An unoffial Python Wrapper for the exaroton API
Simply get an API Token from your Account and you're good to go.
exaroton requires Python 3.7 or newer.
python3 -m pip install -U exaroton
A Virtual Environment is recommended to not mess with system installs.
This module has minimal requirements (requests
), but you can never be safe enough.
python3 -m venv venv
source ./venv/bin/activate
pip install exaroton
Currently all methods are (in my opinion) well documented and properly typehinted. If you see something wrong, don't hestitate to create an Issue.
I may create a full list of all available methods, or even utilize readthedocs.org
# Import exaroton and set our token
>>> from exaroton import Exaroton
>>> exa = Exaroton("API_TOKEN")
# Get information about the authenticated account
>>> exa.get_account()
{
"_": "Account",
"name": "Username",
"email": "[email protected]",
"verified": true,
"credits": 420.69
}
# Get a list of our servers
>>> exa.get_servers()
[
{
"_": "Server",
"id": "7ZxuNK5RX879BFaH", # Thanks, random.org!
...
},
{
"_": "Server",
"id": "Kf48Td5iVlr8Xu24", # Thanks, random.org!
...
}
]
# Upload logs to https://mclo.gs
>>> exa.upload_logs("7ZxuNK5RX879BFaH")
{
"_": "Logs",
"id": "N5FR4K2", # Thanks, random.org!
"url": "https://mclo.gs/N5FR4K2",
"raw": "https://api.mclo.gs/1/raw/N5FR4K2"
}
# Print logs (this'll most likely spam your output lol)
>>> exa.get_server_logs("7ZxuNK5RX879BFaH")
'one extremely long string with lines seperated by the newline escape character \n'
# It'll print each line seperately when used with `print()`!
All you need to make calls to the API is the Authentication Token you can get from your account page. If you make server-specific calls, you'll need that servers ID, too.
Licensed under MIT