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Description

Python client library to quickly get started with the various Watson Developer Cloud services.

Code Quality Rank: L5
Programming language: Python
License: Apache License 2.0
Latest version: v5.3.0

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README

Watson Developer Cloud Python SDK

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Python client library to quickly get started with the various Watson APIs services.

Announcements

Tone Analyzer Deprecation

As of this major release, 6.0.0, the Tone Analyzer api has been removed in preparation for deprecation. If you wish to continue using this sdk to make calls to Tone Analyzer until its final deprecation, you will have to use a previous version.

On 24 February 2022, IBM announced the deprecation of the Tone Analyzer service. The service will no longer be available as of 24 February 2023. As of 24 February 2022, you will not be able to create new instances. Existing instances will be supported until 24 February 2023.

As an alternative, we encourage you to consider migrating to the Natural Language Understanding service on IBM Cloud. With Natural Language Understanding, tone analysis is done by using a pre-built classifications model, which provides an easy way to detect language tones in written text. For more information, see Migrating from Watson Tone Analyzer Customer Engagement endpoint to Natural Language Understanding.

Natural Language Classifier Deprecation

As of this major release, 6.0.0, the NLC api has been removed in preparation for deprecation. If you wish to continue using this sdk to make calls to NLC until its final deprecation, you will have to use a previous version.

On 9 August 2021, IBM announced the deprecation of the Natural Language Classifier service. The service will no longer be available from 8 August 2022. As of 9 September 2021, you will not be able to create new instances. Existing instances will be supported until 8 August 2022. Any instance that still exists on that date will be deleted.

As an alternative, we encourage you to consider migrating to the Natural Language Understanding service on IBM Cloud that uses deep learning to extract data and insights from text such as keywords, categories, sentiment, emotion, and syntax, along with advanced multi-label text classification capabilities, to provide even richer insights for your business or industry. For more information, see Migrating to Natural Language Understanding.

Before you begin

  • You need an IBM Cloud account. We now only support python 3.5 and above

Installation

To install, use pip or easy_install:

pip install --upgrade ibm-watson

or

easy_install --upgrade ibm-watson

Note the following: a) Versions prior to 3.0.0 can be installed using:

pip install --upgrade watson-developer-cloud

b) If you run into permission issues try:

sudo -H pip install --ignore-installed six ibm-watson

For more details see #225

c) In case you run into problems installing the SDK in DSX, try

!pip install --upgrade pip

Restarting the kernel

For more details see #405

Examples

The examples folder has basic and advanced examples. The examples within each service assume that you already have service credentials.

Running in IBM Cloud

If you run your app in IBM Cloud, the SDK gets credentials from the VCAP_SERVICES environment variable.

Authentication

Watson services are migrating to token-based Identity and Access Management (IAM) authentication.

  • With some service instances, you authenticate to the API by using IAM.
  • In other instances, you authenticate by providing the username and password for the service instance.

Getting credentials

To find out which authentication to use, view the service credentials. You find the service credentials for authentication the same way for all Watson services:

  1. Go to the IBM Cloud Dashboard page.
  2. Either click an existing Watson service instance in your resource list or click Create resource > AI and create a service instance.
  3. Click on the Manage item in the left nav bar of your service instance.

On this page, you should be able to see your credentials for accessing your service instance.

Supplying credentials

There are three ways to supply the credentials you found above to the SDK for authentication.

Credential file

With a credential file, you just need to put the file in the right place and the SDK will do the work of parsing and authenticating. You can get this file by clicking the Download button for the credentials in the Manage tab of your service instance.

The file downloaded will be called ibm-credentials.env. This is the name the SDK will search for and must be preserved unless you want to configure the file path (more on that later). The SDK will look for your ibm-credentials.env file in the following places (in order):

  • The top-level directory of the project you're using the SDK in
  • Your system's home directory

As long as you set that up correctly, you don't have to worry about setting any authentication options in your code. So, for example, if you created and downloaded the credential file for your Discovery instance, you just need to do the following:

discovery = DiscoveryV1(version='2019-04-30')

And that's it!

If you're using more than one service at a time in your code and get two different ibm-credentials.env files, just put the contents together in one ibm-credentials.env file and the SDK will handle assigning credentials to their appropriate services.

If you would like to configure the location/name of your credential file, you can set an environment variable called IBM_CREDENTIALS_FILE. This will take precedence over the locations specified above. Here's how you can do that:

export IBM_CREDENTIALS_FILE="<path>"

where <path> is something like /home/user/Downloads/<file_name>.env.

Environment Variables

Simply set the environment variables using _ syntax. For example, using your favourite terminal, you can set environment variables for Assistant service instance:

export ASSISTANT_APIKEY="<your apikey>"
export ASSISTANT_AUTH_TYPE="iam"

The credentials will be loaded from the environment automatically

assistant = AssistantV1(version='2018-08-01')

Manually

If you'd prefer to set authentication values manually in your code, the SDK supports that as well. The way you'll do this depends on what type of credentials your service instance gives you.

IAM

IBM Cloud has migrated to token-based Identity and Access Management (IAM) authentication. IAM authentication uses a service API key to get an access token that is passed with the call. Access tokens are valid for approximately one hour and must be regenerated.

You supply either an IAM service API key or a bearer token:

  • Use the API key to have the SDK manage the lifecycle of the access token. The SDK requests an access token, ensures that the access token is valid, and refreshes it if necessary.
  • Use the access token if you want to manage the lifecycle yourself. For details, see Authenticating with IAM tokens.
  • Use a server-side to generate access tokens using your IAM API key for untrusted environments like client-side scripts. The generated access tokens will be valid for one hour and can be refreshed.

Supplying the API key

from ibm_watson import DiscoveryV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import IAMAuthenticator

# In the constructor, letting the SDK manage the token
authenticator = IAMAuthenticator('apikey',
                                 url='<iam_url>') # optional - the default value is https://iam.cloud.ibm.com/identity/token
discovery = DiscoveryV1(version='2019-04-30',
                        authenticator=authenticator)
discovery.set_service_url('<url_as_per_region>')

Generating bearer tokens using API key

from ibm_watson import IAMTokenManager

# In your API endpoint use this to generate new bearer tokens
iam_token_manager = IAMTokenManager(apikey='<apikey>')
token = iam_token_manager.get_token()
Supplying the bearer token
from ibm_watson import DiscoveryV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import BearerTokenAuthenticator

# in the constructor, assuming control of managing the token
authenticator = BearerTokenAuthenticator('your bearer token')
discovery = DiscoveryV1(version='2019-04-30',
                        authenticator=authenticator)
discovery.set_service_url('<url_as_per_region>')

Username and password

from ibm_watson import DiscoveryV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import BasicAuthenticator

authenticator = BasicAuthenticator('username', 'password')
discovery = DiscoveryV1(version='2019-04-30', authenticator=authenticator)
discovery.set_service_url('<url_as_per_region>')

No Authentication

from ibm_watson import DiscoveryV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import NoAuthAuthenticator

authenticator = NoAuthAuthenticator()
discovery = DiscoveryV1(version='2019-04-30', authenticator=authenticator)
discovery.set_service_url('<url_as_per_region>')

Python version

Tested on Python 3.5, 3.6, and 3.7.

Questions

If you have issues with the APIs or have a question about the Watson services, see Stack Overflow.

Changes for v1.0

Version 1.0 focuses on the move to programmatically-generated code for many of the services. See the changelog for the details.

Changes for v2.0

DetailedResponse which contains the result, headers and HTTP status code is now the default response for all methods.

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1

assistant = AssistantV1(
    username='xxx',
    password='yyy',
    url='<url_as_per_region>',
    version='2018-07-10')

response = assistant.list_workspaces(headers={'Custom-Header': 'custom_value'})
print(response.get_result())
print(response.get_headers())
print(response.get_status_code())

See the changelog for the details.

Changes for v3.0

The SDK is generated using OpenAPI Specification(OAS3). Changes are basic reordering of parameters in function calls.

The package is renamed to ibm_watson. See the changelog for the details.

Changes for v4.0

Authenticator variable indicates the type of authentication to be used.

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import IAMAuthenticator

authenticator = IAMAuthenticator('your apikey')
assistant = AssistantV1(
    version='2018-07-10',
    authenticator=authenticator)
assistant.set_service_url('<url as per region>')

For more information, follow the MIGRATION-V4

Migration

To move from v3.x to v4.0, refer to the MIGRATION-V4.

Configuring the http client (Supported from v1.1.0)

To set client configs like timeout use the set_http_config() function and pass it a dictionary of configs. See this documentation for more information about the options. All options shown except method, url, headers, params, data, and auth are configurable via set_http_config(). For example for a Assistant service instance

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import IAMAuthenticator

authenticator = IAMAuthenticator('your apikey')
assistant = AssistantV1(
    version='2021-11-27',
    authenticator=authenticator)
assistant.set_service_url('https://api.us-south.assistant.watson.cloud.ibm.com')

assistant.set_http_config({'timeout': 100})
response = assistant.message(workspace_id=workspace_id, input={
    'text': 'What\'s the weather like?'}).get_result()
print(json.dumps(response, indent=2))

Use behind a corporate proxy

To use the SDK with any proxies you may have they can be set as shown below. For documentation on proxies see here

See this example configuration:

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import IAMAuthenticator

authenticator = IAMAuthenticator('your apikey')
assistant = AssistantV1(
    version='2021-11-27',
    authenticator=authenticator)
assistant.set_service_url('https://api.us-south.assistant.watson.cloud.ibm.com')

assistant.set_http_config({'proxies': {
  'http': 'http://10.10.1.10:3128',
  'https': 'http://10.10.1.10:1080',
}})

Sending custom certificates

To send custom certificates as a security measure in your request, use the cert property of the HTTPS Agent.

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import IAMAuthenticator

authenticator = IAMAuthenticator('your apikey')
assistant = AssistantV1(
    version='2021-11-27',
    authenticator=authenticator)
assistant.set_service_url('https://api.us-south.assistant.watson.cloud.ibm.com')

assistant.set_http_config({'cert': ('path_to_cert_file','path_to_key_file')})

Disable SSL certificate verification

For ICP(IBM Cloud Private), you can disable the SSL certificate verification by:

service.set_disable_ssl_verification(True)

Or can set it from extrernal sources. For example set in the environment variable.

export <service name>_DISABLE_SSL=True

Setting the service url

To set the base service to be used when contacting the service

service.set_service_url('my_new_service_url')

Or can set it from extrernal sources. For example set in the environment variable.

export <service name>_URL="<your url>"

Sending request headers

Custom headers can be passed in any request in the form of a dict as:

headers = {
    'Custom-Header': 'custom_value'
}

For example, to send a header called Custom-Header to a call in Watson Assistant, pass the headers parameter as:

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import IAMAuthenticator

authenticator = IAMAuthenticator('your apikey')
assistant = AssistantV1(
    version='2018-07-10',
    authenticator=authenticator)
assistant.set_service_url('https://gateway.watsonplatform.net/assistant/api')

response = assistant.list_workspaces(headers={'Custom-Header': 'custom_value'}).get_result()

Parsing HTTP response information

If you would like access to some HTTP response information along with the response model, you can set the set_detailed_response() to True. Since Python SDK v2.0, it is set to True

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import IAMAuthenticator

authenticator = IAMAuthenticator('your apikey')
assistant = AssistantV1(
    version='2018-07-10',
    authenticator=authenticator)
assistant.set_service_url('https://gateway.watsonplatform.net/assistant/api')

assistant.set_detailed_response(True)
response = assistant.list_workspaces(headers={'Custom-Header': 'custom_value'}).get_result()
print(response)

This would give an output of DetailedResponse having the structure:

{
    'result': <response returned by service>,
    'headers': { <http response headers> },
    'status_code': <http status code>
}

You can use the get_result(), get_headers() and get_status_code() to return the result, headers and status code respectively.

Getting the transaction ID

Every SDK call returns a response with a transaction ID in the X-Global-Transaction-Id header. Together the service instance region, this ID helps support teams troubleshoot issues from relevant logs.

Suceess

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1

service = AssistantV1(authenticator={my_authenticator})
response_headers = service.my_service_call().get_headers()
print(response_headers.get('X-Global-Transaction-Id'))

Failure

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1, ApiException

try:
    service = AssistantV1(authenticator={my_authenticator})
    service.my_service_call()
except ApiException as e:
    print(e.global_transaction_id)
    # OR
    print(e.http_response.headers.get('X-Global-Transaction-Id'))

However, the transaction ID isn't available when the API doesn't return a response for some reason. In that case, you can set your own transaction ID in the request. For example, replace <my-unique-transaction-id> in the following example with a unique transaction ID.

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1

service = AssistantV1(authenticator={my_authenticator})
service.my_service_call(headers={'X-Global-Transaction-Id': '<my-unique-transaction-id>'})

Using Websockets

The Text to Speech service supports synthesizing text to spoken audio using web sockets with the synthesize_using_websocket. The Speech to Text service supports recognizing speech to text using web sockets with the recognize_using_websocket. These methods need a custom callback class to listen to events. Below is an example of synthesize_using_websocket. Note: The service accepts one request per connection.

from ibm_watson.websocket import SynthesizeCallback

class MySynthesizeCallback(SynthesizeCallback):
    def __init__(self):
        SynthesizeCallback.__init__(self)

    def on_audio_stream(self, audio_stream):
        return audio_stream

    def on_data(self, data):
        return data

my_callback = MySynthesizeCallback()
service.synthesize_using_websocket('I like to pet dogs',
                                   my_callback,
                                   accept='audio/wav',
                                   voice='en-US_AllisonVoice'
                                  )

Cloud Pak for Data

If your service instance is of CP4D, below are two ways of initializing the assistant service.

1) Supplying the username, password and authentication url

The SDK will manage the token for the user

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import CloudPakForDataAuthenticator

authenticator = CloudPakForDataAuthenticator(
    '<your username>',
    '<your password>',
    '<authentication url>', # should be of the form https://{icp_cluster_host}{instance-id}/api
    disable_ssl_verification=True) # Disable ssl verification for authenticator

assistant = AssistantV1(
    version='<version>',
    authenticator=authenticator)
assistant.set_service_url('<service url>') # should be of the form https://{icp_cluster_host}/{deployment}/assistant/{instance-id}/api
assistant.set_disable_ssl_verification(True) # MAKE SURE SSL VERIFICATION IS DISABLED

2) Supplying the access token

from ibm_watson import AssistantV1
from ibm_cloud_sdk_core.authenticators import BearerTokenAuthenticator

authenticator = BearerTokenAuthenticator('your managed access token')
assistant = AssistantV1(version='<version>',
                        authenticator=authenticator)
assistant.set_service_url('<service url>') # should be of the form https://{icp_cluster_host}/{deployment}/assistant/{instance-id}/api
assistant.set_disable_ssl_verification(True) # MAKE SURE SSL VERIFICATION IS DISABLED

Logging

Enable logging

import logging
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)

This would show output of the form:

DEBUG:urllib3.connectionpool:Starting new HTTPS connection (1): iam.cloud.ibm.com:443
DEBUG:urllib3.connectionpool:https://iam.cloud.ibm.com:443 "POST /identity/token HTTP/1.1" 200 1809
DEBUG:urllib3.connectionpool:Starting new HTTPS connection (1): gateway.watsonplatform.net:443
DEBUG:urllib3.connectionpool:https://gateway.watsonplatform.net:443 "POST /assistant/api/v1/workspaces?version=2018-07-10 HTTP/1.1" 201 None
DEBUG:urllib3.connectionpool:Starting new HTTPS connection (1): gateway.watsonplatform.net:443
DEBUG:urllib3.connectionpool:https://gateway.watsonplatform.net:443 "GET /assistant/api/v1/workspaces/883a2a44-eb5f-4b1a-96b0-32a90b475ea8?version=2018-07-10&export=true HTTP/1.1" 200 None
DEBUG:urllib3.connectionpool:Starting new HTTPS connection (1): gateway.watsonplatform.net:443
DEBUG:urllib3.connectionpool:https://gateway.watsonplatform.net:443 "DELETE /assistant/api/v1/workspaces/883a2a44-eb5f-4b1a-96b0-32a90b475ea8?version=2018-07-10 HTTP/1.1" 200 28

Low level request and response dump

To get low level information of the requests/ responses:

from http.client import HTTPConnection
HTTPConnection.debuglevel = 1

Dependencies

  • requests
  • python_dateutil >= 2.5.3
  • responses for testing
  • Following for web sockets support in speech to text
    • websocket-client 0.48.0
  • ibm_cloud_sdk_core == 1.0.0

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md.

Featured Projects

Here are some projects that have been using the SDK:

We'd love to highlight cool open-source projects that use this SDK! If you'd like to get your project added to the list, feel free to make an issue linking us to it.

License

This library is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license.


*Note that all licence references and agreements mentioned in the Watson Developer Cloud Python SDK README section above are relevant to that project's source code only.