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|
%global _empty_manifest_terminate_build 0
Name: python-gspread-asyncio
Version: 1.8.1
Release: 1
Summary: asyncio wrapper for burnash's Google Spreadsheet API library, gspread
License: MIT
URL: https://github.com/dgilman/gspread_asyncio
Source0: https://mirrors.nju.edu.cn/pypi/web/packages/e5/7c/230958d09cc2bcf06b89d0ffb50ee032d570c97554099cfd36ec1bbd1f46/gspread_asyncio-1.8.1.tar.gz
BuildArch: noarch
Requires: python3-requests
Requires: python3-gspread
%description
# gspread_asyncio
An [asyncio wrapper](https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio.html) for [burnash's excellent Google Spreadsheet API library](https://github.com/burnash/gspread). `gspread_asyncio` isn't just a plain asyncio wrapper around the `gspread` API, it implements several useful and helpful features on top of those APIs. It's useful for long-running processes and one-off scripts.
Requires Python >= 3.7.
[](https://gspread-asyncio.readthedocs.io/en/latest/?badge=latest) 
## Features
* Complete async wrapping of the `gspread` API. All `gspread` API calls are run off the main thread in a threadpool executor.
* Internal caching and reuse of `gspread` `Client`/`Spreadsheet`/`Worksheet` objects.
* Automatic renewal of expired credentials.
* Automatic retries of spurious failures from Google's servers (HTTP 5xx).
* Automatic rate limiting with defaults set to Google's default API limits.
* Many methods that don't need to return a value can optionally return an already-scheduled `Future` (the `nowait` kwarg). You can ignore that future, allowing forward progress on your calling coroutine while the asyncio event loop schedules and runs the Google Spreadsheet API call at a later time for you.
## Example usage
```python
import asyncio
import gspread_asyncio
# from google-auth package
from google.oauth2.service_account import Credentials
# First, set up a callback function that fetches our credentials off the disk.
# gspread_asyncio needs this to re-authenticate when credentials expire.
def get_creds():
# To obtain a service account JSON file, follow these steps:
# https://gspread.readthedocs.io/en/latest/oauth2.html#for-bots-using-service-account
creds = Credentials.from_service_account_file("serviceacct_spreadsheet.json")
scoped = creds.with_scopes([
"https://spreadsheets.google.com/feeds",
"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/spreadsheets",
"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive",
])
return scoped
# Create an AsyncioGspreadClientManager object which
# will give us access to the Spreadsheet API.
agcm = gspread_asyncio.AsyncioGspreadClientManager(get_creds)
# Here's an example of how you use the API:
async def example(agcm):
# Always authorize first.
# If you have a long-running program call authorize() repeatedly.
agc = await agcm.authorize()
ss = await agc.create("Test Spreadsheet")
print("Spreadsheet URL: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/{0}".format(ss.id))
print("Open the URL in your browser to see gspread_asyncio in action!")
# Allow anyone with the URL to write to this spreadsheet.
await agc.insert_permission(ss.id, None, perm_type="anyone", role="writer")
# Create a new spreadsheet but also grab a reference to the default one.
ws = await ss.add_worksheet("My Test Worksheet", 10, 5)
zero_ws = await ss.get_worksheet(0)
# Write some stuff to both spreadsheets.
for row in range(1, 11):
for col in range(1, 6):
val = "{0}/{1}".format(row, col)
await ws.update_cell(row, col, val + " ws")
await zero_ws.update_cell(row, col, val + " zero ws")
print("All done!")
# Turn on debugging if you're new to asyncio!
asyncio.run(example(agcm), debug=True)
```
## Observational notes and gotchas
* This module does not define its own exceptions, it propagates instances of `gspread.exceptions.GSpreadException`.
* Always call `AsyncioGspreadClientManager.authorize()`, `AsyncioGspreadClient.open_*()` and `AsyncioGspreadSpreadsheet.get_worksheet()` before doing any work on a spreadsheet. These methods keep an internal cache so it is painless to call them many times, even inside of a loop. This makes sure you always have a valid set of authentication credentials from Google.
* The only object you should store in your application is the `AsyncioGspreadClientManager` (`agcm`).
* Right now the `gspread` library does not support bulk appends of rows or bulk changes of cells. When this is done `gspread_asyncio` will support batching of these Google API calls without any changes to the Python `gspread_asyncio` API.
* I came up with the default 1.1 second delay between API calls (the `gspread_delay` kwarg) after extensive experimentation. The official API rate limit is one call every second but however Google measures these things introduces a tiny bit of jitter that will get you rate blocked if you ride that limit exactly.
* Google's service reliability on these endpoints is surprisingly bad. There are frequent HTTP 500s and the retry logic will save your butt in long-running scripts or short, one-shot, one-off ones.
* Experimentation also found that Google's credentials expire after an hour and the default `reauth_interval` of 45 minutes takes care of that just fine.
## License
MIT
## Sponsorship
Development of gspread_asyncio is sponsored by [Pro Football History.com, your source for NFL coaching biographies.](https://pro-football-history.com)
%package -n python3-gspread-asyncio
Summary: asyncio wrapper for burnash's Google Spreadsheet API library, gspread
Provides: python-gspread-asyncio
BuildRequires: python3-devel
BuildRequires: python3-setuptools
BuildRequires: python3-pip
%description -n python3-gspread-asyncio
# gspread_asyncio
An [asyncio wrapper](https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio.html) for [burnash's excellent Google Spreadsheet API library](https://github.com/burnash/gspread). `gspread_asyncio` isn't just a plain asyncio wrapper around the `gspread` API, it implements several useful and helpful features on top of those APIs. It's useful for long-running processes and one-off scripts.
Requires Python >= 3.7.
[](https://gspread-asyncio.readthedocs.io/en/latest/?badge=latest) 
## Features
* Complete async wrapping of the `gspread` API. All `gspread` API calls are run off the main thread in a threadpool executor.
* Internal caching and reuse of `gspread` `Client`/`Spreadsheet`/`Worksheet` objects.
* Automatic renewal of expired credentials.
* Automatic retries of spurious failures from Google's servers (HTTP 5xx).
* Automatic rate limiting with defaults set to Google's default API limits.
* Many methods that don't need to return a value can optionally return an already-scheduled `Future` (the `nowait` kwarg). You can ignore that future, allowing forward progress on your calling coroutine while the asyncio event loop schedules and runs the Google Spreadsheet API call at a later time for you.
## Example usage
```python
import asyncio
import gspread_asyncio
# from google-auth package
from google.oauth2.service_account import Credentials
# First, set up a callback function that fetches our credentials off the disk.
# gspread_asyncio needs this to re-authenticate when credentials expire.
def get_creds():
# To obtain a service account JSON file, follow these steps:
# https://gspread.readthedocs.io/en/latest/oauth2.html#for-bots-using-service-account
creds = Credentials.from_service_account_file("serviceacct_spreadsheet.json")
scoped = creds.with_scopes([
"https://spreadsheets.google.com/feeds",
"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/spreadsheets",
"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive",
])
return scoped
# Create an AsyncioGspreadClientManager object which
# will give us access to the Spreadsheet API.
agcm = gspread_asyncio.AsyncioGspreadClientManager(get_creds)
# Here's an example of how you use the API:
async def example(agcm):
# Always authorize first.
# If you have a long-running program call authorize() repeatedly.
agc = await agcm.authorize()
ss = await agc.create("Test Spreadsheet")
print("Spreadsheet URL: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/{0}".format(ss.id))
print("Open the URL in your browser to see gspread_asyncio in action!")
# Allow anyone with the URL to write to this spreadsheet.
await agc.insert_permission(ss.id, None, perm_type="anyone", role="writer")
# Create a new spreadsheet but also grab a reference to the default one.
ws = await ss.add_worksheet("My Test Worksheet", 10, 5)
zero_ws = await ss.get_worksheet(0)
# Write some stuff to both spreadsheets.
for row in range(1, 11):
for col in range(1, 6):
val = "{0}/{1}".format(row, col)
await ws.update_cell(row, col, val + " ws")
await zero_ws.update_cell(row, col, val + " zero ws")
print("All done!")
# Turn on debugging if you're new to asyncio!
asyncio.run(example(agcm), debug=True)
```
## Observational notes and gotchas
* This module does not define its own exceptions, it propagates instances of `gspread.exceptions.GSpreadException`.
* Always call `AsyncioGspreadClientManager.authorize()`, `AsyncioGspreadClient.open_*()` and `AsyncioGspreadSpreadsheet.get_worksheet()` before doing any work on a spreadsheet. These methods keep an internal cache so it is painless to call them many times, even inside of a loop. This makes sure you always have a valid set of authentication credentials from Google.
* The only object you should store in your application is the `AsyncioGspreadClientManager` (`agcm`).
* Right now the `gspread` library does not support bulk appends of rows or bulk changes of cells. When this is done `gspread_asyncio` will support batching of these Google API calls without any changes to the Python `gspread_asyncio` API.
* I came up with the default 1.1 second delay between API calls (the `gspread_delay` kwarg) after extensive experimentation. The official API rate limit is one call every second but however Google measures these things introduces a tiny bit of jitter that will get you rate blocked if you ride that limit exactly.
* Google's service reliability on these endpoints is surprisingly bad. There are frequent HTTP 500s and the retry logic will save your butt in long-running scripts or short, one-shot, one-off ones.
* Experimentation also found that Google's credentials expire after an hour and the default `reauth_interval` of 45 minutes takes care of that just fine.
## License
MIT
## Sponsorship
Development of gspread_asyncio is sponsored by [Pro Football History.com, your source for NFL coaching biographies.](https://pro-football-history.com)
%package help
Summary: Development documents and examples for gspread-asyncio
Provides: python3-gspread-asyncio-doc
%description help
# gspread_asyncio
An [asyncio wrapper](https://docs.python.org/3/library/asyncio.html) for [burnash's excellent Google Spreadsheet API library](https://github.com/burnash/gspread). `gspread_asyncio` isn't just a plain asyncio wrapper around the `gspread` API, it implements several useful and helpful features on top of those APIs. It's useful for long-running processes and one-off scripts.
Requires Python >= 3.7.
[](https://gspread-asyncio.readthedocs.io/en/latest/?badge=latest) 
## Features
* Complete async wrapping of the `gspread` API. All `gspread` API calls are run off the main thread in a threadpool executor.
* Internal caching and reuse of `gspread` `Client`/`Spreadsheet`/`Worksheet` objects.
* Automatic renewal of expired credentials.
* Automatic retries of spurious failures from Google's servers (HTTP 5xx).
* Automatic rate limiting with defaults set to Google's default API limits.
* Many methods that don't need to return a value can optionally return an already-scheduled `Future` (the `nowait` kwarg). You can ignore that future, allowing forward progress on your calling coroutine while the asyncio event loop schedules and runs the Google Spreadsheet API call at a later time for you.
## Example usage
```python
import asyncio
import gspread_asyncio
# from google-auth package
from google.oauth2.service_account import Credentials
# First, set up a callback function that fetches our credentials off the disk.
# gspread_asyncio needs this to re-authenticate when credentials expire.
def get_creds():
# To obtain a service account JSON file, follow these steps:
# https://gspread.readthedocs.io/en/latest/oauth2.html#for-bots-using-service-account
creds = Credentials.from_service_account_file("serviceacct_spreadsheet.json")
scoped = creds.with_scopes([
"https://spreadsheets.google.com/feeds",
"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/spreadsheets",
"https://www.googleapis.com/auth/drive",
])
return scoped
# Create an AsyncioGspreadClientManager object which
# will give us access to the Spreadsheet API.
agcm = gspread_asyncio.AsyncioGspreadClientManager(get_creds)
# Here's an example of how you use the API:
async def example(agcm):
# Always authorize first.
# If you have a long-running program call authorize() repeatedly.
agc = await agcm.authorize()
ss = await agc.create("Test Spreadsheet")
print("Spreadsheet URL: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/{0}".format(ss.id))
print("Open the URL in your browser to see gspread_asyncio in action!")
# Allow anyone with the URL to write to this spreadsheet.
await agc.insert_permission(ss.id, None, perm_type="anyone", role="writer")
# Create a new spreadsheet but also grab a reference to the default one.
ws = await ss.add_worksheet("My Test Worksheet", 10, 5)
zero_ws = await ss.get_worksheet(0)
# Write some stuff to both spreadsheets.
for row in range(1, 11):
for col in range(1, 6):
val = "{0}/{1}".format(row, col)
await ws.update_cell(row, col, val + " ws")
await zero_ws.update_cell(row, col, val + " zero ws")
print("All done!")
# Turn on debugging if you're new to asyncio!
asyncio.run(example(agcm), debug=True)
```
## Observational notes and gotchas
* This module does not define its own exceptions, it propagates instances of `gspread.exceptions.GSpreadException`.
* Always call `AsyncioGspreadClientManager.authorize()`, `AsyncioGspreadClient.open_*()` and `AsyncioGspreadSpreadsheet.get_worksheet()` before doing any work on a spreadsheet. These methods keep an internal cache so it is painless to call them many times, even inside of a loop. This makes sure you always have a valid set of authentication credentials from Google.
* The only object you should store in your application is the `AsyncioGspreadClientManager` (`agcm`).
* Right now the `gspread` library does not support bulk appends of rows or bulk changes of cells. When this is done `gspread_asyncio` will support batching of these Google API calls without any changes to the Python `gspread_asyncio` API.
* I came up with the default 1.1 second delay between API calls (the `gspread_delay` kwarg) after extensive experimentation. The official API rate limit is one call every second but however Google measures these things introduces a tiny bit of jitter that will get you rate blocked if you ride that limit exactly.
* Google's service reliability on these endpoints is surprisingly bad. There are frequent HTTP 500s and the retry logic will save your butt in long-running scripts or short, one-shot, one-off ones.
* Experimentation also found that Google's credentials expire after an hour and the default `reauth_interval` of 45 minutes takes care of that just fine.
## License
MIT
## Sponsorship
Development of gspread_asyncio is sponsored by [Pro Football History.com, your source for NFL coaching biographies.](https://pro-football-history.com)
%prep
%autosetup -n gspread-asyncio-1.8.1
%build
%py3_build
%install
%py3_install
install -d -m755 %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}
if [ -d doc ]; then cp -arf doc %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
if [ -d docs ]; then cp -arf docs %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
if [ -d example ]; then cp -arf example %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
if [ -d examples ]; then cp -arf examples %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
pushd %{buildroot}
if [ -d usr/lib ]; then
find usr/lib -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
fi
if [ -d usr/lib64 ]; then
find usr/lib64 -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
fi
if [ -d usr/bin ]; then
find usr/bin -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
fi
if [ -d usr/sbin ]; then
find usr/sbin -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
fi
touch doclist.lst
if [ -d usr/share/man ]; then
find usr/share/man -type f -printf "/%h/%f.gz\n" >> doclist.lst
fi
popd
mv %{buildroot}/filelist.lst .
mv %{buildroot}/doclist.lst .
%files -n python3-gspread-asyncio -f filelist.lst
%dir %{python3_sitelib}/*
%files help -f doclist.lst
%{_docdir}/*
%changelog
* Mon May 15 2023 Python_Bot <Python_Bot@openeuler.org> - 1.8.1-1
- Package Spec generated
|