# Using Request Builders with Your Service Client In this doc, we will be showing how to use our ***request builders*** to build ***http requests*** - or create raw ***http requests*** yourselves - and send these requests directly to the service using the ***send_request*** method. Here's how to get started: ```python >>> from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential >>> from azure.example import ExampleClient >>> from azure.example.rest import build_example_request >>> client = ExampleClient(endpoint='https://www.example.org/', credential=DefaultAzureCredential()) >>> request = build_example_request() >>> request >>> response = client.send_request(request) >>> response >>> response.raise_for_status() >>> response.text 'Happy to see you!' ``` ## Code Snippets **Code snippets for how to use our request builders with our clients**: 1. [Sync client](#sync-client) 2. [Async client](#async-client) ## Steps To Make a Call 1. [Initialize your client](#1-initialize-your-client "Initialize Your Client") 2. [Create a request](#2-create-a-request "Create a Request") 3. [Send the request](#3-send-the-request "Send the Request") 4. [Handle the response](#4-handle-the-response "Handle the Response") We will go into each step in the following sections ## 1. Initialize Your Client First you import your client from the namespace of your package. For example, let's say your namespace is `azure.example` and your client's name is `ExampleClient`. Your import would look like ```python from azure.example import ExampleClient ``` Most clients require authenticating through their `credential` parameter. Depending on what authentication support your library is using, you can either [authenticate with aad](#authenticating-with-aad) or [authenticate with an `AzureKeyCredential`](#authenticating-with-azurekeycredential). Additionally, most of our clients accept an `endpoint` parameter at initialization, usually a link to your own resource. ### Authenticating with AAD If your client supports authenticating with an [Azure Active Directory (AAD) token credential][aad_authentication], we provide a convenient library for AAD authentication called [`azure-identity`][azure_identity_docs] that can be installed additionally with: ```bash pip install azure-identity ``` Once [`azure-identity`][azure_identity_pip] is installed, the simplest way to authenticate is to use the [`DefaultAzureCredential`][default_azure_credential] class. The following code snippet shows you how to authenticate with a [`DefaultAzureCredential`][default_azure_credential]. ```python from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential from azure.example import ExampleClient client = ExampleClient( endpoint="https://www.example.org/", credential=DefaultAzureCredential() ) ``` ### Authenticating with [`AzureKeyCredential`][azure_key_credential] Some libraries support authenticating with an [`AzureKeyCredential`][azure_key_credential]. The following code snippet shows you how to authenticate with an [`AzureKeyCredential`][azure_key_credential] ```python from azure.core.credentials import AzureKeyCredential from azure.example import ExampleClient credential = "myCredential" client = ExampleClient( endpoint="https://www.example.org/", credential=AzureKeyCredential(credential) ) ``` ## 2. Create a Request Next, you need to create the request you want to be sent to the service. We offer [request builders](#use-our-request-builders) to make creating your `HttpRequest`s easier. For more advanced users, you can also [create your `HttpRequest` fully by yourself](#create-your-own-httprequest) ### Use our Request Builders Our request builders: - Keep track of the URL and method of the call, so you don't have to - Let you know what parameters the service needs - Take care of formatting your parameters - Will be grouped into submodules if there's a natural grouping to them. These request builders are located in the `rest` module of our libraries. If there's a natural grouping to request builders, these submodule groups will live inside the `rest` module. Now, let's make a request with a `json` body. ```python from azure.example.rest import build_analyze_text_request request = build_analyze_text_request( json={"document": "Hello world!"}, language="en", ) ``` If the `rest` module has grouped submodules, we recommend importing the whole submodule like this to avoid name conflicts: ```python from azure.example.rest import languages request = languages.build_detect_request( json={"document": "世界你好!"} ) ``` ### Create Your Own [`HttpRequest`][azure_core_http_request] For more advanced scenarios, you can also create your own [`HttpRequest`][azure_core_http_request]. Let's make the same request as we do in our [previous example](#use-our-request-builders) ```python from azure.example.core.rest import HttpRequest # this URL is relative to the endpoint we passed our client request = HttpRequest("POST", "/helloWorld", json={"document": "Hello world!"}, params={"language": "en"} ) ``` ## 3. Send the Request Now, we pass this request to your client's `send_request` method. This actually makes the network call. ```python from azure.example import ExampleClient response = client.send_request(request) # makes the network call ``` ## 4. Handle the Response Our `send_request` call returns an [`HttpResponse`][azure_core_http_response]. ### Error handling The response you get back from `send_request` will not automatically raise if your response is an error. If you wish to raise an error if your response is bad, call [`.raise_for_status()`][azure_core_raise_for_status] on your returned response. ```python try: response.raise_for_status() # raises an error if your response is not good except HttpResponseError as e: print(str(e)) ``` ### JSON response If the response you get back should be a `json` object, you can call `.json()` on your response to get it `json`-deserialized. Putting this all together, see our code snippets for how you can deal with your response object ```python response = client.send_request(request) try: response.raise_for_status() # raises an error if your response is not good json_response = response.json() # get your response as a json object # Now play with your JSON response! except HttpResponseError as e: print(str(e)) ``` ## Examples ### Sync Client ```python from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential from azure.example import ExampleClient from azure.example.rest import build_analyze_text_request from azure.core.exceptions import HttpResponseError client = ExampleClient( endpoint="https://example.org", credential=DefaultAzureCredential() ) request = build_analyze_text_request( json={"document": "Hello world!"}, language="en", ) response = client.send_request(request) try: response.raise_for_status() json_response = response.json() # Play with your response! except HttpResponseError: print(str(e)) ``` ### Async Client ```python from azure.identity.aio import DefaultAzureCredential from azure.example.aio import ExampleClient from azure.example.rest import build_analyze_text_request from azure.core.exceptions import HttpResponseError request = build_analyze_text_request( json={"document": "Hello world!"}, language="en", ) with DefaultAzureCredential() as credential: with ExampleClient(endpoint="https://example.org", credential=credential) as client: response = await client.send_request(request) try: response.raise_for_status() await response.load_body() json_response = response.json() # Play with your response! except HttpResponseError: print(str(e)) ``` ## Troubleshooting ### Errors All errors thrown by `.raise_for_error()` are [exceptions defined in `azure-core`][azure_core_exceptions]. ### Logging Our clients also have logging support. They use the standard [logging][python_logging] library for logging. Basic information about HTTP sessions (URLs, headers, etc.) is logged at INFO level. Detailed DEBUG level logging, including request/response bodies and un-redacted headers, can be enabled on a client with the `logging_enable` keyword argument. ```python from azure.identity import DefaultAzureCredential from azure.example import ExampleClient client = ExampleClient( endpoint="https://example.org", credential=DefaultAzureCredential(), logging_enable=True ) ``` ### File an Issue You can file issues [here][issues] in our repo. [azure_core_docs]: https://docs.microsoft.com/python/api/overview/azure/core-readme?view=azure-python [azure_identity_docs]: https://docs.microsoft.com/python/api/overview/azure/identity-readme?view=azure-python [http_response]: https://docs.microsoft.com/python/api/azure-core/azure.core.pipeline.transport.httpresponse?view=azure-python [azure_identity_pip]: https://pypi.org/project/azure-identity/ [aad_authentication]: https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/cognitive-services/authentication?tabs=powershell#authenticate-with-an-authentication-token [identity_credentials]: https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-python/tree/main/sdk/identity/azure-identity#credentials [default_azure_credential]: https://docs.microsoft.com/python/api/azure-identity/azure.identity.defaultazurecredential?view=azure-python [azure_key_credential]: https://docs.microsoft.com/python/api/azure-core/azure.core.credentials.azurekeycredential?view=azure-python [bearer_token_credential_policy]: https://docs.microsoft.com/python/api/azure-core/azure.core.pipeline.policies.bearertokencredentialpolicy?view=azure-python [azure_key_credential_policy]: https://docs.microsoft.com/python/api/azure-core/azure.core.pipeline.policies.azurekeycredentialpolicy?view=azure-python [azure_core_exceptions]: https://docs.microsoft.com/python/api/azure-core/azure.core.exceptions?view=azure-python [azure_core_http_request]: https://docsupport.blob.core.windows.net/$web/azure-core/azure.core.html#azure.core.protocol.HttpRequest [azure_core_http_response]: https://docsupport.blob.core.windows.net/$web/azure-core/azure.core.html#azure.core.protocol.HttpResponse [azure_core_async_http_response]: https://docsupport.blob.core.windows.net/$web/azure-core/azure.core.html#azure.core.protocol.AsyncHttpResponse [azure_core_raise_for_status]: https://docsupport.blob.core.windows.net/$web/azure-core/azure.core.html#azure.core.protocol.HttpResponse.raise_for_status [python_logging]: https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/logging.html [code_of_conduct]: https://opensource.microsoft.com/codeofconduct/ [coc_faq]: https://opensource.microsoft.com/codeofconduct/faq/ [coc_contact]: mailto:opencode@microsoft.com [issues]: https://github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-python/issues