Awesome
<p align="center"><img src="https://dydx.exchange/flat.svg" width="256" /></p> <div align="center"> <a href='https://pypi.org/project/dydx-v3-python'> <img src='https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/dydx-v3-python.svg' alt='PyPI'/> </a> <a href='https://github.com/dydxprotocol/dydx-v3-python/blob/master/LICENSE'> <img src='https://img.shields.io/github/license/dydxprotocol/dydx-v3-python.svg' alt='License' /> </a> </div> <br>Python client for dYdX (v3 API).
The library is currently tested against Python versions 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6, 3.9, and 3.11.
Installation
The dydx-v3-python
package is available on PyPI. Install with pip
:
pip install dydx-v3-python
Getting Started
The Client
object can be created with different levels of authentication depending on which features are needed. For more complete examples, see the examples directory, as well as the integration tests.
Public endpoints
No authentication information is required to access public endpoints.
from dydx3 import Client
from web3 import Web3
#
# Access public API endpoints.
#
public_client = Client(
host='http://localhost:8080',
)
public_client.public.get_markets()
Private endpoints
One of the following is required:
api_key_credentials
eth_private_key
web3
web3_account
web3_provider
#
# Access private API endpoints, without providing a STARK private key.
#
private_client = Client(
host='http://localhost:8080',
api_key_credentials={ 'key': '...', ... },
)
private_client.private.get_orders()
private_client.private.create_order(
# No STARK key, so signatures are required for orders and withdrawals.
signature='...',
# ...
)
#
# Access private API endpoints, with a STARK private key.
#
private_client_with_key = Client(
host='http://localhost:8080',
api_key_credentials={ 'key': '...', ... },
stark_private_key='...',
)
private_client.private.create_order(
# Order will be signed using the provided STARK private key.
# ...
)
Onboarding and API key management endpoints
One of the following is required:
eth_private_key
web3
web3_account
web3_provider
#
# Onboard a new user or manage API keys, without providing private keys.
#
web3_client = Client(
host='http://localhost:8080',
web3_provider=Web3.HTTPProvider('http://localhost:8545'),
)
web3_client.onboarding.create_user(
stark_public_key='...',
ethereum_address='...',
)
web3_client.eth_private.create_api_key(
ethereum_address='...',
)
#
# Onboard a new user or manage API keys, with private keys.
#
web3_client_with_keys = Client(
host='http://localhost:8080',
stark_private_key='...',
eth_private_key='...',
)
web3_client_with_keys.onboarding.create_user()
web3_client_with_keys.eth_private.create_api_key()
Using the C++ Library for STARK Signing
By default, STARK curve operations such as signing and verification will use the Python native implementation. These operations occur whenever placing an order or requesting a withdrawal. To use the C++ implementation, initialize the client object with crypto_c_exports_path
:
client = Client(
crypto_c_exports_path='./libcrypto_c_exports.so',
...
)
The path should point to a C++ shared library file, built from Starkware's crypto-cpp
library (CMake target) for the particular platform (e.g. Linux, etc.) that you are running your trading program on.
Running tests
If you want to run tests when developing the library locally, clone the repo and run:
pip install -r requirements.txt
docker-compose up # In a separate terminal
V3_API_HOST=<api-host> tox
NOTE: api-host
should be https://api.stage.dydx.exchange
to test in staging.