dohq-artifactory
is a live python package for JFrog Artifactory. This module is intended to serve as a logical
descendant of pathlib, and it implements everything as closely as
possible to the origin with few exceptions. Current module was forked from outdated
parallels/artifactory and supports all functionality from the original
package.
- Install
- Usage
- Authentication
- Artifactory SaaS
- Walking Directory Tree
- Downloading Artifacts
- Downloading Artifacts in chunks
- Downloading Artifacts folder as archive
- Uploading Artifacts
- Copy Artifacts
- Move Artifacts
- Remove Artifacts
- Artifact properties
- Repository Scheduled Replication Status
- Artifactory Query Language
- Artifact Stat
- Promote Docker image
- Builds
- Exception handling
- Admin area
- Advanced
- Contribute
- Advertising
Upgrade/install to the newest available version:
pip install dohq-artifactory --upgrade
Install latest development version (Warning! It may contains some errors!):
pip install dohq-artifactory --upgrade --pre
Or specify version, e.g.:
pip install dohq-artifactory==0.5.dev243
dohq-artifactory
supports these ways of authentication:
- Username and password (or API KEY) to access restricted resources, you can pass
auth
parameter to ArtifactoryPath. - API KEY can pass with
apikey
parameter. - Access Token can pass with
token
parameter.
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
# API_KEY
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/myrepo/restricted-path", apikey="MY_API_KEY"
)
# Access Token
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/myrepo/restricted-path", token="MY_ACCESS_TOKEN"
)
# User and password OR API_KEY
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/myrepo/restricted-path",
auth=("USERNAME", "PASSWORD or API_KEY"),
)
# Other authentication types
from requests.auth import HTTPDigestAuth
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/myrepo/restricted-path",
auth=("USERNAME", "PASSWORD"),
auth_type=HTTPDigestAuth,
)
from requests.auth import HTTPBasicAuth
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/myrepo/restricted-path",
auth=("USERNAME", "PASSWORD"),
auth_type=HTTPBasicAuth,
)
# Load username, password from global config if exist:
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/myrepo/restricted-path",
auth_type=HTTPBasicAuth,
)
path.touch()
If you use Artifactory SaaS solution - use ArtifactorySaaSPath
class.
SaaS supports all methods and authentication types as ArtifactoryPath
. We have to use other class, because as a SaaS
service, the URL is different from an on-prem installation and the REST API endpoints.
from artifactory import ArtifactorySaaSPath
path = ArtifactorySaaSPath(
"https://myartifactorysaas.jfrog.io/myartifactorysaas/folder/path.xml",
apikey="MY_API_KEY",
)
Get directory listing:
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath("http://repo.jfrog.org/artifactory/gradle-ivy-local")
for p in path:
print(p)
Find all .gz
files in current dir, recursively:
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath("http://repo.jfrog.org/artifactory/distributions/org/")
for p in path.glob("**/*.gz"):
print(p)
Download artifact to a local filesystem:
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://repo.jfrog.org/artifactory/distributions/org/apache/tomcat/apache-tomcat-7.0.11.tar.gz"
)
with path.open() as fd, open("tomcat.tar.gz", "wb") as out:
out.write(fd.read())
Download artifact to the local filesystem using chunks (in bytes) to prevent loading the entire response into memory at once. This can help with getting big files or resolve known issue
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://repo.jfrog.org/artifactory/distributions/org/apache/tomcat/apache-tomcat-7.0.11.tar.gz"
)
# download by providing path to out file and use default chunk 1024
path.writeto(out="tomcat.tar.gz")
# download and suppress progress messages
path.writeto(out="tomcat2.tar.gz", progress_func=None)
# download by providing out as file object and specify chunk size
with open("tomcat3.tar.gz", "wb") as out:
path.writeto(out, chunk_size=256)
# download and use custom print function
def custom_print(bytes_now, total, custom):
"""
Custom function that accepts first two arguments as [int, int] in its signature
"""
print(bytes_now, total, custom)
# since writeto requires [int, int] in its signature, all custom arguments you have to provide via lambda function or
# similar methods
path.writeto(
out="tomcat5.tar.gz",
progress_func=lambda x, y: custom_print(x, y, custom="test"),
)
Download artifact folder to a local filesystem as archive (supports zip/tar/tar.gz/tgz) Allows to specify archive type and request checksum for the folder
Note: Archiving should be enabled on the server!
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my_url:8080/artifactory/my_repo/winx64/aas", auth=("user", "password")
)
with path.archive(archive_type="zip", check_sum=False).open() as archive:
with open(r"D:\target.zip", "wb") as out:
out.write(archive.read())
# download folder archive in chunks
path.archive().writeto(out="my.zip", chunk_size=100 * 1024)
Deploy a regular file myapp-1.0.tar.gz
. This method by default will calculate all available checksums and attach
them to the file
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/libs-snapshot-local/myapp/1.0"
)
path.mkdir()
path.deploy_file("./myapp-1.0.tar.gz")
Deploy artifacts from archive: this will automatically extract the contents of the archive on the server preserving the archive's paths
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/libs-snapshot-local/myapp/1.0"
)
path.mkdir()
path.deploy_file("./myapp-1.0.tar.gz", explode_archive=True)
Atomically deploy artifacts from archive: this will automatically extract the contents of the archive on the server preserving the archive's paths. This is primarily useful when you want Artifactory to see all the artifacts at once, e.g., for indexing purposes.
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/libs-snapshot-local/myapp/1.0"
)
path.mkdir()
path.deploy_file(
"./myapp-1.0.tar.gz", explode_archive=True, explode_archive_atomic=True
)
Deploy artifact by checksum: deploy an artifact to the specified destination by checking if the artifact content already exists in Artifactory. If Artifactory already contains a user readable artifact with the same checksum the artifact content is copied over to the new location without requiring content transfer.
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath("http://my-artifactory/artifactory/my_repo/foo")
sha1 = "1be5d2dbe52ddee96ef2d17d354e2be0a155a951"
sha256 = "00bbf80ccca376893d60183e1a714e707fd929aea3e458f9ffda60f7ae75cc51"
# If you don't know sha value, you can calculate it via
# sha1 = artifactory.sha1sum("local_path_of_your_file")
# or
# sha256 = artifactory.sha256sum("local_path_of_your_file")
# Each of the following 4 methods works fine if the artifact content already
# exists in Artifactory.
path.deploy_by_checksum(sha1=sha1)
# deploy by sha1 via checksum parameter
path.deploy_by_checksum(checksum=sha1)
# deploy by sha256 via sha256 parameter
path.deploy_by_checksum(sha256=sha256)
# deploy by sha256 via checksum parameter
path.deploy_by_checksum(checksum=sha256)
Deploy a debian package myapp-1.0.deb
to an existent
folder
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath("http://my-artifactory/artifactory/ubuntu-local/pool/")
path.deploy_deb(
"./myapp-1.0.deb", distribution="trusty", component="main", architecture="amd64"
)
Deploy a debian package myapp-1.0.deb
to a non-existent
folder
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/ubuntu-local/pool/myapp-1.0.deb"
)
path.deploy_deb(
"./myapp-1.0.deb", distribution="trusty", component="main", architecture="amd64"
)
# if you want to set multiple values you can use list to set them
path.deploy_deb(
"./myapp-1.0.deb",
distribution=["dist1", "dist2"],
component="main",
architecture=["amd64", "i386"],
)
Copy artifact from this path to destination. If files are on the same instance of artifactory, lightweight (local) copying will be attempted.
The suppress_layouts parameter, when set to True
, will allow artifacts
from one path to be copied directly into another path without enforcing
repository layouts. The default behaviour is to copy to the repository
root, but remap the [org], [module], [baseVer], etc. structure to the
target repository.
For example, we have a builds repository using the default maven2 repository where we publish our builds, and we also have a published repository where a directory for production and a directory for staging environments should hold the current promoted builds. How do we copy the contents of a build over to the production folder?
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
source = ArtifactoryPath("http://example.com/artifactory/builds/product/product/1.0.0/")
dest = ArtifactoryPath("http://example.com/artifactory/published/production/")
"""
Using copy with the default, suppress_layouts=False, the artifacts inside
builds/product/product/1.0.0/ will not end up in the published/production
path as we intended, but rather the entire structure product/product/1.0.0
is placed in the destination repo.
"""
source.copy(dest)
for p in dest:
print(p)
# http://example.com/artifactory/published/production/foo-0.0.1.gz
# http://example.com/artifactory/published/production/foo-0.0.1.pom
for p in ArtifactoryPath(
"http://example.com/artifactory/published/product/product/1.0.0.tar"
):
print(p)
# http://example.com/artifactory/published/product/product/1.0.0/product-1.0.0.tar.gz
# http://example.com/artifactory/published/product/product/1.0.0/product-1.0.0.tar.pom
"""
Using copy with suppress_layouts=True, the contents inside our source are copied
directly inside our dest as we intended.
"""
source.copy(dest, suppress_layouts=True)
for p in dest:
print(p)
"""
http://example.com/artifactory/published/production/foo-0.0.1.gz
http://example.com/artifactory/published/production/foo-0.0.1.pom
http://example.com/artifactory/published/production/product-1.0.0.tar.gz
http://example.com/artifactory/published/production/product-1.0.0.tar.pom
"""
# you can use dry run just to check if command will succeed without real change, adds debug message
source.copy(dest, dry_run=True)
Move artifact from this path to destination.
The suppress_layouts parameter, when set to True
, will allow artifacts
from one path to be copied directly into another path without enforcing
repository layouts. The default behaviour is to copy to the repository
root, but remap the [org], [module], [baseVer], etc. structure to the
target repository.
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
source = ArtifactoryPath("http://example.com/artifactory/builds/product/product/1.0.0/")
dest = ArtifactoryPath("http://example.com/artifactory/published/production/")
source.move(dest)
# you can use dry run just to check if command will succeed without real change, adds debug message
source.move(dest, dry_run=True)
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://repo.jfrog.org/artifactory/distributions/org/apache/tomcat/apache-tomcat-7.0.11.tar.gz"
)
if path.exists():
path.unlink()
You can get and set (or remove) properties from artifact. Following example shows how to manage properties and property sets
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://repo.jfrog.org/artifactory/distributions/org/apache/tomcat/apache-tomcat-7.0.11.tar.gz"
)
# Get properties
properties = path.properties
print(properties)
# Update a property or add if does not exist
properties["qa"] = "tested"
path.properties = properties
# add/replace set of properties
new_props = {
"test": ["test_property"],
"time": ["2018-01-16 12:17:44.135143"],
"addthis": ["addthis"],
}
path.properties = new_props
# Remove properties
properties.pop("release")
path.properties = properties
Returns the status of scheduled cron-based replication jobs define via the Artifactory UI on repositories. Supported by local, local-cached and remote repositories.
Notes: Requires Artifactory Pro
Security: Requires a user with 'read' permission (can be anonymous)
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"https://repo.jfrog.org/artifactory/repo1-cache/archetype-catalog.xml"
)
rep_status = path.replication_status
print("status: ", rep_status["status"])
You can use Artifactory Query Language in python.
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
arti_path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory"
) # path to artifactory, NO repo
# dict support
# Send query:
# items.find({"repo": "myrepo"})
artifacts = arti_path.aql("items.find", {"repo": "myrepo"})
# list support.
# Send query:
# items.find().include("name", "repo")
artifacts = arti_path.aql("items.find()", ".include", ["name", "repo"])
# support complex query
# Example 1
# items.find(
# {
# "$and": [
# {"repo": {"$eq": "repo"}},
# {"$or": [{"path": {"$match": "*path1"}}, {"path": {"$match": "*path2"}}]},
# ]
# }
# )
aqlargs = [
"items.find",
{
"$and": [
{"repo": {"$eq": "repo"}},
{
"$or": [
{"path": {"$match": "*path1"}},
{"path": {"$match": "*path2"}},
]
},
]
},
]
# artifacts_list contains raw data (list of dict)
# Send query
artifacts_list = arti_path.aql(*aqlargs)
# Example 2
# The query will find all items in repo docker-prod that are of type file and were created after timecode. The
# query will only display the fields "repo", "path" and "name" and will sort the result ascendingly by those fields.
# items.find(
# {
# "$or": [{"repo": "docker-prod"}],
# "type": "file",
# "created": {"$gt": "2019-07-10T19:20:30.45+01:00"},
# }
# ).include("repo", "path", "name",).sort({"$asc": ["repo", "path", "name"]})
aqlargs = [
"items.find",
{
"$and": [
{"repo": "docker-prod"},
{"type": "file"},
{"created": {"$gt": "2019-07-10T19:20:30.45+01:00"}},
]
},
".include",
["repo", "path", "name", "type"],
".sort",
{"$asc": ["repo", "path", "name"]},
]
artifacts_list = arti_path.aql(*aqlargs)
# You can convert to pathlib object:
artifact_pathlib = map(arti_path.from_aql, artifacts_list)
artifact_pathlib_list = list(map(arti_path.from_aql, artifacts_list))
You can get hash (md5
, sha1
, sha256
), creator, create date, and change date:
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://repo.jfrog.org/artifactory/distributions/org/apache/tomcat/apache-tomcat-7.0.11.tar.gz"
)
# Get FileStat
stat = path.stat()
print(stat)
print(stat.ctime)
print(stat.mtime)
print(stat.created_by)
print(stat.modified_by)
print(stat.mime_type)
print(stat.size)
print(stat.sha1)
print(stat.sha256)
print(stat.md5)
print(stat.is_dir)
print(stat.children)
print(stat.repo)
Information about number of downloads, user that last downloaded and date of last download
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://repo.jfrog.org/artifactory/distributions/org/apache/tomcat/apache-tomcat-7.0.11.tar.gz"
)
# Get FileStat
download_stat = path.download_stats()
print(download_stat)
print(download_stat.last_downloaded)
print(download_stat.last_downloaded_by)
print(download_stat.download_count)
print(download_stat.remote_download_count)
print(download_stat.remote_last_downloaded)
print(download_stat.uri)
Promotes a Docker image in a registry to another registry.
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath("http://example.com/artifactory")
path.promote_docker_image("docker-staging", "docker-prod", "my-application", "0.5.1")
from artifactory import ArtifactoryBuildManager
arti_build = ArtifactoryBuildManager(
"https://repo.jfrog.org/artifactory", project="proj_name", auth=("admin", "admin")
)
# Get all builds
all_builds = arti_build.builds
print(all_builds)
# Build Runs
build1 = all_builds[0]
all_runs = build1.runs
print(all_runs)
# Build Info
build_number1 = all_runs[0]
print(build_number1.info)
# Builds Diff
"""
Compare a build artifacts/dependencies/environment with an older build to see what
has changed (new artifacts added, old dependencies deleted etc).
"""
print(build_number1.diff(3))
# Build Promotion
"""
Change the status of a build, optionally moving or copying the build's artifacts and its dependencies
to a target repository and setting properties on promoted artifacts.
All artifacts from all scopes are included by default while dependencies are not. Scopes are additive (or)
"""
build_number1.promote(
ci_user="admin",
properties={"components": ["c1", "c3", "c14"], "release-name": ["fb3-ga"]},
)
Exceptions in this library are represented by dohq_artifactory.exception.ArtifactoryException
or by OSError
If exception was caused by HTTPError you can always drill down the root cause by using following example:
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
from dohq_artifactory.exception import ArtifactoryException
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my_arti:8080/artifactory/installer/", auth=("wrong_user", "wrong_pass")
)
try:
path.stat()
except ArtifactoryException as exc:
print(exc) # clean artifactory error message
# >>> Bad credentials
print(
exc.__cause__
) # HTTP error that triggered exception, you can use this object for more info
# >>> 401 Client Error: Unauthorized for url: http://my_arti:8080/artifactory/installer/
You can manipulate with user\group\repository and permission. First, create ArtifactoryPath
object without a repository
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
artifactory_ = ArtifactoryPath(
"https://artifactory.example.com/artifactory", auth=("user", "password")
)
You can see detailed use of AdminObject
in file .\tests\integration\test_admin.py
# Find or create first way
from dohq_artifactory import generate_password, User
user = artifactory_.find_user("username")
if user is None:
# User does not exist
user = User(
artifactory_, "username", "username@example.com", password=generate_password()
)
user.create()
# Find or create - second way
user = User(artifactory_, "username")
if not user.read(): # Return True if user exist
# User does not exist
user = User(
artifactory_, "username", "username@example.com", password=generate_password()
)
user.create()
# Add to group
user.add_to_group("byname")
group = artifactory_.find_group("groupname")
user.add_to_group(group)
user.update() # Don't forget update :)
enc_pwd = user.encrypted_password
# You can re-read from Artifactory
user.read()
user.delete()
from dohq_artifactory import User
user = User(artifactory_, "username")
# create an API key
user.api_key.create()
# get API key
user.api_key.get()
# or using str() method
my_key = str(user.api_key)
# or using repr method
print(user.api_key)
# regenerate API key if one already exists
user.api_key.regenerate()
# remove API key for current user
user.api_key.revoke()
# remove all API keys in system, only if user has admin rights
user.api_key.revoke_for_all_users()
# Find
from dohq_artifactory import generate_password, Group
group = artifactory_.find_group("groupname")
# Create
if group is None:
group = Group(artifactory_, "groupname")
group.create()
# You can re-read from Artifactory
group.read()
# You can add multiple users at once to Group
group.users = ["admin", "anonymous"]
group.create()
# You can remove all users from a Group
group.users = []
group.create()
group.delete()
https://www.jfrog.com/confluence/display/RTF/LDAP+Groups#LDAPGroups-UsingtheRESTAPI
# Full DN path in artifactory
dn = "cn=R.DevOps.TestArtifactory,ou=Groups,dc=example,dc=com"
attr = "ldapGroupName=r.devops.testartifactory;groupsStrategy=STATIC;groupDn={}".format(
dn
)
test_group = GroupLDAP(
artifactory=artifactory_, name="r.devops.testartifactory", realm_attributes=attr
)
test_group.create()
# Find
from dohq_artifactory import generate_password, RepositoryLocal
repo = artifactory_.find_repository_local("reponame")
# Create
if repo is None:
# or RepositoryLocal.PYPI, RepositoryLocal.NUGET, etc
repo = RepositoryLocal(artifactory_, "reponame", packageType=RepositoryLocal.DEBIAN)
repo.create()
# You can re-read from Artifactory
repo.read()
repo.delete()
# Find
from dohq_artifactory import RepositoryVirtual
repo = artifactory_.find_repository_virtual("pypi.all")
# Create
if repo is None:
# or RepositoryVirtual.PYPI, RepositoryLocal.NUGET, etc
repo = RepositoryVirtual(
artifactory_,
"pypi.all",
repositories=["pypi.snapshot", "pypi.release"],
packageType=RepositoryVirtual.PYPI,
)
repo.create()
# You can re-read from Artifactory
repo.read()
local_repos = repo.repositories # return List<RepositoryLocal>
repo.delete()
# Find
from dohq_artifactory import RepositoryRemote
repo = artifactory_.find_repository_virtual("pypi.all")
# Create
if repo is None:
# or RepositoryRemote.PYPI, RepositoryRemote.NUGET, etc
repo = RepositoryRemote(
artifactory_,
"pypi.all",
url="https://files.pythonhosted.org",
packageType=RepositoryVirtual.PYPI,
)
repo.create()
# You can re-read from Artifactory
repo.read()
repo.delete()
# Find
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
from dohq_artifactory import Project
artifactory_ = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/myrepo/restricted-path", token="MY_TOKEN"
)
project = artifactory_.find_project("t1k1")
# Create
if project is None:
project = Project(artifactory_, "t1k1", "t1k1_display_name")
project.create()
# You can re-read from Artifactory
project.read()
project.delete()
# Find any repo by name
repo = artifactory_.find_repository("pypi.all")
# Get repo
repo = artifactory_.find_repository("pypi.all")
# Iterate over repo
for artifact in repo:
print(artifact)
print(artifact.properties)
# Result:
# http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.0.0-py3.whl
# {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.0"]}
# http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.0.1.dev5-py3.whl
# {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.1.dev5"]}
# http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/other_package/other_package-0.0.1-py3.whl
# {"pypi.name": ["other_package"], "pypy_version": ["0.0.1"]}
# ...
Repo can bee accessed just like any other ArtifactPath
:
# Get repo
repo = artifactory_.find_repository("pypi.all")
# Access a folder within the repo
package = repo / "my_package"
# Result:
# ArtifactPath('http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package')
# Access a file within the repo
package = repo / "my_package" / "my_artifact.tar.gz"
# Result:
# ArtifactPath('http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_artifact.tar.gz')
# Get repo
repo = artifactory_.find_repository("pypi.all")
# Will generate and perform AQL query for getting artifacts by path or name
for artifacts in repo["my_package"]:
print(artifact)
print(artifact.properties)
# Result:
# http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.0.0-py3.whl
# {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.0"], ...}
# http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.0.1.dev5-py3.whl
# {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.1.dev5"], ...}
# http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.1.0-py3.whl
# {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.1.0"], ...}
# ...
# Using partial match
for artifacts in repo["my_pack*"]:
print(artifact)
print(artifact.properties)
# Result:
# http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.0.0-py3.whl
# {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.0"], ...}
# http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.0.1.dev5-py3.whl
# {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.1.dev5"], ...}
# http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package_new_/my_package_new-0.0.1-py3.whl
# {"pypi.name": ["my_package_new"], "pypy_version": ["0.0.1"], ...}
# ...
Some types of repositories support specific ways of searching artifacts.
-
PyPi
# Get repo repo = artifactory_.find_repository("pypi.all") # Get artifacts by package name for artifacts in repo["my_package"]: print(artifact) print(artifact.properties) # Result: # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.0.0-py3.whl # {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.0"], ...} # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.0.1.dev5-py3.whl # {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.1.dev5"], ...} # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.1.0-py3.whl # {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.1.0"], ...} # ... # Get artifacts by specific version for artifacts in repo["my_package==1.0.0"]: print(artifact) print(artifact.properties) # Result: # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.0.0-py3.whl # {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.0"], ...} # Using other pip operators (result should be additionaly checked!) for artifacts in repo["my_package!=1.0.0"]: print(artifact) print(artifact.properties) # Result: # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.0.1.dev5-py3.whl # {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.1.dev5"], ...} # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.1.0-py3.whl # {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.1.0"], ...} # ... # In case of using > or < operators, the result should be additionaly checked # because Artifactory compares strings, not versions for artifacts in repo["my_package>=1.0.0"]: print(artifact) print(artifact.properties) # Result: # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.0.1.dev5-py3.whl # {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.1.dev5"], ...} # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/pypi.all/my_package/my_package-1.1.0-py3.whl # {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.1.0"], ...} # ...
-
Docker
# Get repo repo = artifactory_.find_repository("docker.all") # Get artifacts by image name for artifacts in repo["my_image"]: print(artifact) print(artifact.properties) # Result: # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/docker.all/my_image/latest/manifest.json # {"docker.repoName": ["my_image"], "docker.manifest": ["latest"], ...} # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/docker.all/my_image/1.0.0/manifest.json # {"docker.repoName": ["my_image"], "docker.manifest": ["1.0.0"], ...} # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/docker.all/my_image/1.1.0/manifest.json # {"docker.repoName": ["my_image"], "docker.manifest": ["1.1.0"], ...} # ... # Get artifacts by specific version for artifacts in repo["my_image:1.0.0"]: print(artifact) print(artifact.properties) # Result: # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/docker.all/my_image/1.0.0/manifest.json # {"docker.repoName": ["my_image"], "docker.manifest": ["1.0.0"], ...} # ... for artifacts in repo["my_image:latest"]: print(artifact) print(artifact.properties) # Result: # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/docker.all/my_image/latest/manifest.json # {"docker.repoName": ["my_image"], "docker.manifest": ["latest"], ...} # ... # Partial search for artifacts in repo["my_package:*dev*"]: print(artifact) print(artifact.properties) # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/docker.all/my_image/dev/manifest.json # {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["dev"]} # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/docker.all/my_image/1.0.1-dev5/manifest.json # {"pypi.name": ["my_package"], "pypy_version": ["1.0.1-dev5"]} # ...
-
Maven
# Get repo repo = artifactory_.find_repository("maven.all") # Get artifacts by group name for artifacts in repo["my.group"]: print(artifact) print(artifact.properties) # Result: # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.0/maven-metadata.xml # ... # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/another_package/1.2.3/maven-metadata.xml # ... # Get artifacts by group and package name for artifacts in repo["my.group:package"]: print(artifact) print(artifact.properties) # Result: # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.0/maven-metadata.xml # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.0/package-1.0.0-source.jar # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.0/package-1.0.0-javadoc.jar # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.0/package-1.0.0.pom # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.0/package-1.0.0.jar # {"build.number": ["123"], "build.name": ["1.0.0"], ...} # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.1/maven-metadata.xml # ... # Get artifacts by group, package name and version for artifacts in repo["my.group:package:1.0.0"]: print(artifact) print(artifact.properties) # Result: # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.0/maven-metadata.xml # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.0/package-1.0.0-source.jar # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.0/package-1.0.0-javadoc.jar # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.0/package-1.0.0.pom # http://my.artifactory.com/artifactory/maven.all/my/group/package/1.0.0/package-1.0.0.jar # {"build.number": ["123"], "build.name": ["1.0.0"], ...}
Docs: https://www.jfrog.com/confluence/display/RTF/Managing+Permissions
Supports these roles:
PermissionTarget.ROLE_ADMIN
=ADMIN + DELETE + DEPLOY + ANNOTATE + READ
PermissionTarget.ROLE_DELETE
=DELETE + DEPLOY + ANNOTATE + READ
PermissionTarget.ROLE_DEPLOY
=DEPLOY + ANNOTATE + READ
PermissionTarget.ROLE_ANNOTATE
=ANNOTATE + READ
PermissionTarget.ROLE_READ
=READ
And for more modular control:
PermissionTarget.ADMIN
- Allows changing the permission settings for other users on this permission targetPermissionTarget.DELETE
- Allows deletion or overwriting of artifactsPermissionTarget.DEPLOY
- Allows deploying artifacts and deploying to caches (i.e. populating caches with remote artifacts)PermissionTarget.ANNOTATE
- Allows annotating artifacts and folders with metadata and propertiesPermissionTarget.READ
- Allows reading and downloading of artifacts
from dohq_artifactory import PermissionTarget
permission = artifactory_.find_permission_target("rule")
# See repositories, users or groups
permission.repositories
# Result:
# <RepositiryLocal repo1>
# <RepositiryLocal repo2>
permission.users
# Result:
# <User user1>
# <User user2>
permission.groups
# Result:
# <Group group1>
# <Group group2>
# Add repo (string or Repository) object
permission.add_repository("repo3", "repo4")
permission.add_repository(repo5_object)
# Or remove
permission.remove_repository("repo1", "repo2")
# Add user (string or User object) with specific permission
permission.add_user("user3", PermissionTarget.ROLE_ADMIN)
permission.add_user(
user4_object, PermissionTarget.ROLE_READ + PermissionTarget.ROLE_WRITE
) # You can add sum of permissions
# Or remove
permission.remove_user("user1", "user2")
# Add group (string or Group object) with permission
permission.add_group("group3", PermissionTarget.ROLE_ADMIN)
permission.add_group(
group4_object, PermissionTarget.ROLE_READ + PermissionTarget.ROLE_WRITE
) # You can add sum of permissions
# Or remove
permission.remove_group("group1", "group2")
permission.update() # Update!!
permission.repositories
# Result:
# <RepositiryLocal repo3>
# <RepositiryLocal repo4>
# <RepositiryLocal repo5>
permission.users
# Result:
# <User user3>
# <User user4>
permission.groups
# Result:
# <Group group3>
# <Group group4>
https://www.jfrog.com/confluence/display/RTF5X/Access+Tokens#AccessTokens-RESTAPI
from requests.auth import HTTPBasicAuth
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
from dohq_artifactory import Token
session = ArtifactoryPath(
"https://artifactory_dns/artifactory",
auth=("admin", "admin_password"),
auth_type=HTTPBasicAuth,
verify=False,
)
# Read token for readers group
group_name = "readers"
scope = "api:* member-of-groups:" + group_name
token = Token(session, scope=scope)
token.read()
# Create token for member of the readers
group_name = "readers"
scope = "api:* member-of-groups:" + group_name
subject = group_name
token = Token(
session, scope=scope, username=subject, expires_in=31557600, refreshable=True
)
response = token.create()
print("Readonly token:")
print("Username: " + token.username)
print("Token: " + token.token["access_token"])
All AdminObject
support:
user = artifactory_.find_user("username")
print(user.raw) # JSON response from Artifactory
new_repo = RepositoryLocal(artifactory, "reponame")
# If some key you can't find in object, you can use this:
new_repo.additional_params["property_sets"] = ["my", "properties_sets"]
new_repo.create()
# All object support CRUD operations:
obj.read() # Return True if user exist (and read from Artifactory), else return False
obj.create()
obj.update()
obj.delete()
# ArtifactoryPath have different find_ method:
artifactory_.find_user("name")
artifactory_.find_group("name")
artifactory_.find_repository_local("name")
artifactory_.find_permission_target("name")
artifactory_.find_project("project_key")
To re-use the established connection, you can pass session
parameter to ArtifactoryPath:
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
import requests
ses = requests.Session()
ses.auth = ("username", "password")
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/myrepo/my-path-1", sesssion=ses
)
path.touch()
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/myrepo/my-path-2", sesssion=ses
)
path.touch()
See Requests - SSL verification for more details.
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/libs-snapshot-local/myapp/1.0"
)
... is the same as
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/libs-snapshot-local/myapp/1.0", verify=True
)
Specify a local cert to use as client side certificate
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/libs-snapshot-local/myapp/1.0",
cert="/path_to_file/server.pem",
)
Disable host cert verification
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/libs-snapshot-local/myapp/1.0", verify=False
)
Note: If host cert verification is disabled, urllib3
will throw a InsecureRequestWarning.
To disable these warning, one needs to call urllib3.disable_warnings()
.
import requests.packages.urllib3 as urllib3
urllib3.disable_warnings()
The library supports timeout
argument in the same meaner as requests does
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/libs-snapshot-local/myapp/1.0"
)
... is the same as
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/libs-snapshot-local/myapp/1.0", timeout=None
)
Set 5 seconds timeout to your requests after which it will be terminated:
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/libs-snapshot-local/myapp/1.0", timeout=5
)
The library can be configured to emit logging that will give you better insight into what it's doing. Just configure logging module in your python script. Simplest example to add debug messages to a console:
import logging
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
logging.basicConfig()
# set level only for artifactory module, if omitted, then global log level is used, eg from basicConfig
logging.getLogger("artifactory").setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/myrepo/restricted-path", apikey="MY_API_KEY"
)
Artifactory Python module also can specify all connection-related settings in a central file, given by environment
variable $DOHQ_ARTIFACTORY_PYTHON_CFG
(default if not set: ~/.artifactory_python.cfg
) that is read upon
the creation of first ArtifactoryPath
object and is stored globally. For instance, you can specify per-instance
settings of authentication tokens, so that you won't need to explicitly pass auth
parameter to ArtifactoryPath
.
Example:
[DEFAULT]
username = nameforallinstances
[http://artifactory-instance.com/artifactory]
password = ilikerandompasswords
verify = false
[another-artifactory-instance.com/artifactory]
password = @dmin
cert = ~/mycert
Whether or not you specify http://
or https://
, the prefix is not essential. The module will first try to
locate the best match and then try to match URLs without prefixes. So in the config, if you specify
https://my-instance.local
and call ArtifactoryPath
with http://my-instance.local
, it will still do
the right thing.
About contributing and testing
- artifactory-du - estimate file space usage. Summarize disk usage in JFrog Artifactory of the set of FILEs, recursively for directories.
- artifactory-cleanup - is an extended and flexible cleanup tool for JFrog Artifactory.