/nre-darwin-py

Python wrapper for National Rail Enquiries Darwin API

Primary LanguagePythonBSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" LicenseBSD-3-Clause

nre-darwin-py

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Introduction

nre-darwin-py provides an abstraction layer for accessing National Rail Enquiries Darwin service via their LDB SOAP web service. This service provides live departure board information for all United Kingdom train stations.

This module has the following goals:

  • Allow developers to avoid the complexity of SOAP and the decisions involved in choosing a Python SOAP client
  • Provide a more pythonic interface to station board and service details information
  • Make useful documentation available through pydoc or through the help command in the python shell
  • Facilitate the easy creation of departure board websites and webservices

Getting started

You will need to register for Darwin access, you can do this via National Rail Enquiries developer site.

Then install nre-darwin-py:

pip install nre-darwin-py

Basic usage

Initiate a session:

>>> from nredarwin.webservice import DarwinLdbSession
>>> darwin_sesh = DarwinLdbSession(wsdl="https://lite.realtime.nationalrail.co.uk/OpenLDBWS/wsdl.aspx", api_key="YOUR_KEY")

Retrieve the departure board for Manchester Piccadilly station:

>>> board = darwin_sesh.get_station_board('MAN')
>>> board.location_name
'Manchester Piccadilly'
>> board.train_services[0].destination_text
'Rose Hill Marple'

Retrieve more detailed information regarding a particular service:

>>> service_id = board.train_services[0].service_id
>>> service = darwin_sesh.get_service_details(service_id)
>>> [cp.location_name for cp in service.subsequent_calling_points]
[Gorton, Fairfield, Guide Bridge, Hyde Central, Woodley, Romiley, Rose Hill Marple]

Command Line Usage

A simple command line tool is provided as a reference implementation:

pip install nre-darwin-py
national-rail --help
To use you will need to export your Darwin API KEY as an environment variable::
export DARWIN_WEBSERVICE_API_KEY=YOURKEY

To view a departure board invoke the script with a single argument, the CRS code of the station:

national-rail MSN

This will render the departure board in a tabular format, for example:

Platform  Destination            Scheduled    Due
----------  ---------------------  -----------  -------
         2  Manchester Piccadilly  13:05        On time
         1  Huddersfield           13:30        On time
         2  Manchester Piccadilly  14:05        On time
         1  Huddersfield           14:30        On time

Command line help is available to list all available options:

national-rail --help

Practicalities

  • The environment variables DARWIN_WEBSERVICE_WSDL and DARWIN_WEBSERVICE_API_KEY can be used to set the WSDL url and api key, so you don't have to specify them when initiating a DarwinLdbSession.
  • The WSDL url for the LDB Webservice may change from time to time, and has in the past. Your application should take this into account.
  • Any call to get_station_board or get_service_details will result in a query to the LDB Webservice, and therefore an HTTP request to an external service. Your application will need to handle caching and failure modes itself.
  • There is an overhead involved when creating a DarwinLdbSession, as the WSDL must be retrieved and parsed.

Contributions

Pull requests and issue reports are welcome. A requirements file is provided to help you set up code checking and formatting tools.

To set this up run:

pip install -r devenv-requirements.txt
pre-commit install

This will enable a pre-commit hook to run linting checks with flake8 and format any changed files with black

The test suite can be run via setup.py:

python3 setup.py test

Credits

Additional contributions by George Goldberg. Advice on SUDS proxy issues from Pete Barking.

TODO

  • Make departure and arrival times available as timezone-aware datetime objects
  • More detailed exception handling