pip install aica-api
The AICA API client module provides simple functions for interacting with the AICA Core through a REST API.
Refer to https://docs.aica.tech for more information about the AICA System.
from aica_api.client import AICA
aica = AICA()
if aica.check():
print(f"Connected to AICA Core version {aica.core_version()}")
The client object can be used to easily make API calls to monitor or control AICA Core. For example:
aica.set_application('my_application.yaml')
aica.start_application()
aica.load_component('my_component')
aica.unload_component('my_component')
aica.stop_application()
To check the status of predicates and conditions, the following blocking methods can be employed:
if aica.wait_for_condition('timer_1_active', timeout=10.0):
print('Condition is true!')
else:
print('Timed out before condition was true')
if aica.wait_for_component_predicate('timer_1', 'is_timed_out', timeout=10.0):
print('Predicate is true!')
else:
print('Timed out before predicate was true')
Refer to the available methods of the AICA
client class for more advanced usage.
By default, the API server of AICA Core is available on the default address localhost:8080
. Depending on the network
configuration, the URL or port number of the AICA Core instance may be different.
For example, when using AICA Launcher on macOS, the API is bound to a different, randomly generated port to avoid conflict with reserved ports. Use the "Open in browser" button from Launcher to open AICA Studio in the browser and copy the port from the url.
from aica_api.client import AICA
# connect to a non-default port on the local network
aica = AICA(port=55000)
# or connect to a different host address entirely
aica = AICA(url='192.168.0.1', port=55005)
For connecting to AICA Core v4.3.0 and later, an API key is required for authentication.
API keys can be generated in AICA Studio with configurable access scopes. Note that available scopes are limited to those of the currently logged-in user. A generated API key is only shown once and should be kept secret. For example, it may be exported as an environment variable. The following example key is shown for demonstrative purposes only:
export AICA_API_KEY=64ce9e8f-aa46-4ba7-814f-f169c01c957e.RwoH6A1Ti5poNKSizoWrcBEYzh7AkB0kpMq1TR59t6os
The API key can then be provided to the constructor with the api_key
keyword argument:
import os
from aica_api.client import AICA
AICA_API_KEY = os.getenv('AICA_API_KEY')
aica = AICA(api_key=AICA_API_KEY)
The latest version of this AICA API client will generally support the latest AICA Core version. Major version changes to the API client or to AICA Core indicate breaking changes and are not always backwards compatible. To interact with older versions of AICA Core, it may be necessary to install older versions of the client. Use the following compatability table to determine which client version to use.
AICA Core version | API protocol version | Matching Python client version |
---|---|---|
>= 4.3 |
v2 |
>= 3.1.0 |
>= 4.0, < 4.3 |
v2 |
>= 3.0.0 |
3.x |
v2 |
>= 2.0.0 |
2.x |
v2 |
1.2.0 |
<= 1.x |
v1 |
Unsupported |
The API protocol version is a namespace for the endpoints. Endpoints under the v2
protocol have a /v2/...
prefix in
the URL. A change to the protocol version indicates a fundamental change to the API structure or behavior.
Between major version changes, minor updates to the AICA Core version and Python client versions may introduce new endpoints and functions respectively. If a function requires a feature that the detected AICA Core version does not yet support (as is the case when the Python client version is more up-to-date than the targeted AICA Core), then calling that function will return None with a warning.
AICA Core versions v1.x
and earlier were alpha and pre-alpha versions that are no longer supported.
AICA Core version v2.x
was a beta version that introduced a new API structure under the v2
protocol namespace.
In AICA Core v3.x
, live data streaming for predicates and conditions switched from using raw websockets to Socket.IO
for data transfer. This constituted a breaking change to API clients, but the overall structure of the REST API remained
the same, and so the API protocol version is still v2
.
AICA Core versions v4.0
through v4.2
keep the same protocol structure as before under the v2
namespace. The
primary breaking change from the point of the API server and client is that the /version
endpoint now returns the
version of AICA Core, rather than the specific version of the API server subpackage inside core. These have historically
carried the same major version, but in future the core version may have major updates without any breaking changes to
the actual API server version.
AICA Core versions v4.3
and later introduce authentication and access scopes to the API server. An API key with
appropriate scopes is required to access the respective endpoints and functionalities.
Recent client versions include a check()
method to assess the client version and API compatability.
from aica_api.client import AICA
aica = AICA()
# check compatability between the client version and API version
if aica.check():
print('Client and server versions are compatible')
else:
print('Client and server versions are incompatible')
The latest client versions also include the following functions to check the configuration details manually.
from aica_api.client import AICA
aica = AICA()
# get the current version of this client
print(aica.client_version())
# get the current version of AICA Core (e.g. "4.0.0")
print(aica.core_version())
# get the current API protocol version (e.g. "v2")
print(aica.protocol())
# get the specific version of the API server running in AICA Core (e.g. "4.0.1")
# (generally only needed for debugging purposes)
print(aica.api_version())