A Python wrapper for the Bitbucket Cloud REST API.
This is not known to work with Bitbucket Server,
previously known as Stash.
To start working with this library, just do: pip install pybitbucket
The Authenticator
subclasses prepare API requests with credentials.
The simplest case is Anonymous
which connects with no credentials.
Anonymous
can be used with an publicly available resources.
For private resources,
BasicAuthenticator
uses email, username, and password as credentials.
If your client application has it's own mechanisms for working with these values,
you can subclass the BasicAuthenticator
to provide custom behavior.
To "plug in" your implementation or a standard one, just do:
bitbucket = Client( BasicAuthenticator( 'your_username_here', 'your_secret_password_here', 'pybitbucket@mailinator.com'))
If you have enabled two-step verification,
then you will need to use an app password with the BasicAuthenticator
,
not your regular user password.
The OAuth2Authenticator
is intended as an example and superclass.
It may work for some command-line clients.
Other clients like web applications
will need an appropriate implementation of obtain_authorization()
and perhaps may need to use a different grant types.
For example, to find all your snippets:
for snip in Snippet.find_snippets_for_role(client=bitbucket): print(snip)
The method says "for role" but, if not provided, it will use the default of owner. Hence, all your snippets.
In general, finding things is done with a static find method on each type of resource. If the resource is plural, like "snippets" above, then the find method is a generator. You can use it with iterators or comprehensions. The resources you can find are:
- user and team
- repository and snippet
- pull request and comment
- commit and build status
- hook and branch restriction
For example, to create a new snippet:
snip = Snippet.create( files=open_files(["README.rst"]), payload=SnippetPayload().add_title("My New Snippet"), client=bitbucket)
The resources you can create are:
- repository and snippet
- pull request and comment
- build status
- hook and branch restriction
For example, to examine attributes on a snippet:
snip = Snippet.find_snippet_by_id("Xqoz8", bitbucket) s = '\n'.join([ "id : {}".format(snip.id), "is_private : {}".format(snip.is_private), "title : {}".format(snip.title), "files : {}".format(snip.filenames), "created_on : {}".format(snip.created_on), "updated_on : {}".format(snip.updated_on), "scm : {}".format(snip.scm), ]) if snip else 'Snippet not found.' print(s)
What attributes are available? You will not find them hardcoded in Python. They are populated dynamically from the JSON response. You can query the list via a convenience method:
snip = Snippet.find_snippet_by_id("Xqoz8", bitbucket) print(snip.attributes())
Beware. The attributes for the same resource may change depending on how you got to it.
For example, to list the commits for a snippet:
snip = Snippet.find_snippet_by_id("Xqoz8", bitbucket) for commit in snip.commits(): print(commit)
What relationships are available? You will not find them hardcoded in Python. They are populated dynamically from the JSON response. You can query the list via a convenience method:
snip = Snippet.find_snippet_by_id("Xqoz8", bitbucket) print(snip.relationships())
Just like attributes, the relationships for the same resource may change depending on how you got to it.
If you need the canonical resource with all attributes, use the self()
relationship:
snips = Snippet.find_snippets_for_role(client=bitbucket) one_snip = next(snips) # one_snip has no files relationship in this context. real_snip = next(one_snip.self()) print(real_snip.files)
It's not virtual like a virtual machine. More like a specialized container for a Python version and libraries.
brew install python
This installs the latest version of Python 2.7 with a version of setuptools and pip. Unfortunately, those versions of setuptools and pip seem to be broken.pip install --upgrade --no-use-wheel setuptools
pip install --upgrade --no-use-wheel pip
pip install virtualenvwrapper
- Clone the repository and set it as the current working directory.
- (Optional, but good practice) Create a virtual environment:
mkvirtualenv python-bitbucket
Once created, useworkon python-bitbucket
to restore the virtual environment. pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
Loads required libraries into the virtual environment.paver test_all
Run all the unit tests and analyze the source code.
PUT
andDELETE
forsnippet.watch
from snippets Endpoint.- Wrap the version 1 endpoints for:
- groups
- group-privileges
- invitations