<p align="center"><img src="https://dydx.exchange/flat.svg" width="256" /></p>
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<a href='https://pypi.org/project/dydx-v3-python'>
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</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' />
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<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](https://pypi.org/project/dydx-v3-python). Install with `pip`:
```bash
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](./examples/) directory, as well as [the integration tests](./integration_tests/).
### Public endpoints
No authentication information is required to access public endpoints.
```python
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`
```python
#
# 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`
```python
#
# 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`:
```python
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](https://github.com/starkware-libs/crypto-cpp/blob/601de408bee9f897315b8a5cb0c88e2450a91282/src/starkware/crypto/ffi/CMakeLists.txt#L3)) 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.