This project has evolved into IB-insync and all development is happening there now.
To port code:
TWSClient
has moved toib_insync.client.Client
(with much improvements);TWSClientQt
: The newClient
can be used with PyQt and quamash.
The tws_async
package allows the Python API from Interactive Brokers (IBAPI)
to be used asynchronously and single-threaded with the
asyncio standard library or with the PyQt5 framework.
This offers a simpler, safer and more performant approach to concurrency than multithreading.
Install using pip:
pip3 install -U tws_async
Note that on some systems the pip3
command is just pip
.
Python version 3.5 or higher is required as well as the Interactive Brokers Python API.
This package offers two clients that can be used as a drop-in replacement for the standard EClient as provided by IBAPI:
TWSClient
, for use with the asyncio event loop;TWSClientQt
, for use with the PyQt5 event loop.
These clients also inherit from ibapi.wrapper.EWrapper
and can be used exactly
as one would use the standard IBAPI version. The asynchronous clients use
their own event-driven networking code that replaces the networking code
of the standard EClient
, and they also replace the infinite loop of
EClient.run()
with an event loop.
To simplify working with contracts, this package provides
Contract
, Stock
, Option
, Future
, Forex
, Index
, CFD
and Commodity
classes that can be used anywhere where a ibapi.contract.Contract
is expected.
Examples of some simple cases are
Stock('AMD')
, Forex('EURUSD')
, CFD('IBUS30')
or
Future('ES', '201612', 'GLOBEX')
.
To specify more complex contracts, any property can be given as a keyword.
To learn more, consult the official IBAPI documentation or have a look at these sample use cases:
The HistRequester downloads historical data and saves it to CSV files; histrequester demo illustrates how to use it.
The tick streamer subscribes to realtime tick data.
To use the Interactive Brokers API fully interactively in a Jupyter notebook, have a look at the example notebook.
Jupyter can be started with the command jupyter notebook
.
This notebook uses the Qt version of the client, where the
Qt event loop is started with the %gui qt5
directive at the very top.
It is not necessary to call the run()
method of the client.
Currently there does not seem to be a single-threaded way to directly run the asyncio event loop in Jupyter. What can be done is to use the Qt event loop (which does have good integration with the Jupyter kernel) with the quamash adaptor. With quamash the Qt event loop is used to drive the asyncio event loop. This can be done by placing the following code at the top of the notebook:
%gui qt5
import asyncio, quamash
loop = quamash.QEventLoop()
asyncio.set_event_loop(loop)
One thing that does not work in the combination of quamash and Jupyter is the
loop.run_until_finished
method. It can be patched like this:
def run_until_complete(self, future):
future = asyncio.ensure_future(future)
qApp = qt.QApplication.instance()
while not future.done():
qApp.processEvents(qt.QEventLoop.WaitForMoreEvents)
return future.result()
quamash.QEventLoop.run_until_complete = run_until_complete
The asyncio version of the client relies on loop.run_until_finished
to connect
synchonously. So in order to run the asyncio client in the notebook, apply the patch
or just connect asynchonously (i.e. give asyncConnect=True to the connect call).
- HistRequester fix for endDateTime formatting
- HistRequester updated to version 9.73.04 of the API
- small simplifications
- connect() call of the clients will now by default block until client is ready to serve requests.
- getReqId() method added to both clients.
- dataHandlingPre() and dataHandlingPost() event hooks added to clients.
- logging added.
- util module aded.
- file tws_async.py renamed to twsclient.py, tws_asyncqt.py to twsclientqt.py.
- Added optional
asyncConnect
argument toclient.connect()
method. The default is now to connect synchronously (block until connected). - Fixed bug in HistRequester when downloading daily data.
- Initial pip package release.
Good luck and enjoy,
author: | Ewald de Wit <ewald.de.wit@gmail.com> |
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