Command line interface (CLI) and application program interface (API) to allow users to search, download from and upload to HEPData.
The code is compatible with Python 3.7 or greater. Inspiration from arxiv-cli (unmaintained since 2018).
Install from PyPI using pip:
$ pip install --user hepdata-cli
$ hepdata-cli --help
Install from GitHub in a virtual environment:
$ git clone https://github.com/HEPData/hepdata-cli.git
$ cd hepdata-cli
$ python3 -m venv venv
$ source venv/bin/activate
(venv) $ pip install -e '.[tests]'
(venv) $ hepdata-cli --help
(venv) $ pytest --cov=hepdata_cli
You can use HEPData-CLI both as a command-line interface (CLI) to search, download and upload records from/to the HEPData database, or as a Python library to perform the same operations via its application program interface (API).
$ hepdata-cli [-v/--version, --help]
$ hepdata-cli [--verbose] find [QUERY] [-kw/--keyword KEYWORD] [-i/--ids IDTYPE]
$ hepdata-cli [--verbose] download [IDS] [-f/--file-format FORMAT] [-i/--ids IDTYPE] [-t/--table-name TABLE-NAME] [-d/--download-dir DOWNLOAD-DIR]
$ hepdata-cli [--verbose] fetch-names [IDS] [-i/--ids IDTYPE]
$ hepdata-cli [--verbose] upload [PATH-TO-FILE-ARCHIVE] [-e/--email YOUR-EMAIL] [-r/--recid RECORD-ID] [-i/--invitation-cookie COOKIE] [-s/--sandbox TRUE/FALSE] [-p/--password PASSWORD]
The command find searches the HEPData database for matches of QUERY. The advanced search syntax from the website can be used.
The command download downloads records from the database (see options below).
The command fetch-names returns the names of the data tables in the records whose ids are supplied.
The command upload uploads a file to the HEPData web site as either a sandbox or normal record.
The argument [-kw/--keyword KEYWORD] filters the search result dictionary for specific keywords.
An exact match of the keyword is first attempted, otherwise partial matches are accepted.
The argument [-i/--ids IDTYPE] accepts IDTYPE equal to arxiv, hepdata orinspire.
The argument [-f/--file-format FORMAT] accepts FORMAT equal to csv, root, yaml, yoda, yoda1, yoda.h5, or json.
In the first six cases a .tar.gz archive is downloaded and unpacked as a directory, whereas in the last case a .json file is downloaded.
The argument [-t/--table-name TABLE-NAME] accepts a string giving the table name as input.
In this case only the specified table is downloaded as a .csv, .root, .yaml, .yoda, .yoda1, .yoda.h5, or .json file.
The argument [-d/--download-dir DOWNLOAD-DIR] specifies the directory to download the files.
If not specified, the default download directory is ./hepdata-downloads.
The argument [-e/--email YOUR-EMAIL] is the uploader's email, needed to associate the submission to their HEPData account.
The argument [-i/--invitation-cookie COOKIE] must be supplied for non-sandbox submissions.
This can be found in the Uploader invitation email received at the beginning of the submission process.
The argument [-s/--sandbox TRUE/FALSE] is a boolean to decide whether to upload to the sandbox or not.
The argument [-p/--password PASSWORD is the password for the uploader's HEPData account (prompt if not specified).
Warning: do not store your password unencrypted in any code intended for shared use.
The hepdata-cli download/fetch-names and hepdata-cli find commands can be concatenated, if a IDTYPE is specified for find.
Equivalently to the above, these commands can be invoked by the API (in fact, the CLI is just a wrapper around the API).
from hepdata_cli.api import Client
client = Client(verbose=True)
client.find(query, keyword, ids)
client.download(id_list, file_format, ids, table_name, download_dir)
client.fetch_names(id_list, ids)
client.upload(path_to_file, email, recid, invitation_cookie, sandbox, password)$ hepdata-cli --verbose find 'reactions:"P P --> LQ LQ X"'
or equivalently
client.find('reactions:"P P --> LQ LQ X"')matches a single entry and returns full metadata dictionary.
$ hepdata-cli --verbose find 'reactions:"P P --> LQ LQ"' -kw year
or equivalently
client.find('reactions:"P P --> LQ LQ"', keyword='year')matches four entries and returns their publication years, as a dictionary.
$ hepdata-cli --verbose find 'reactions:"P P --> LQ LQ"' -i hepdata
or equivalently
client.find('reactions:"P P --> LQ LQ"', ids='hepdata')matches four entries and returns their hepdata ids, as a plain list.
$ hepdata-cli --verbose download $(hepdata-cli find 'reactions:"P P --> LQ LQ"' -i inspire) -i inspire -f csv
or equivalently
id_list = client.find('reactions:"P P --> LQ LQ"', ids='inspire')
downloads = client.download(id_list, ids='inspire', file_format='csv')
print(downloads) # {'1222326': ['./hepdata-downloads/HEPData-ins1222326-v1-csv/Table1.csv', ...], ...}downloads four .tar.gz archives containing csv files and unpacks them in the default ./hepdata-downloads directory. Using the API, a dictionary mapping ids to the downloaded files is returned.
$ hepdata-cli fetch-names $(hepdata-cli find 'reactions:"P P --> LQ LQ"' -i hepdata) -i hepdata
or equivalently
id_list = client.find('reactions:"P P --> LQ LQ"', ids='hepdata')
client.fetch_names(id_list, ids='hepdata')returns all table names in the four matching records.
This example requires arxiv.py to be installed, which is easily done via:
$ pip install --user arxiv
Then,
import hepdata_cli
hepdata_client = hepdata_cli.Client()
id_list = hepdata_client.find('reactions:"P P --> LQ LQ X"', ids='arxiv')
id_list = id_list.split()
print(id_list) # ['1605.06035', '2101.11582', ...]
import arxiv
papers = arxiv.Client().results(arxiv.Search(id_list=id_list))
for paper in papers:
paper.download_pdf()downloads the PDF files from the arXiv.
$ hepdata-cli upload /path/to/TestHEPSubmission.tar.gz -e [email protected] -s True
or equivalently
client.upload('/path/to/TestHEPSubmission.tar.gz', email='[email protected]', sandbox=True)The uploaded submission can then be found from your sandbox. You will be prompted for the password associated with your HEPData account. If your account was created with CERN or ORCID authentication, you will first need to set a password.
$ hepdata-cli upload /path/to/TestHEPSubmission.tar.gz -e [email protected] -r 1234567890 -s True
or equivalently
client.upload('/path/to/TestHEPSubmission.tar.gz', email='[email protected]', recid='1234567890', sandbox=True)Note that you must have uploaded the original sandbox record yourself and that you will be prompted for a password.
$ hepdata-cli upload /path/to/TestHEPSubmission.tar.gz -e [email protected] -r 123456 -i 8232e07f-d1d8-4883-bb1d-77fd9994ce4f -s False
or equivalently
client.upload('/path/to/TestHEPSubmission.tar.gz', email='[email protected]', recid='123456', invitation_cookie='8232e07f-d1d8-4883-bb1d-77fd9994ce4f', sandbox=False)The uploaded submission can then be found from your Dashboard.
The invitation cookie is sent in your original invitation email.
You must have already claimed permissions by clicking the link in that email or from your Dashboard.
Again, you will be prompted for a password, which must be set if using CERN/ORCID login.
The password can alternatively be passed as an argument to the CLI (-p PASSWORD) or API (password=PASSWORD).
However, please be careful to keep your password secure, for example, by defining an encrypted environment variable for a CI/CD workflow.