rawes is an elasticsearch driver for Python. It provides a small level of abstraction above the requests library - enough abstraction to be useful, but not so much to obscure elasticsearch's great native api
- elasticsearch native API support
- gzip over HTTP support
- Thrift support
$ pip install rawes
Create a connection to elasticsearch
import rawes
es = rawes.Elastic('localhost:9200')
Search for a document
es.get('tweets/tweet/_search', data={
'query' : {
'match_all' : {}
}
})
The rawes.Elastic constructor takes the following parameters (defaults shown):
rawes.Elastic(
url='localhost:9200', # Path and port to elasticsearch service. Ports 9500-9600 will use thrift; others http
path='', # http url path (for example, 'tweets/tweet/_search')
timeout=30, # Timeout in seconds
connection_type=None, # Set to 'http' or 'thrift' to explicitly set a protocol
)
An instance of rawes.Elastic ('es' in this case) has methods for get, post, put, delete, and head (for each http verb). Each method takes the following parameters (defaults shown):
es.get(
path='', # HTTP URL path
data='', # http body. can be either a string or a python dictionary (will automatically be converted to JSON)
params={}, # HTTP URL params passed as a python dictionary
headers={}, # HTTP headers as a python dictionary
**kwargs # HTTP only: any additional parameters you wish to pass to the python 'requests' library (for example, basic auth)
)
Create a new document in the twitter index of type tweet with id 1
es.put('tweets/tweet/1', data={
'user' : 'dwnoble',
'post_date' : '2012-8-27T08:00:30Z',
'message' : 'Tweeting about elasticsearch'
})
es.put('blogs/post/2', data={
'user' : 'dan',
'post_date' : '2012-8-27T09:30:03Z',
'title' : 'Elasticsearch',
'body' : 'Blogging about elasticsearch'
})
Search for a document, specifying http params
es.get('tweets/tweet/_search', data={
'query' : {
'match_all' : {}
}
}, params= {
'size': 2
})
Search for a document with a JSON string
es.get('tweets,blogs/_search', data="""
{
"query" : {
"match_all" : {}
}
}
""")
Update a document
es.put('someindex/sometype/123', data={
'value' : 100,
'other' : 'stuff'
})
es.post('someindex/sometype/123/_update', data={
'script' : 'ctx._source.value += value',
'params' : {
'value' : 50
}
})
Delete a document
es.delete('tweets/tweet/1')
Bulk load
bulk_body = '''
{"index" : {}}
{"key":"value1"}
{"index" : {}}
{"key":"value2"}
{"index" : {}}
{"key":"value3"}
'''
es.post('someindex/sometype/_bulk', data=bulk_body)
bulk_list = [
{"index" : {}},
{"key":"value4"},
{"index" : {}},
{"key":"value5"},
{"index" : {}},
{"key":"value6"}
]
# Remember to include the trailing \n character for bulk inserts
bulk_body_2 = '\n'.join(map(json.dumps, bulk_list))+'\n'
es.post('someindex/sometype/_bulk', data=bulk_body_2)
Instead of setting the first argument of a es.<http verb> call to the HTTP URL path, you can also use python attributes and item accessors to build up the url path. For example:
es.post('tweets/tweet/', data={
'user' : 'dwnoble',
'post_date' : '2012-8-27T09:15:59',
'message' : 'More tweets about elasticsearch'
})
Becomes:
es.tweets.tweet.post(data={
'user' : 'dwnoble',
'post_date' : '2012-8-27T09:15:59',
'message' : 'More tweets about elasticsearch'
})
Or using item accessors ([] notation). This can be useful for characters that are not allowed in python attributes:
es['tweets']['tweet'].post(data={
'user' : 'dwnoble',
'post_date' : '2012-8-27T09:15:59',
'message' : 'More tweets about elasticsearch'
})
More examples:
Searching the "tweets" index for documents of type "tweets"
es.tweets.tweet._search.get(data={'query' : {'match_all' : {} }})
Searching the "tweets" and "blogs" index for documents of any type using a JSON strings
es['tweets,blogs']._search.get(data='{"query" : {"match_all" : {}}}')
By default, rawes will encode datetimes (timezone required!) to UTC ISO8601 strings with 'second' precision before handing the JSON off to elasticsearch. If elasticsearch has no mapping defined, this will result in the default mapping of 'dateOptionalTime.'
Timezones are required for this automatic serialization: you may want to use a python module like python-dateutil or pytz to make your life easier.
from datetime import datetime
from dateutil import tz
eastern_timezone = tz.gettz('America/New_York')
es.put('tweets/tweet/99', data={
'user' : 'dwnoble',
'post_date' : datetime(2012, 8, 27, 8, 0, 30, tzinfo=eastern_timezone),
'message' : 'Tweeting about elasticsearch'
})
es.get('tweets/tweet/99')['_source']['post_date']
# Returns:
u'2012-08-27T12:00:30Z'
Alternatively, you can specify a custom JSON encoder using the json_encoder parameter:
from datetime import datetime
from dateutil import tz
eastern_timezone = tz.gettz('America/New_York')
def encode_custom(obj):
if isinstance(obj, datetime):
return obj.astimezone(tz.tzutc()).strftime('%Y-%m-%d')
raise TypeError(repr(obj) + " is not JSON serializable")
es.put('tweets/tweet/445', data={
'user' : 'dwnoble',
'post_date' : datetime(2012, 11, 12, 9, 45, 45, tzinfo=eastern_timezone),
'message' : 'Tweeting about elasticsearch'
}, json_encoder=encode_custom)
es.get('tweets/tweet/445')['_source']['post_date']
# Returns:
u'2012-11-12'
Before thrift will work with rawes, you must install the thrift python module
$ pip install thrift
By default, connections on ports between 9500 and 9600 will use thrift
import rawes
es_thrift = rawes.Elastic('localhost:9500')
If you are using thrift on a non standard port, specify connection_type='thrift' as a parameter
import rawes
es_thrift = rawes.Elastic('localhost:8500', connection_type='thrift')
rawes' unit tests require the python thrift module to run:
$ pip install thrift
Run tests:
$ python -m unittest tests
Apache 2.0 License