pxsas
is a simple Python 3 wrapper for the
XMM-Newton Science Analysis System (SAS).
pxsas
needs a working SAS installation. SAS has to be initialized
before importing pxsas
into your python environment.
A note about SAS 17.0.0 and above
Starting with version 17.0.0, the SAS installation procedure creates its own python environment for running some tasks. This is the system's default python environment after the initialization of SAS. You can install pxsas in this environment, but this is extremely NOT recomended. Instead, you can redefine your PATH after SAS initialization like this (in bash):
export PATH="/path/to/my/python:$PATH"
pxsas
can be easily installed using pip
:
pip install pxsas
A simple example of using pxsas
:
>>> import logging >>> import os >>> import pxsas >>> logging.getLogger().setLevel(logging.INFO) # Show SAS version used by pxsas >>> pxsas.sasversion(full=True) INFO:root:Running sasversion -v INFO:root:sasversion (sasversion-1.3) [xmmsas_20190531_1155-18.0.0] '18.0.0' # Show the version of the task 'evselect' >>> pxsas.run("evselect", "-v") # Create a Calibration Index File for a given observation # Raise exception if the task fails >>> os.environ["SAS_ODF"] = "/path/to/observation/ODF" >> pxsas.run("cifbuild", calindexset="ccf.cif") # Create a Calibration Index File for a given observation # Returns None if the task fails >>> os.environ["SAS_ODF"] = "/path/to/observation/ODF" >>> pxsas.run("cifbuild", calindexset="ccf.cif", raise_error=False)
The output messages from the SAS tasks are captured through the python logging system. The messages are included at the logging level defined bt the parameter verbosity_level. For example:
>> pxsas.run("cifbuild", calindexset="ccf.cif", verbosity_level=logging.DEBUG)
will include the output messages of the task as DEBUG messages. By default the logging level is INFO. For not capturing the messages through the logging system, use verbosity_level=0.
If the task runs succesfully, pxsas.run
returns the output text as a string. By
default, if an error happens during execution, and exception is raised. If the keyword
argument raise_error
is set to False, then no exception is raised and it just returns
None
.