--- layout: default navsection: sdk navmenu: Python title: "Python SDK" ... The Python SDK provides access from Python to the Arvados API and Keep. It also includes a number of command line tools for using and administering Arvados and Keep, and some conveniences for use in Crunch scripts; see "Crunch utility libraries":crunch-utility-libraries.html for details. h3. Installation If you are logged in to an Arvados VM, the Python SDK should be installed. To use the Python SDK elsewhere, you can install from a distribution package, PyPI, or source. {% include 'notebox_begin' %} The Python SDK requires Python 2.7. {% include 'notebox_end' %} h4. Option 1: Install from distribution packages First, "add the appropriate package repository for your distribution":{{ site.baseurl }}/install/install-manual-prerequisites.html#repos. {% assign rh_version = "6" %} {% include 'note_python_sc' %} On CentOS 6 and RHEL 6:
~$ sudo yum install python27-python-arvados-python-client python27-python-arvados-cwl-runner
On other Red Hat-based systems:
~$ sudo yum install python-arvados-python-client python-arvados-cwl-runner
On Debian-based systems:
~$ sudo apt-get install python-arvados-python-client python-arvados-cwl-runner
h4. Option 2: Install with pip Run @pip-2.7 install arvados-python-client arvados-cwl-runner@ in an appropriate installation environment, such as a virtualenv. If your version of @pip@ is 1.4 or newer, the @pip install@ command might give an error: "Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement arvados-python-client". If this happens, try @pip-2.7 install --pre arvados-python-client@. h4. Option 3: Install from source Install the @python-setuptools@ package from your distribution. Then run the following:
~$ git clone https://github.com/curoverse/arvados.git
~$ cd ~/arvados/sdk/python
~$ python2.7 setup.py install
~$ cd ~/arvados/sdk/cwl
~$ python2.7 setup.py install
You may optionally run the final installation command in a virtualenv, or with the @--user@ option. h4. Test installation If the SDK is installed and your @ARVADOS_API_HOST@ and @ARVADOS_API_TOKEN@ environment variables are set up correctly (see "api-tokens":{{site.baseurl}}/user/reference/api-tokens.html for details), @import arvados@ should produce no errors:
~$ python2.7
Python 2.7.4 (default, Sep 26 2013, 03:20:26)
[GCC 4.7.3] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import arvados
>>> arvados.api('v1')
<apiclient.discovery.Resource object at 0x233bb50>
h3. Examples Get the User object for the current user:
current_user = arvados.api('v1').users().current().execute()
Get the UUID of an object that was retrieved using the SDK:
my_uuid = current_user['uuid']
Retrieve an object by ID:
some_user = arvados.api('v1').users().get(uuid=my_uuid).execute()
Create an object:
test_link = arvados.api('v1').links().create(
    body={'link_class':'test','name':'test'}).execute()
Update an object:
arvados.api('v1').links().update(
    uuid=test_link['uuid'],
    body={'properties':{'foo':'bar'}}).execute()
Get a list of objects:
repos = arvados.api('v1').repositories().list().execute()
len(repos['items'])
2
repos['items'][0]['uuid']
u'qr1hi-s0uqq-kg8cawglrf74bmw'
h3. Notes The general form of an API call is:
arvados.api(api_version).plural_resource_type().api_method(parameter=value, ...).execute()
Many API methods accept a parameter whose name is the same as the resource type. For example, @links.create@ accepts a parameter called @link@. This parameter should be given as @body@.
arvados.api('v1').links().create(
    uuid=test_link['uuid'],
    body={'properties':{'foo':'bar'}}).execute()
One way to make API calls slightly less verbose is:
arv = arvados.api('v1')
j = arv.jobs().list().execute()
The SDK retrieves the list of API methods from the server at run time. Therefore, the set of available methods is determined by the server version rather than the SDK version.