pyFaceGraph is a Python client library for the Facebook Graph API. It is being developed and maintained by iPlatform.
Via pip
or easy_install
:
pip install pyfacegraph
easy_install pyfacegraph
You can install an 'edge' version via git:
git clone 'git://github.com/iplatform/pyFaceGraph.git'
cd pyFaceGraph
python setup.py install
To begin using the API, create a new Graph
with an access token:
>>> from facegraph import Graph
>>> g = Graph(ACCESS_TOKEN) # Access token is optional.
>>> g
<Graph('https://graph.facebook.com/') at 0x...>
Each Graph
contains an access token and a URL. The graph you just created
will have a URL of 'https://graph.facebook.com/' by default (this is defined as
the class attribute Graph.API_ROOT
). The URL is represented as a URLObject
;
see http://github.com/zacharyvoase/urlobject for more information. Remember
that you can treat it exactly as you would a unicode
string; it just supports
a few more methods to enable easy URL manipulation.
>>> g.url
<URLObject(u'https://graph.facebook.com/') at 0x...>
>>> print g.url
https://graph.facebook.com/
>>> unicode(g.url)
u'https://graph.facebook.com/'
To address child nodes, Graph
supports dynamic attribute and item lookups:
>>> g.me
<Graph('https://graph.facebook.com/me') at 0x...>
>>> g.me.home
<Graph('https://graph.facebook.com/me/home') at 0x...>
>>> g['me']['home']
<Graph('https://graph.facebook.com/me/home') at 0x...>
>>> g[123456789]
<Graph('https://graph.facebook.com/123456789') at 0x...>
Note that a Graph
instance is rarely modified; these methods all return copies
of the original object. In addition, the API is lazy: HTTP requests will
never be made unless you explicitly make them.
You can fetch data by calling a Graph
instance:
>>> about_me = g.me()
>>> about_me
Node({'about': '...', 'id': '1503223370'})
This returns a Node
object, which contains the retrieved data. Node
is
a subclass of bunch.Bunch
[pypi], so you
can access keys using either attribute or item syntax:
>>> about_me.id
'1503223370'
>>> about_me.first_name
'Zachary'
>>> about_me.hometown.name
'London, United Kingdom'
>>> about_me['hometown']['name']
'London, United Kingdom'
Accessing non-existent attributes or items will return a Graph
instance
corresponding to a child node. This Graph
can then be called normally, to
retrieve the child node it represents:
>>> 'home' in about_me # Not present in the data itself
False
>>> about_me.home
<Graph('https://graph.facebook.com/me/home') at 0x...>
>>> about_me.home()
Node({'data': [...]})
With the Graph API, node manipulation is done via HTTP POST requests.
Graph.post()
will POST to the current URL, with varying semantics for each
endpoint:
>>> post = g.me.feed.post(message="Test.") # Status update
>>> post
Node({'id': '...'})
>>> g[post.id].comments.post(message="A comment.") # Comment on the post
Node({'id': '...'})
>>> g[post.id].likes.post() # Like the post
True
>>> event = g[121481007877204]()
>>> event.name
'Facebook Developer Garage London May 2010'
>>> event.rsvp_status is None
True
>>> event.attending.post() # Attend the given event
True
Any keyword arguments passed to post()
will be added as form data. Consult the
Facebook API docs for a complete reference on URLs and options.
Nodes can be deleted by adding ?method=delete
to the URL; the delete()
method is a helpful shortcut:
>>> g[post.id].delete()
True
Facebook is rolling out support for OAuth 2.0 in canvas applications with the
new signed_request
parameter; you can read about it here.
pyFaceGraph comes with a simple function for verifying and decoding this parameter:
>>> from facegraph import decode_signed_request, InvalidSignature
>>> decode_signed_request(APP_SECRET, GET['signed_request'])
{'0': 'payload', 'algorithm': 'HMAC-SHA256'}
>>> decode_signed_request('wrong-secret', GET['signed_request'])
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
InvalidSignature
pyFaceGraph comes with basic support for building client applications in Django. At the moment, this consists of:
- Abstract class-based views for OAuth 2.0 authorization
- Abstract middleware to attach
Graph
instances to each request
pyFaceGraph defines two abstract class-based views (using django-clsview) and a mixin; these help your app obtain OAuth 2.0 acess tokens to access the Graph API on behalf of a Facebook user.
-
FacebookOAuthView
: Defines some common methods useful to all Facebook-related CBVs. Should be used as an inherited ‘mixin’, i.e.:class Callback(CallbackView, FacebookOAuthView): pass
Examples of methods implemented here are
redirect_uri()
(which must be the same for both the authorize and callback views),client_id()
andclient_secret()
andfetch_url()
-
AuthorizeView
: Acts solely to redirect users to Facebook for authorization. You can overrideauthorize_url()
to change the URL which the user is redirected to.scope()
anddisplay()
are two shortcuts for the Facebook-specific parameters, which you might need to alter for your requirements. -
CallbackView
: The view the user is redirected back to from Facebook, upon successful authorization. It’s up to you to write the body of this (by defining__call__()
), but you can callget_access_token()
to fetch the access token. Suggestions include saving the access token to the database, or storing it inrequest.session
.
See the source of facegraph.django.views for the ultimate reference guide to these views.
Take a look at the example project in test/graphdevtools
, which shows how to
construct an app that interfaces with Facebook (and provides a dashboard for
generating access tokens with varying permissions). You’ll need to create
local_settings.py
in that directory and define SECRET_KEY
,
FACEBOOK_CLIENT_ID
and FACEBOOK_CLIENT_SECRET
(for the latter two you need
to register a Facebook application).
The provided FacebookGraphMiddleware
will attach a facegraph.Graph
instance
to each request, accessible as request.graph
. You will need to subclass this
middleware to define your own method of fetching the access token. For example:
## myapp/middleware.py:
from facegraph.django.middleware import FacebookGraphMiddleware
class GraphMiddleware(FacebookGraphMiddleware):
def access_token(self, request):
return request.session.get('access_token')
## settings.py:
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
# ...
'myapp.middleware.GraphMiddleware',
# ...
)
Note that this will still attach a Graph
even if the access token is None
.
To check for authentication, just use if request.graph.access_token:
in your
view code.
There is also a piece of middleware for canvas applications:
FacebookCanvasMiddleware
will verify and decode Facebook’s new
signed_request
parameter for each request, and attach the value as
request.fbrequest
. By default, settings.FACEBOOK_APP_SECRET
will be used as
the application secret for signature verification, but you can subclass the
middleware and override the app_secret()
method to modify this behavior:
## myapp/middleware.py:
from django.conf import settings
from facegraph.django.middleware import FacebookCanvasMiddleware
class CanvasMiddleware(FacebookCanvasMiddleware):
def app_secret(self, request):
return settings.MY_FACEBOOK_APP_SECRET
## settings.py:
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
# ...
'myapp.middleware.CanvasMiddleware',
# ...
)
Finally, FacebookCanvasGraphMiddleware
is a subclass of
FacebookGraphMiddleware
which will use the signed request as the source of the
access token; no subclassing is necessary, just place it after
CanvasMiddleware
in MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
:
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = (
# ...
'myapp.middleware.CanvasMiddleware',
'facegraph.django.middleware.FacebookCanvasGraphMiddleware',
# ...
)
This is free and unencumbered software released into the public domain.
Anyone is free to copy, modify, publish, use, compile, sell, or distribute this software, either in source code form or as a compiled binary, for any purpose, commercial or non-commercial, and by any means.
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