口 和 | REST library

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kandi X-RAY | python-sdk Summary

kandi X-RAY | python-sdk Summary

python-sdk is a Python library typically used in Web Services, REST applications. python-sdk has no bugs, it has no vulnerabilities, it has build file available and it has low support. You can install using 'pip install python-sdk' or download it from GitHub, PyPI.

UPYUN Python SDK,集合 UPYUN HTTP REST 接口,UPYUN HTTP FORM 接口 和 视频处理接口。.
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            kandi-support Support

              python-sdk has a low active ecosystem.
              It has 112 star(s) with 29 fork(s). There are 10 watchers for this library.
              OutlinedDot
              It had no major release in the last 6 months.
              There are 6 open issues and 13 have been closed. On average issues are closed in 12 days. There are no pull requests.
              It has a neutral sentiment in the developer community.
              The latest version of python-sdk is current.

            kandi-Quality Quality

              python-sdk has 0 bugs and 31 code smells.

            kandi-Security Security

              python-sdk has no vulnerabilities reported, and its dependent libraries have no vulnerabilities reported.
              python-sdk code analysis shows 0 unresolved vulnerabilities.
              There are 17 security hotspots that need review.

            kandi-License License

              python-sdk does not have a standard license declared.
              Check the repository for any license declaration and review the terms closely.
              OutlinedDot
              Without a license, all rights are reserved, and you cannot use the library in your applications.

            kandi-Reuse Reuse

              python-sdk releases are not available. You will need to build from source code and install.
              Deployable package is available in PyPI.
              Build file is available. You can build the component from source.
              Installation instructions are not available. Examples and code snippets are available.
              python-sdk saves you 805 person hours of effort in developing the same functionality from scratch.
              It has 1850 lines of code, 190 functions and 20 files.
              It has medium code complexity. Code complexity directly impacts maintainability of the code.

            Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA

            kandi has reviewed python-sdk and discovered the below as its top functions. This is intended to give you an instant insight into python-sdk implemented functionality, and help decide if they suit your requirements.
            • Puts an object
            • Make the user agent string
            • Set headers to headers
            • Perform an http request
            • Upload a key to a key
            • Perform an HTTP request
            • Handle the response from the API
            • Get status of all tasks
            • Handle the response
            • Restart upload
            • Complete this upload
            • Purge keys from the given domain
            • Creates the image_asynchronously
            • Compress images
            • Convert to file
            • Do video treatment
            • Put image to image
            • Get a list of items
            • Redress files
            • Get spiderman
            • Upload a file from a local file
            • Complete this file
            • Verify the signature
            • Get a list of files
            • Adds stderr to the logger
            • Get a value from the cache
            • Handle POST request
            Get all kandi verified functions for this library.

            python-sdk Key Features

            No Key Features are available at this moment for python-sdk.

            python-sdk Examples and Code Snippets

            No Code Snippets are available at this moment for python-sdk.

            Community Discussions

            QUESTION

            Oracle NoSQL Cloud Service - Is it possible to do a connection using instance-principal instead of creating config files?
            Asked 2021-Jun-03 at 12:36

            I am using Oracle NoSQL Cloud Service on OCI and I want to write a program using the Oracle NoSQL Database Python SDK.

            I did a test using the OCI SDK, I am using instance-principal IAM vs creating config files with tenancy/user ocid and API private keys on the nodes which invoke the noSQL api calls

            Is it possible to do a connection using instance-principal instead of creating config files with tenancy/user ocid and API private keys with the Oracle NoSQL Database Python SDK.

            I read the examples provided in the documentation https://github.com/oracle/nosql-python-sdk but I cannot find information about instance-principal support

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-03 at 12:36

            The Oracle NoSQL Database Python SDK works with instance-principals and resource principals. See the documentation https://nosql-python-sdk.readthedocs.io/en/stable/api/borneo.iam.SignatureProvider.html

            Here an example using resource principals and Oracle functions

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67820099

            QUESTION

            I have a problem with get billings from paypal
            Asked 2021-Jun-01 at 16:38

            I have a big problem with the webhook for confirms a subscribe agreements. I'm used the SDK [https://github.com/paypal/PayPal-Python-SDK/blob/master/samples/subscription/billing_agreements/get.py] If somebody could help me, my errors is the next:

            Traceback (most recent call last):

            File "/home/jjorge/venvs/payments/lib/python3.7/site-packages/django/core/handlers /exception.py", line 34, in inner response = get_response(request)

            File "/home/jjorge/venvs/payments/lib/python3.7/site-packages/django/core/handlers/base.py", line 115, in _get_response response = self.process_exception_by_middleware(e, request) File "/home/jjorge/venvs/payments/lib/python3.7/site-packages/django/core/handlers/base.py", line 113, in _get_response response = wrapped_callback(request, *callback_args, **callback_kwargs)

            File "/home/jjorge/venvs/payments/lib/python3.7/site-packages/django/views/decorators/csrf.py", line 54, in wrapped_view return view_func(*args, **kwargs)

            File "/home/jjorge/venvs/payments/lib/python3.7/site-packages/django/views/generic/base.py", line 71, in view return self.dispatch(request, *args, **kwargs)

            File "/home/jjorge/venvs/payments/lib/python3.7/site-packages/django/views/generic/base.py", line 97, in dispatch return handler(request, *args, **kwargs)

            File "/home/jjorge/src/guru/guru-payments/apps/paypal/views.py", line 69, in post settings.PAYPAL_CLIENT_SECRET

            File "/home/jjorge/src/guru/guru-payments/apps/paypal/services.py", line 34, in execute paypal_secret_id

            File "/home/jjorge/src/guru/guru-payments/apps/paypal/payment_methods.py", line 154, in get_billing_agreement 'client_secret': paypal_client_secret

            File "/home/jjorge/venvs/payments/lib/python3.7/site-packages/paypalrestsdk/resource.py", line 110, in find return cls(api.get(url, refresh_token=refresh_token), api=api)

            File "/home/jjorge/venvs/payments/lib/python3.7/site-packages/paypalrestsdk/api.py", line 268, in get return self.request(util.join_url(self.endpoint, action), 'GET', headers=headers or {}, refresh_token=refresh_token)

            File "/home/jjorge/venvs/payments/lib/python3.7/site-packages/paypalrestsdk/api.py", line 171, in request return self.http_call(url, method, data=json.dumps(body), headers=http_headers) File "/home/jjorge/venvs/payments/lib/python3.7/site-packages/paypalrestsdk/api.py", line 214, in http_call return self.handle_response(response, response.content.decode('utf-8')) File "/home/jjorge/venvs/payments/lib/python3.7/site-packages/paypalrestsdk/api.py", line 231, in handle_response

            raise exceptions.ResourceNotFound(response, content)

            paypalrestsdk.exceptions.ResourceNotFound: Failed. Response status: 404. Response message: Not Found. Error message: {"name":"RESOURCE_NOT_FOUND","debug_id":"9a7aa1a765763","message":"The requested resource was not found","information_link":"https://developer.paypal.com/docs/api/payments.billing-agreements#errors","details":[{"issue":"Requested resource ID was not found."}]}

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-01 at 16:38

            Deprecation notice: The /v1/payments/billing-agreements endpoints are deprecated. Use the /v1/billing/subscriptions

            That is my solution, I had to implement a new function with the new api

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67781169

            QUESTION

            How to generate timestamps using Azure speech to text and C#?
            Asked 2021-Mar-31 at 05:24

            I'm trying to generate timestamps using Azure S2T in C#. I've tried the following resources:

            How to get Word Level Timestamps using Azure Speech to Text and the Python SDK?

            How to generate timestamps in speech recognition?

            The second has been the most helpful, but I'm still getting errors. My code is:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Mar-31 at 05:24

            QUESTION

            Output model metrics to Cloudwatch
            Asked 2021-Mar-26 at 15:05

            I am following the mnist-2 guide from the aws github documentation to implement my own training job https://github.com/aws/amazon-sagemaker-examples/tree/master/sagemaker-python-sdk/tensorflow_script_mode_training_and_serving. I have wrote my code using a similar structure, but I would like to visualise the training and validation metrics from Cloudwatch while the job is running. Do I need to manually specify the metrics I am trying to observe? The AWS guide states "SageMaker automatically parses the logs for metrics that built-in algorithms emit and sends those metrics to CloudWatch." I am only using Tensorflow's training and validation accuracy and loss metrics, which I am not sure if they are built-in, or if I need to call them manually.

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Mar-26 at 15:05

            If you are not using a built-in algorithm, like in the example you linked, you have to define your metrics when you create the training job. You have to define regex expressions to grab from the logs the metric values, then cloudwatch will plot for you. The x axis will be the timestamp, you cannot change it. Basically just run your traning job and observe how the metrics are outputted, then you can build the appropriate regex. For example, since I am using coco metrics in tensorflow which periodically produce this:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/66819026

            QUESTION

            How can one use the StorageStreamDownloader to stream download from a blob and stream upload to a different blob?
            Asked 2021-Mar-15 at 02:53

            I believe I have a very simple requirement for which a solution has befuddled me. I am new to the azure-python-sdk and have had little success with its new blob streaming functionality.

            Some context

            I have used the Java SDK for several years now. Each CloudBlockBlob object has a BlobInputStream and a BlobOutputStream object. When a BlobInputStream is opened, one can invoke its many functions (most notably its read() function) to retrieve data in a true-streaming fashion. A BlobOutputStream, once retrieved, has a write(byte[] data) function where one can continuously write data as frequently as they want until the close() function is invoked. So, it was very easy for me to:

            1. Get a CloudBlockBlob object, open it's BlobInputStream and essentially get back an InputStream that was 'tied' to the CloudBlockBlob. It usually maintained 4MB of data - at least, that's what I understood. When some amount of data is read from its buffer, a new (same amount) of data is introduced, so it always has approximately 4MB of new data (until all data is retrieved).
            2. Perform some operations on that data.
            3. Retrieve the CloudBlockBlob object that I am uploading to, get it's BlobOutputStream, and write to it the data I did some operations on.

            A good example of this is if I wanted to compress a file. I had a GzipStreamReader class that would accept an BlobInputStream and an BlobOutputStream. It would read data from the BlobInputStream and, whenever it has compressed some amount of data, write to the BlobOutputStream. It could call write() as many times as it wished; when it finishes reading all the daya, it would close both Input and Output streams, and all was good.

            Now for Python

            Now, the Python SDK is a little different, and obviously for good reason; the io module works differently than Java's InputStream and OutputStream classes (which the Blob{Input/Output}Stream classes inherit from. I have been struggling to understand how streaming truly works in Azure's python SDK. To start out, I am just trying to see how the StorageStreamDownloader class works. It seems like the StorageStreamDownloader is what holds the 'connection' to the BlockBlob object I am reading data from. If I want to put the data in a stream, I would make a new io.BytesIO() and pass that stream to the StorageStreamDownloader's readinto method.

            For uploads, I would call the BlobClient's upload method. The upload method accepts a data parameter that is of type Union[Iterable[AnyStr], IO[AnyStr]].

            I don't want to go into too much detail about what I understand, because what I understand and what I have done have gotten me nowhere. I am suspicious that I am expecting something that only the Java SDK offers. But, overall, here are the problems I am having:

            1. When I call download_blob, I get back a StorageStreamDownloader with all the data in the blob. Some investigation has shown that I can use the offset and length to download the amount of data I want. Perhaps I can call it once with a download_blob(offset=0, length=4MB), process the data I get back, then again call download_bloc(offset=4MB, length=4MB), process the data, etc. This is unfavorable. The other thing I could do is utilize the max_chunk_get_size parameter for the BlobClient and turn on the validate_content flag (make it true) so that the StorageStreamDownloader only downloads 4mb. But this all results in several problems: that's not really streaming from a stream object. I'll still have to call download and readinto several times. And fine, I would do that, if it weren't for the second problem:
            2. How the heck do I stream an upload? The upload can take a stream. But if the stream doesn't auto-update itself, then I can only upload once, because all the blobs I deal with must be BlockBlobs. The docs for the upload_function function say that I can provide a param overwrite that does:

            keyword bool overwrite: Whether the blob to be uploaded should overwrite the current data. If True, upload_blob will overwrite the existing data. If set to False, the operation will fail with ResourceExistsError. The exception to the above is with Append blob types: if set to False and the data already exists, an error will not be raised and the data will be appended to the existing blob. If set overwrite=True, then the existing append blob will be deleted, and a new one created. Defaults to False.

            1. And this makes sense because BlockBlobs, once written to, cannot be written to again. So AFAIK, you can't 'stream' an upload. If I can't have a stream object that is directly tied to the blob, or holds all the data, then the upload() function will terminate as soon as it finishes, right?

            Okay. I am certain I am missing something important. I am also somewhat ignorant when it comes to the io module in Python. Though I have developed in Python for a long time, I never really had to deal with that module too closely. I am sure I am missing something, because this functionality is very basic and exists in all the other azure SDKs I know about.

            To recap

            Everything I said above can honestly be ignored, and only this portion read; I am just trying to show I've done some due diligence. I want to know how to stream data from a blob, process the data I get in a stream, then upload that data. I cannot be receiving all the data in a blob at once. Blobs are likely to be over 1GB and all that pretty stuff. I would honestly love some example code that shows:

            1. Retrieving some data from a blob (the data received in one call should not be more than 10MB) in a stream.
            2. Compressing the data in that stream.
            3. Upload the data to a blob.

            This should work for blobs of all sizes; whether its 1MB or 10MB or 10GB should not matter. Step 2 can be anything really; it can also be nothing. Just as long as long as data is being downloaded, inserted into a stream, then uploaded, that would be great. Of course, the other extremely important constraint is that the data per 'download' shouldn't be an amount more than 10MB.

            I hope this makes sense! I just want to stream data. This shouldn't be that hard.

            Edit:

            Some people may want to close this and claim the question is a duplicate. I have forgotten to include something very important: I am currently using the newest, mot up-to-date azure-sdk version. My azure-storage-blob package's version is 12.5.0. There have been other questions similar to what I have asked for severely outdated versions. I have searched for other answers, but haven't found any for 12+ versions.

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Mar-15 at 02:53

            If you want to download azure blob in chunk, process every chunk data and upload every chunk data to azure blob, please refer to the follwing code

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/66617548

            QUESTION

            IBP Python SDK functionality for invoking chaincode transactions
            Asked 2021-Mar-11 at 18:43

            Looking at the current IBP Python SDK ( https://github.com/IBM-Blockchain/ibp-python-sdk ) I can't find any calls for invoking chaincode transactions (adding data in the ledger and querying it). Will this functionality be added later?

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Mar-11 at 18:43

            This SDK is only for the managing of the IBM Blockchain Platform itself and is not an SDK for interacting with a Hyperledger Fabric network created on IBM Blockchain Platform. You should look to the various hyperlegdger fabric SDKs themselves for that capability. IBM provides documentation about this which you can find here https://cloud.ibm.com/docs/blockchain?topic=blockchain-ibp-console-app

            Note that it doesn't list the hyperledger fabric Python SDK because it's not recommended for use with IBM Blockchain Platform.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/66584424

            QUESTION

            Pepper animations not working in simulation using python SDK
            Asked 2021-Mar-06 at 17:28

            This question is similar to Naoqi pepper python SDK

            But unfortunately the solution doesn't work. I have not capitalised animation and yet have the same problem still, have tried copying the exact path and all other solutions.

            Do animations not work with the SDK in simulation? I am unable to test on the real robot due to COVID.

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Mar-06 at 17:28

            The virtual robot does not have any applications (pre)installled, thus even no animations. The only application running, when you use Choregraphe, is .lastUploadedChoregrapheBehavior. If you want to use ALAnimationPlayer to run an animation in the virtual robot, you can:

            • create a new (extra) behavior with the animation in your application. This behavior can be named e.g. anim. It can contain e.g. the Happy box for Pepper.
            • refer to the anim behavior in the PythonScript (in the default behavior):

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/66444226

            QUESTION

            How to capture an order from PayPal in Python
            Asked 2021-Mar-04 at 22:20

            I've been trying to understand how exactly the capturing process of the PayPal SDK works. I'm currently working on a Python Kivy Mobile App with a PayPal Checkout option. I've been trying to make this example here to work: https://github.com/paypal/Checkout-Python-SDK#capturing-an-order but get this error when executed:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Mar-04 at 22:20

            The capture should only be done after the customer goes through an approval flow (at PayPal) and returns to your app. If you specify a return_url when you create the order, this can be set to a deeplink back to your app, which should be an intent that then calls the function that only then does the capture.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/66483873

            QUESTION

            Change model file save location on AWS SageMaker Training Job
            Asked 2021-Jan-13 at 13:47

            I am trying to run custom python/sklearn sagemaker script on AWS, basically learning from these examples: https://github.com/aws/amazon-sagemaker-examples/blob/master/sagemaker-python-sdk/scikit_learn_randomforest/Sklearn_on_SageMaker_end2end.ipynb

            All works fine, if define the arguments, train the model and output the file:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jan-13 at 13:47

            You can use parameter output_path when you define the estimator. If you use the model_dir I guess you have to create that bucket beforehand, but you have the advantage that artifacts can be saved in real time during the training (if the instance has rights on S3). You can take a look at my repo for this specific case.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/65699980

            QUESTION

            "Dereference" a sub-resource in the Azure Python SDK return value
            Asked 2020-Dec-21 at 05:44

            I would like to retrieve the public IP address associated with a given network interface. I need to do something like

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2020-Dec-21 at 05:44

            Update:

            Due to this issue: public_ip_address method within NetworkManagementClient will not return values, we cannot fetch the ip address from PublicIPAddress.

            So currently, you can use any other workaround, For example:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/65261367

            Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network

            Vulnerabilities

            No vulnerabilities reported

            Install python-sdk

            You can install using 'pip install python-sdk' or download it from GitHub, PyPI.
            You can use python-sdk like any standard Python library. You will need to make sure that you have a development environment consisting of a Python distribution including header files, a compiler, pip, and git installed. Make sure that your pip, setuptools, and wheel are up to date. When using pip it is generally recommended to install packages in a virtual environment to avoid changes to the system.

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            For any new features, suggestions and bugs create an issue on GitHub. If you have any questions check and ask questions on community page Stack Overflow .
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