I want to query the Google Analytics API using Python to periodically download data from my Analytics account and store data in a local database. I am basically following the steps as given in the basic tutorial. I am using the Google client API library for Python in this process.
My script is working fine so far when I am running it on my local dev machine (Mac). When I start the script, my browser opens and I am prompted to grant access to my Analytics data from the app. Afterwards I can run my script as often as I want and get access to my data.
On my server (Ubuntu, only terminal available), the w3m
browser opens, but I cannot access my Google account from there. I can only quit w3m
and kill the program with Ctrl-C
. There is an error message like:
Your browser has been opened to visit:
https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth?scope=some_long_url&access_type=offline
If your browser is on a different machine then exit and re-run this application with the command-line parameter
--noauth_local_webserver
However when I run my script with the parameter --noauth_local_webserver
, I get the same results - w3m
opens and I cannot authenticate.
How can I get the --noauth_local_webserver
to work? I there another way to authenticate without a local browser on the same machine?
When you use FLAGS = gflags.FLAGS
, you actually need to pass the command-line arguments to FLAGS
(this may or may not have tripped me up as well :) ). See here for an Analytics-centric example of how to do it (code below as links tend to go away after a while). General idea is that argv
arguments are passed into the FLAGS
variable, which then become available to other modules.
# From samples/analytics/sample_utils.py in the google-api-python-client source
def process_flags(argv):
"""Uses the command-line flags to set the logging level.
Args:
argv: List of command line arguments passed to the python script.
"""
# Let the gflags module process the command-line arguments.
try:
argv = FLAGS(argv)
except gflags.FlagsError, e:
print '%s\nUsage: %s ARGS\n%s' % (e, argv[0], FLAGS)
sys.exit(1)
# Set the logging according to the command-line flag.
logging.getLogger().setLevel(getattr(logging, FLAGS.logging_level))
Also, turns out that we aren't alone! You can track this bug to see when this will get added the documentation.