/python-amazon-mws

Python 2/3 wrapper for the Amazon Marketplace Web Service API

Primary LanguagePythonThe UnlicenseUnlicense

mws

PyPI version

master: Requirements Status Build Status codecov

develop: Requirements Status Build Status codecov

This is a fork and continuation of https://github.com/czpython/python-amazon-mws with preliminary Python 2/3 support.

The main aim is to provide a backwards-compatible drop in replacement for the original package (i.e. same method signatures, class names, etc) with some extra features and anything that was obviously broken fixed.

Installation

Install from PyPI with pip install mws.

Quickstart

Put your API credentials in your environment.

$ export MWS_ACCOUNT_ID=...
$ export MWS_ACCESS_KEY=...
$ export MWS_SECRET_KEY=...

Now you can experiment with the API from a shell.

>>> import mws, os
>>> orders_api = mws.Orders(
...     access_key=os.environ['MWS_ACCESS_KEY'],
...     secret_key=os.environ['MWS_SECRET_KEY'],
...     account_id=os.environ['MWS_ACCOUNT_ID'],
...     region='UK',  # if necessary
... )
>>> service_status = orders_api.get_service_status()
>>> service_status
<mws.mws.DictWrapper object at 0x1063a2160>
>>> service_status.original
'<?xml version="1.0"?>\n<GetServiceStatusResponse xmlns="https://mws.amazonservices.com/Orders/2013-09-01">\n  <GetServiceStatusResult>\n    <Status>GREEN</Status>\n    <Timestamp>2017-06-14T16:39:12.765Z</Timestamp>\n  </GetServiceStatusResult>\n  <ResponseMetadata>\n    <RequestId>affdec68-05d2-4bc5-a8a4-bb40f307dd6b</RequestId>\n  </ResponseMetadata>\n</
GetServiceStatusResponse>\n'
>>> service_status.parsed
{'value': '\n    ', 'Status': {'value': 'GREEN'}, 'Timestamp': {'value': '2017-06-14T16:39:12.765Z'}}
>>> service_status.response
<Response [200]>

Development

All dependencies for working on mws are in requirements.txt and docs/requirements.txt.

Tests

Tests are run with pytest. We test against Python 2.7 and supported Python 3.x versions with Travis.

Documentation

Docs are built using Sphinx. Change into the docs/ directory and install any dependencies from the requirements.txt there.

To build HTML documentation, run:

make html

The output HTML documentation will be in docs/build/.

To run a live reloading server serving the HTML documentation (on port 8000 by default):

make livehtml

Contributing

Please make pull requests to develop. Code coverage isn't necessary but encouraged where possible (especially for anything which might behave differently between Python 2/3).