aionotion
is a Python 3, asyncio-friendly library for interacting with Notion
home monitoring sensors.
pip install aionotion
aionotion
is currently supported on:
- Python 3.10
- Python 3.11
- Python 3.12
import asyncio
from aiohttp import ClientSession
from aionotion import async_get_client_with_credentials
async def main() -> None:
"""Create the aiohttp session and run the example."""
client = await async_get_client_with_credentials(
"<EMAIL>", "<PASSWORD>", session=session
)
# Get the UUID of the authenticated user:
client.user_uuid
# >>> xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx
# Get the current refresh token of the authenticated user (BE CAREFUL):
client.refresh_token
# >>> abcde12345
# Get all "households" associated with the account:
systems = await client.system.async_all()
# >>> [System(...), System(...), ...]
# Get a system by ID:
system = await client.system.async_get(12345)
# >>> System(...)
# Get all bridges associated with the account:
bridges = await client.bridge.async_all()
# >>> [Bridge(...), Bridge(...), ...]
# Get a bridge by ID:
bridge = await client.bridge.async_get(12345)
# >>> Bridge(...)
# Get all sensors:
sensors = await client.sensor.async_all()
# >>> [Sensor(...), Sensor(...), ...]
# Get a sensor by ID:
sensor = await client.sensor.async_get(12345)
# >>> Sensor(...)
# Get "listeners" (conditions that a sensor is monitoring) for all sensors:
listeners = await client.listener.async_all()
# >>> [Listener(...), Listener(...), ...]
# Get all listener definitions supported by Notion:
definitions = await client.listener.async_definitions()
# >>> [ListenerDefinition(...), ListenerDefinition(...), ...]
# Get user info:
user_info = await client.user.async_info()
# >>> User(...)
# Get user preferences:
user_preferences = await client.user.async_preferences()
# >>> UserPreferences(...)
asyncio.run(main())
During the normal course of operations, aionotion
will automatically maintain a refresh
token and use it when needed. At times, you may wish to manage that token yourself (so
that you can use it later)–aionotion
provides a few useful capabilities there.
aionotion
allows implementers to defining callbacks that get called when a new refresh
token is generated. These callbacks accept a single string parameter (the refresh
token):
import asyncio
from aiohttp import ClientSession
from aionotion import async_get_client_with_credentials
async def main() -> None:
"""Create the aiohttp session and run the example."""
client = await async_get_client_with_credentials(
"<EMAIL>", "<PASSWORD>", session=session
)
def do_somethng_with_refresh_token(refresh_token: str) -> None:
"""Do something interesting."""
pass
# Attach the callback to the client:
remove_callback = client.add_refresh_token_callback(do_somethng_with_refresh_token)
# Later, if you want to remove the callback:
remove_callback()
asyncio.run(main())
All of previous examples retrieved an authenticated client with
async_get_client_with_credentials
. However, implementers may also create an
authenticated client by providing a previously retrieved user UUID and refresh token:
import asyncio
from aiohttp import ClientSession
from aionotion import async_get_client_with_refresh_token
async def main() -> None:
"""Create the aiohttp session and run the example."""
async with ClientSession() as session:
# Create a Notion API client:
client = await async_get_client_with_refresh_token(
"<USER UUID>", "<REFRESH TOKEN>", session=session
)
# Get to work...
asyncio.run(main())
By default, the library creates a new connection to Notion with each coroutine. If you
are calling a large number of coroutines (or merely want to squeeze out every second of
runtime savings possible), an aiohttp
ClientSession
can be used for
connection pooling:
import asyncio
from aiohttp import ClientSession
from aionotion import async_get_client_with_credentials
async def main() -> None:
"""Create the aiohttp session and run the example."""
async with ClientSession() as session:
# Create a Notion API client:
client = await async_get_client_with_credentials(
"<EMAIL>", "<PASSWORD>", session=session
)
# Get to work...
asyncio.run(main())
Check out the examples, the tests, and the source files themselves for method signatures and more examples.
Thanks to all of our contributors so far!
- Check for open features/bugs or initiate a discussion on one.
- Fork the repository.
- (optional, but highly recommended) Create a virtual environment:
python3 -m venv .venv
- (optional, but highly recommended) Enter the virtual environment:
source ./.venv/bin/activate
- Install the dev environment:
script/setup
- Code your new feature or bug fix on a new branch.
- Write tests that cover your new functionality.
- Run tests and ensure 100% code coverage:
poetry run pytest --cov aionotion tests
- Update
README.md
with any new documentation. - Submit a pull request!