Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: aio-geojson-query
Version: 0.0.4
Summary: A generalized client for aio-geojson-client
Home-page: https://github.com/exxamalte/python-aio-geojson-client
Author: Chris F Ravenscroft
Author-email: chris@voilaweb.com
License: MIT
Description: # python-aio-geojson-query
        
        This library is my attempt at creating a generalized client for the [aio-geojson-client](https://github.com/exxamalte/python-aio-geojson-client) library.
        
        Of course, this requires some uncomfortable contorting as the properties in a GeoJson feed are free-form (see [rfc7946](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7946))
        
        This is currently under development, so apologies for the bugs.
        
        ## Installation
        `pip install aio-geojson-query`
        
        ## Usage
        See below for examples of how this library can be used. After instantiating a 
        particular class - feed or feed manager - and supplying the required parameters, 
        you can call `update` to retrieve the feed data. The return value 
        will be a tuple of a status code and the actual data in the form of a list of 
        feed entries specific to the selected feed.
        
        ### Status Codes
        
        * _OK_: Update went fine and data was retrieved. The library may still 
          return empty data, for example because no entries fulfilled the filter 
          criteria.
        * _OK_NO_DATA_: Update went fine but no data was retrieved, for example 
          because the server indicated that there was not update since the last request.
        * _ERROR_: Something went wrong during the update
        
        ### Parameters
        
        | Parameter          | Description                               |
        |--------------------|-------------------------------------------|
        | `home_coordinates` | Coordinates (tuple of latitude/longitude) |
        
        #### Supported Filters
        
        | Filter   |                   | Description                                                  |
        | -------- | ----------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------ |
        | Radius   | `filter_radius`   | Radius in kilometers around the home coordinates in which events from feed are included. |
        | Criteria | `filter_criteria` | Array of filtering conditions.                               |
        
        #### Criteria Syntax
        
        At this time, criteria are pretty simple and are applied using an `or`operator. Therefore, properties matching any function will be a match.
        
        Available operators are: `==`, `!=`, `<`, `>`.
        
        The latter two will always compare the property as a float value.
        
        ### Mappings
        
        Since this library has no knowledge of the feeds being retrieved, this is used to map property names. Mappings are passed as an additional argument called, of course, `mappings`
        
        #### Mapping Names
        
        By default, mappings are as simple as: the first argument is known, in the feed, as the second argument.
        
        For instance, let's say you are looking for the `date` mapping and, in the feed, that field is called `published_date` -- you will want to help the library find it by passing this mapping:
        
        `"date": "published_date"`
        
        #### Parametric Mapping
        
        Sometimes, a value can only be extracted from a complex property. For instance, `location` may only be available inside the `description` property. These mappings are denoted using `~~` followed by the regular expression that will extract the value:
        
        `"location": "description~~LOCATION: (?P<{}>[^<]+) <br"`
        
        #### Mandatory and default mappings
        
        Some properties are mandatory. For instance, if the library does not find the `date` property, it will not be able to synchronize the feed properly.
        
        If you do not specify mappings for these variables, the library may attempt to guess what their names could be.
        
        For instance:
        
        | Property      |                                | Guessed Names                              |
        | ------------- | ------------------------------ | ------------------------------------------ |
        | `id`          | Each entry's unique identifier | `id`, `guid` (@see FeedManager)            |
        | `date`        | Mandatory                      | `time`, `date`                             |
        | `dateformat`  | A pseudo mapping               | Helps the library parse the date property. |
        | `description` |                                | `description`, `details`                   |
        
        #### Date Parsing
        
        The `dateformat` pseudo mapping can be:
        
        | Format              |      | Meaning                                                    |
        | ------------------- | ---- | ---------------------------------------------------------- |
        | `seconds`           |      | This is an epoch timestamp,                                |
        | `milliseconds`      |      | A timestamp in milliseconds.                               |
        | `iso`               |      | ISO-3601 or RFC-3339 compatible format. Allows variations. |
        | An arbitrary string |      | Used by the library in the `strptime` function.            |
        
        ## Example
        
        I recommend checking out [python-aio-geojson-nsw-rfs-incidents](https://github.com/exxamalte/python-aio-geojson-nsw-rfs-incidents) which is a library dedicated to retrieving fire incidents information, written by the same author as the library I am creating this middleware for. You may be interested in comparing that library's example code to the one below, which does the same thing (then checks for earthquakes when done):
        
        ```python
        import asyncio
        from aiohttp import ClientSession
        from aio_geojson_query import GeoJsonQueryFeed
        
        
        async def main() -> None:
            async with ClientSession() as websession:
                # NSW Incidents Feed
                # Home Coordinates: Latitude: -33.0, Longitude: 150.0
                # Filter radius: 50 km
                # Filter categories: 'Advice'
                feed = GeoJsonQueryFeed(websession,
                                        "https://www.rfs.nsw.gov.au/feeds/majorIncidents.json",
                                        (-33.0, 150.0),
                                        filter_radius=500,
                                        filter_criteria=[
                                            ['category', '==', 'Advice']
                                            ],
                                        mappings={
                                            "dateformat": "iso",
                                            "date": "pubDate",
                                            "location": "description~~LOCATION: (?P<{}>[^<]+) <br"
                                        })
                status, entries = await feed.update()
                print(status)
                for entry in entries:
                    print("%s [%s]: @%s" % (entry.title, entry.publication_date, entry.location))
        
                # Earthquakes, magnitude at least 3, around Los Angeles
                feed2 = GeoJsonQueryFeed(websession,
                                        "https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/feed/v1.0/summary/all_month.geojson",
                                        (34.052235, -118.243683),
                                        filter_criteria=[
                                            ['mag', '>', '3.0']
                                            ],
                                        filter_radius=50,
                                        mappings={
                                            "dateformat": "milliseconds",
                                            "date": "updated"
                                        })
                status, entries = await feed2.update()
                print(status)
                for entry in entries:
                    print("%s [%s]: @%s" % (entry.title, entry.publication_date, entry.title))
        
        
        asyncio.get_event_loop().run_until_complete(main())
        ```
        
        
        ## Feed Manager
        
        The Feed Manager helps managing feed updates over time, by notifying the 
        consumer of the feed about new feed entries, updates and removed entries 
        compared to the last feed update.
        
        * If the current feed update is the first one, then all feed entries will be 
          reported as new. The feed manager will keep track of all feed entries' 
          external IDs that it has successfully processed.
        * If the current feed update is not the first one, then the feed manager will 
          produce three sets:
          * Feed entries that were not in the previous feed update but are in the 
            current feed update will be reported as new.
          * Feed entries that were in the previous feed update and are still in the 
            current feed update will be reported as to be updated.
          * Feed entries that were in the previous feed update but are not in the 
            current feed update will be reported to be removed.
        * If the current update fails, then all feed entries processed in the previous
          feed update will be reported to be removed.
        
        After a successful update from the feed, the feed manager provides two
        different dates:
        
        * `last_update` will be the timestamp of the last update from the feed 
          irrespective of whether it was successful or not.
        * `last_update_successful` will be the timestamp of the last successful update 
          from the feed. This date may be useful if the consumer of this library wants 
          to treat intermittent errors from feed updates differently.
        * `last_timestamp` (optional, depends on the feed data) will be the latest 
          timestamp extracted from the feed data. 
          This requires that the underlying feed data actually contains a suitable 
          date. This date may be useful if the consumer of this library wants to 
          process feed entries differently if they haven't actually been updated.
        
        ### Specify `id`
        
        When in doubt... make sure you specify a mapping for `id` -- if only one entry is returned by the feed manager when you expect multiple entries, it is likely that the feed entries are not properly identified. If necessary, specify a mapping for `id` to a property that is unique to each entry. For instance, in the USGS earthquake feed, such an entry is `code`.
        
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
