A simple framework for bootstrapping your Crypto Trading Bots on Python 3.6+
Supported by Buda.com
Disclaimer: Still at an early stage of development. Rapidly evolving APIs.
Trading-Bots is a general purpose mini-framework for developing an algorithmic trading bot on crypto currencies, thus it makes no assumption of your trading goals.
- macOS, Windows or Linux
- Python 3.6 or 3.7
To install Trading-Bots, simply use pipenv
(or pip
, of course):
$ pipenv install trading-bots
Remember to activate the virtual environment
$ pipenv shell
Let's learn by example creating a simple bot that fetches your Bitcoin balance on Buda.com!
We'll assume you have Trading-Bots installed already, and your virtual environment is active.
If this is your first time, you’ll have to take care of some initial setup. Namely, you’ll need to auto-generate some code that establishes a Trading-Bots project.
From the command line, cd into a directory where you’d like to store your bots, then run the following command:
$ bots-admin startproject
TRADING BOTS 🤖
===============
Name [MyAwesomeProject]: MyProject
Directory [.]: .
This will create a my_project directory in your current directory.
Let’s look at what startproject
created:
root/
bots.py
secrets.yml
settings.yml
my_project/
__init__.py
These files are:
- The outer
root/
directory is just a container for your project. Its name doesn't matter to Trading-Bots; you can rename it to anything you like. bots.py
: A handy CLI that lets you interact with this Trading-Bots project in various ways.secrets.yml
: A configuration file to store your project secrets like API keys and wallets DON'T SHARE YOUR SECRETS WITH ANYONE!settings.yml
: Global settings for this project.- The inner
my_project/
directory is the actual Python package for your project. my_project/__init__.py
: An empty file that tells Python that this directory should be considered a Python package.
Now that your "project" is set up, you're set to start doing work.
Let's create a simple bot that fetches your Bitcoin balance on Buda.com!
Each bot you write in Trading-Bots consists of a Python package that follows a certain convention. Trading-Bots comes with a utility that automatically generates the basic directory structure of a bot, so you can focus on writing code rather than creating directories.
Your bots can live anywhere on your Python path. In this tutorial, we’ll create our bot as a submodule of my_project
.
To create your bot, make sure you're in the same directory as bots.py
and type this command:
$ python bots.py createbot
TRADING BOTS 🤖
===============
Name [MyAwesomeBot]: MyBot
Directory (your projects dir): my_project
That’ll create a directory my_bot
, which is laid out like this:
my_bot/
__init__.py
bot.py
configs/
default.yml
This directory structure will house the MyBot
bot.
You'll also have to "install" your new bot, by adding it to the project's settings.yml
file.
settings.yml
installed_bots:
- my_project.my_bot.bot.MyBot
Configure you Buda.com account's API_KEY
and API_SECRET
onto secrets.yml
credentials:
You can request your API credentials on you account's profile on Buda.com
secrets.yml
credentials:
Buda:
key: MY_API_KEY
secret: MY_API_SECRET
Now let's write the code to fetch the Bitcoin balance on Buda.com implementing the Bot's algorithm. The Bot's logic resides in the my_project/my_bot/bot.py
module created by the createbot
command:
my_project/my_bot/bot.py
# Base class that all Bots must inherit from
from trading_bots.bots import Bot
# The settings module contains all values from settings.yml and secrets.yml
from trading_bots.conf import settings
# API Wrapper for Buda.com
from trading_api_wrappers import Buda
class MyBot(Bot):
# The label is a unique identifier you assign to your bot on Trading-Bots
label = 'MyBot'
def _setup(self, config):
# Get API_KEY and API_SECRET from credentials
credentials = settings.credentials['Buda']
key = credentials['key']
secret = credentials['secret']
# Initialize a Buda Auth client
self.buda = Buda.Auth(key, secret)
def _algorithm(self):
# Fetch the Bitcoin balance from Buda.com
balance = self.buda.balance('BTC')
# Log the Bitcoin balance
self.log.info(f'I have {balance.amount.amount} BTC')
def _abort(self):
# Abort logic, runs on exception
self.log.error(f'Something went wrong with MyBot!')
Run the bot!
$ python bots.py run MyBot
TRADING BOTS 🤖
===============
Global settings
- Settings files: None
- Logs file: log.txt
Bot: MyBot
- Config file: default
Starting MyBot 1530691595: 2018-07-04 08:06:35
I have 1.0 BTC
Run time: .9972 seconds
Ending MyBot 1530691595: 2018-07-04 08:06:36
Or put it to work in a loop!
$ python bots.py loop MyBot --interval 5
TRADING BOTS 🤖
===============
Global settings
- Settings files: None
- Logs file: log.txt
Bot: MyBot
- Config file: default
- Interval: 5s
Starting MyBot 1530692725: 2018-07-04 08:25:25
I have 1.0 BTC
Run time: 1.3611 seconds
Ending MyBot 1530692725: 2018-07-04 08:25:26
Starting MyBot 1530692735: 2018-07-04 08:25:31
I have 1.0 BTC
Run time: 1.3632 seconds
Ending MyBot 1530692735: 2018-07-04 08:25:32
We can make our Bot a little more modular, let's now fetch our Ethereum balance adding a currency
key on MyBot
default config file on my_project/my_bot/configs/default.yml
:
my_project/my_bot/configs/default.yml
currency: ETH
Now use the new currency
config on MyBot
by modifying the Bot's logic:
my_project/my_bot/bot.py
from trading_bots.bots import Bot
from trading_bots.conf import settings
from trading_api_wrappers import Buda
class MyBot(Bot):
label = 'MyBot'
def _setup(self, config):
# Get currency from config
self.currency = config['currency']
# Get API_KEY and API_SECRET from credentials
credentials = settings.credentials['Buda']
key = credentials['key']
secret = credentials['secret']
# Initialize a Buda Auth client
self.buda = Buda.Auth(key, secret)
def _algorithm(self):
# Fetch the currency balance from Buda.com
balance = self.buda.balance(self.currency)
# Log the currency balance
self.log.info(f'I have {balance.amount.amount} {self.currency}')
def _abort(self):
# Abort logic, runs on exception
self.log.error(f'Something went wrong with MyBot!')
Run the bot!
$ python bots.py run MyBot
TRADING BOTS 🤖
===============
Global settings
- Settings files: None
- Logs file: log.txt
Bot: MyBot
- Config file: default
Starting MyBot 1530691595: 2018-07-04 08:06:35
I have 5.0 ETH
Run time: .9972 seconds
Ending MyBot 1530691595: 2018-07-04 08:06:36
Or put it to work in a loop!
$ python bots.py loop MyBot --interval 10
TRADING BOTS 🤖
===============
Global settings
- Settings files: None
- Logs file: log.txt
Bot: MyBot
- Config file: default
- Interval: 5s
Starting MyBot 1530692725: 2018-07-04 08:25:25
I have 5.0 ETH
Run time: 1.3611 seconds
Ending MyBot 1530692725: 2018-07-04 08:25:26
Starting MyBot 1530692735: 2018-07-04 08:25:31
I have 5.0 ETH
Run time: 1.3632 seconds
Ending MyBot 1530692735: 2018-07-04 08:25:32
Trading-Bots comes with a handy CLI
named... bots-admin
!
$ python bots.py startproject
TRADING BOTS 🤖
===============
Name [MyAwesomeProject]: MyProject
Directory [.]: .
Success: 'MyProject' project was successfully created on '.'
startproject
creates a Trading-Bots project directory structure for the given project NAME
in the current directory .
or optionally in the given DIRECTORY
.
project_dir/
- project_name/
- bots.py
- secrets.yml
- settings.yml
$ python bots.py createbot
TRADING BOTS 🤖
===============
Name [MyAwesomeBot]: MyBot
Directory (your projects dir): my_project
Success: 'MyBot' bot was successfully created on 'my_project'
createbot
creates a Bot's directory structure for the given bot NAME
in the current directory .
or optionally in the given DIRECTORY
.
project_dir/
- project_name/
- bots.py
- secrets.yml
- settings.yml
After creating or a new Bot, you must add it to installed_bots
on settings.yml
:
# settings.yml
installed_bots:
- trading_bots.mybot.bot.MyBot
$ python bots.py run BOT [OPTIONS]
Run a specified BOT
by label. Options:
-c, --config |
Bot configuration filename (YAML format) |
-l, --log |
Log to this file |
--settings |
Global settings files (YAML format) |
$ python bots.py run Example
TRADING BOTS 🤖
===============
Global settings
- Settings files: None
- Logs file: log.txt
Bot: Example
- Config file: default
Starting Example 1530691595: 2018-07-04 08:06:35
This is an example bot
Doing work for 5 seconds...
Finished!
Run time: 5.9972 seconds
Ending Example 1530691595: 2018-07-04 08:06:40
$ python bots.py loop BOT [OPTIONS]
Schedule a BOT
(by label) to run on an interval. Options:
-i, --interval |
Loop interval (in seconds). |
-c, --config |
Bot configuration filename (YAML format) |
-l, --log |
Log to this file |
--settings |
Global settings files (YAML format) |
$ python bots.py loop Example -i 5
TRADING BOTS 🤖
===============
Global settings
- Settings files: None
- Logs file: log.txt
Bot: Example
- Config file: default
- Interval: 5s
Starting Example 1530692725: 2018-07-04 08:25:25
This is an example bot
Doing work for 5 seconds...
Finished!
Run time: 5.3611 seconds
Ending Example 1530692725: 2018-07-04 08:25:30
Starting Example 1530692735: 2018-07-04 08:25:35
This is an example bot
Doing work for 5 seconds...
Finished!
Run time: 5.3632 seconds
Ending Example 1530692735: 2018-07-04 08:25:40
...
USE THE SOFTWARE AT YOUR OWN RISK. YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR OWN MONEY. PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT NECESSARILY INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS.
THE AUTHORS AND ALL AFFILIATES ASSUME NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR YOUR TRADING RESULTS.