Python client library for Asana.
Create a client using your Asana Personal Access Token:
client = asana.Client.access_token('PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN')
Asana supports OAuth 2. asana
handles some of the details of the OAuth flow for you.
Create a client using your OAuth Client ID and secret:
client = asana.Client.oauth(
client_id='ASANA_CLIENT_ID',
client_secret='ASANA_CLIENT_SECRET',
redirect_uri='https://yourapp.com/auth/asana/callback'
)
Redirect the user to the authorization URL obtained from the client's session
object:
(url, state) = client.session.authorization_url()
When the user is redirected back to your callback, check the state
URL parameter matches, then pass the code
parameter to obtain a bearer token:
if request.params['state'] == state:
token = client.session.fetch_token(code=request.params['code'])
# ...
else:
# error! possible CSRF attack
Note: if you're writing a non-browser-based application (e.x. a command line tool) you can use the special redirect URI urn:ietf:wg:oauth:2.0:oob
to prompt the user to copy and paste the code into the application.
The client's methods are divided into several resources: attachments
, events
, jobs
, portfolios
, portfolio_memberships
, projects
, project_memberships
, stories
, tags
, tasks
, teams
, users
, user_task_lists
, and workspaces
.
Methods that return a single object return that object directly:
me = client.users.get_user('me')
print(f'Hello {me['name']}')
workspace_id = me['workspaces'][0]['gid']
project = client.projects.create_in_workspace(workspace_id, { 'name': 'new project' })
print(f'Created project with id: {project['gid']}')
Methods that return multiple items (e.x. get_tasks
, get_projects
, get_portfolios
, etc.) return a page iterator by default. See the "Collections" section.
See the gen folder for methods available for each resource.
Various options can be set globally on the Client.DEFAULTS
object, per-client on client.options
, or per-request as additional named arguments. For example:
# global:
asana.Client.DEFAULT_OPTIONS['page_size'] = 100
# per-client:
client.options['page_size'] = 100
# per-request:
client.tasks.get_tasks({ 'project': 1234 }, page_size=100)
base_url
(default: "https://app.asana.com/api/1.0"): API endpoint base URL to connect tomax_retries
(default: 5): number to times to retry if API rate limit is reached or a server error occures. Rate limit retries delay until the rate limit expires, server errors exponentially backoff starting with a 1 second delay.full_payload
(default: False): return the entire JSON response instead of the 'data' propery (default for collection methods andevents.get
)fields
andexpand
: see API documentation
Collections (methods returning an array as its 'data' property):
iterator_type
(default: "items"): specifies which type of iterator (or not) to return. Valid values are "items" andNone
.item_limit
(default: None): limits the number of items of a collection to return.page_size
(default: 50): limits the number of items per page to fetch at a time.offset
: offset token returned by previous calls to the same method (inresponse['next_page']['offset']
)
Events:
poll_interval
(default: 5): polling interval for getting new events viaevents.get_next
andevents.get_iterator
sync
: sync token returned by previous calls toevents.get
(inresponse['sync']
)
You will receive warning logs if performing requests that may be affected by a deprecation. The warning contains a link that explains the deprecation.
If you receive one of these warnings, you should:
- Read about the deprecation.
- Resolve sections of your code that would be affected by the deprecation.
- Add the deprecation flag to your "asana-enable" header.
You can place it on the client for all requests, or place it on a single request.
client.headers={'asana-enable': 'string_ids'}
or
me = client.users.get_user('me', headers={'asana-enable': 'string_ids'})
If you would rather suppress these warnings, you can set
client.LOG_ASANA_CHANGE_WARNINGS = False
By default, methods that return a collection of objects return an item iterator:
workspaces = client.workspaces.get_workspaces(item_limit=1)
print(next(workspaces))
print(next(workspaces)) # raises StopIteration if there are no more items
Or:
for workspace in client.workspaces.get_workspaces()
print(workspace)
You can also use the raw API to fetch a page at a time:
offset = None
while True:
page = client.workspaces.get_workspaces(offset=offset, iterator_type=None)
print(page['data'])
if 'next_page' in page:
offset = page['next_page']['offset']
else:
break
Feel free to fork and submit pull requests for the code! Please follow the existing code as an example of style and make sure that all your code passes lint and tests.
The specific Asana resource classes under gen
(_Tag
, _Workspace
, _Task
, etc) are
generated code, hence they shouldn't be modified by hand.
Repo Owners Only. Take the following steps to issue a new release of the library.
Run deploy.py [major|minor|patch]
. See deploy.py -h
for additional info.
- Merge in the desired changes into the
master
branch and commit them. - Clone the repo, work on master.
- Edit package version in
asana/__init__.py
and./VERSION
to indicate the semantic version change. - Commit the change
- Tag the commit with
v
plus the same version number you set in the file.git tag v1.2.3
- Push changes to origin, including tags:
git push origin master --tags
GitHub Actions will automatically build and deploy the tagged release to PyPI.