There is an active fork of this library available at https://github.com/devopshq/artifactory
This module is intended to serve as a logical descendant of pathlib, a Python 3 module for object-oriented path manipulations. As such, it implements everything as closely as possible to the origin with few exceptions, such as stat().
Getting 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:
with open("tomcat.tar.gz", "wb") as out:
out.write(fd.read())
Deploy a regular file myapp-1.0.tar.gz
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 a debian package myapp-1.0.deb
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')
To provide username and password to access restricted resources, you can pass auth
parameter to ArtifactoryPath:
from artifactory import ArtifactoryPath
path = ArtifactoryPath(
"http://my-artifactory/artifactory/myrepo/restricted-path",
auth=('admin', 'ilikerandompasswords'))
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()
Artifactory Python module also has a way to specify all connection-related settings in a central file, ~/.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:
[http://artifactory-instance.com/artifactory]
username = deployer
password = ilikerandompasswords
verify = false
[another-artifactory-instance.com/artifactory]
username = foo
password = @dmin
cert = ~/mycert
Whether or not you specify http://
or https://
prefix is not essential. The module will first try to locate the best match and then try to match URLs without prefixes. So if in the config you specify https://my-instance.local
and call ArtifactoryPath
with http://my-instance.local
, it will still do the right thing.