The Plivo Python SDK makes it simpler to integrate communications into your Python applications using the Plivo REST API. Using the SDK, you will be able to make voice calls, send SMS and generate Plivo XML to control your call flows.
Install the SDK using pip
pip install plivo
If you have the 0.11.3
version (a.k.a legacy) already installed, you will have to first uninstall it before installing the new version. pip install --upgrade plivo
might not work depending on your system status.
Alternatively, you can download the source code from this repo and run
python setup.py install
We recommend that you use virtualenv to manage and segregate your Python environments, instead of using sudo
with your commands and overwriting dependencies.
To make the API requests, you need to create a RestClient
and provide it with authentication credentials (which can be found at https://manage.plivo.com/dashboard/).
We recommend that you store your credentials in the PLIVO_AUTH_ID
and the PLIVO_AUTH_TOKEN
environment variables, so as to avoid the possibility of accidentally committing them to source control. If you do this, you can initialise the client with no arguments and it will automatically fetch them from the environment variables:
import plivo
client = plivo.RestClient()
Alternatively, you can specifiy the authentication credentials while initializing the RestClient
.
import plivo
client = plivo.RestClient(auth_id='your_auth_id', auth_token='your_auth_token')
If you expect to make a large number of API requests, re-use the same client instance, but if you expect to create a client on an on-demand basis, you can use a context manager to automatically frees all resources used by the client
import plivo
with plivo.RestClient() as client:
pass # Do something with the client
The SDK uses consistent interfaces to create, retrieve, update, delete and list resources. The pattern followed is as follows:
client.resources.create(*args, **kwargs) # Create
client.resources.get(id=resource_identifier) # Get
client.resources.update(id=resource_identifier, *args, **kwargs) # Update
client.resources.delete(id=resource_identifier) # Delete
client.resources.list() # List all resources, max 20 at a time
You can also use the resource
directly to update and delete it. For example,
resource = client.resources.get(id=resource_identifier)
resource.update(*args, **kwargs) # update the resource
resource.delete() # Delete the resource
Also, using client.resources.list()
would list the first 20 resources by default (which is the first page, with limit
as 20, and offset
as 0). To get more, you will have to use limit
and offset
to get the second page of resources.
To list all resources, you can simply use the following pattern that will handle the pagination for you automatically, so you won't have to worry about passing the right limit
and offset
values.
for resource in client.resources:
print(resource.id)
import plivo
client = plivo.RestClient()
message_created = client.messages.create(
src='the_source_number',
dst='the_destination_number',
text='Hello, world!'
)
import plivo
client = plivo.RestClient()
call_made = client.calls.create(
from_='the_from_number',
to_='the_to_number',
answer_url='https://answer.url'
)
from plivo import plivoxml
xml_response = plivoxml.ResponseElement()
xml_response.add_speak('Hello, world!') # or add(plivoxml.SpeakElement(text))
print(xml_response.to_string())
This generates the following XML:
<Response>
<Speak>Hello, world!</Speak>
</Response>
Refer to the Plivo API Reference for more examples. Also refer to the guide to setting up dev environment on Plivo Developers Portal to setup a Flask server & use it to test out your integration in under 5 minutes. to get started with Plivo.
Report any feedback or problems with this version by opening an issue on Github.