A Python API to sign into and query a 1Password account using the op
command.
- Python >= 3.9
- 1Password command-line tool >= 2.26.0
- Versions >= 2.21.0, < 2.26.0 supported but deprecated
- Versions < 2.21.0 are unsupported and an exception will be raised
- See 1Password Developer Documentation
- Internet connectivity to 1Password.com
- The
op
command queries your online account, not your local vault
- The
Notes:
- Generally
pyonepassword
will support up to 5 patch versions, including the current. E.g., 2.{24-28}.0. Five additional patch versions, e.g., 2.{19-23}.0, will be considered deprecated.- This version of
pyonepassword
does not support deprecatedop
1.x versions. Support for those versions is still available, albeit with minimal maintanence. See pyonepassword-legacy for more information.
python3 -m pip install pyonepassword
pyonepassword
essentially has two parts:
- Convenience Python classes for the various objects that the
op
command returns - A full-fledged API for querying a 1Password account
If you already have a workflow to drive the op
command, handle authentication, and so forth, but would benefit from an API that can ingest op
's JSON and give you Python objects, you're in luck, number one might be just what you need.
On the other hand, if you're using op
manually (maybe along side jq
), or in shell scripts (or maybe not at all), and you'd like a full-service Python API rather than console commands, number two does that.
We'll get into some examples below for both of these.
pyonepassword
provides Python classes for many of the objects op
returns, including:
- Several "item" types (login, password, secure note, etc)
- User
- User List (e.g., from 'op user list')
- Group
- Group List
- Vault
- Vault List
- Account
- Account List
All of these classes provide assorted convenience properties. For example obj.created_at
returns a proper Python datetime
object.
All of the object types are fundamentally dictionaries, so their data can be accessed as such, and they can be serialized back to JSON.
Also, all classes can be instantiated from either directly from a JSON string, or from an unserialized object.
Take the following Login item as an example:
{
"id": "4smjvvepfbg3hencrmo7cozphe",
"title": "Example Login",
"version": 2,
"vault": {
"id": "yhdg6ovhkjcfhn3u25cp2bnl6e"
},
"category": "LOGIN",
"last_edited_by": "RAXCWKNRRNGL7I3KSZOH5ERLHI",
"created_at": "2021-06-29T18:42:03Z",
"updated_at": "2022-03-17T03:40:49Z",
"sections": [
{
"id": "linked items",
"label": "Related Items"
}
],
"fields": [
{
"id": "password",
"type": "CONCEALED",
"purpose": "PASSWORD",
"label": "password",
"value": "doth-parrot-hid-tussock-veldt",
"password_details": {
"strength": "FANTASTIC"
}
},
{
"id": "username",
"type": "STRING",
"purpose": "USERNAME",
"label": "username",
"value": "zcutlip"
},
{
"id": "notesPlain",
"type": "STRING",
"purpose": "NOTES",
"label": "notesPlain"
}
],
"urls": [
{
"href": "http://example2.website"
},
{
"primary": true,
"href": "https://example.website"
}
]
}
In just a line of Python, you can create an OPLoginItem
object:
from pyonepassword.api.object_types import OPLoginItem
login_item = OPLoginItem(login_item_json)
print(login_item.username)
print(login_item.password)
print(login_item.primary_url.href)
# login_item is also a dictionary:
print(login_item["username"] == login_item.username)
If you want to fully automate connecting to and querying a 1Password account, that's what the OP
class is for. It handles authentication (except for initial sign-in). And provides methods that are congruent to many of the op
CLI tool's subcommands, such as:
item_get()
item_list()
user_get()
user_list()
...
... and so forth.
All of these methods return objects types as described above. Also, item_get()
returns the appropriate object type for the item, such as OPLoginItem
or OPSecureNoteItem
, as long as pyonepassword
has a class for the returned item type.
Note: In some cases the
op
command may return items that don't conform to the expected structure. When this happens, the item dictionary will fail to validate, an exception will be raised. There is API for relaxing item validation, globally, on a per-class basis, or a per-item basis. See item-validation.md for more information.
Below is an example demonstrating:
- Sign-in
- Specifying a default vault for queries
- Retrieving an item from 1Password by name or by UUID
- Overriding the default vault to retrieve a subsequent item from 1Password
import getpass
from pyonepassword import OP
from pyonepassword.api.exceptions import (
OPSigninException,
OPItemGetException,
OPNotFoundException,
OPConfigNotFoundException
)
# See examples/example-sign-in.py for more sign-in examples
def do_signin():
# Let's check If biometric is enabled
# If so, no need to provide a password
if OP.uses_biometric():
try:
# no need to provide any authentication parameters if biometric is enabled
op = OP()
except OPAuthenticationException:
print("Uh oh! Sign-in failed")
exit(-1)
else:
# prompt user for a password (or get it some other way)
my_password = getpass.getpass(prompt="1Password master password:\n")
# You may optionally provide an account shorthand if you used a custom one during initial sign-in
# shorthand = "arbitrary_account_shorthand"
# return OP(account_shorthand=shorthand, password=my_password)
# Or we'll try to look up account shorthand from your latest sign-in in op's config file
op = OP(password=my_password)
return op
def main():
op = do_signin()
item_password = op.item_get_password("Example Login")
# We can also look up the item by its UUID
# as well as retrieve from an alternate vault
item_password = op.item_get_password(
"ykhsbhhv2vf6hn2u4qwblfrmg4", vault="Private")
Below is an example demonstrating:
- Retrieving a document and its file name from 1Password, based on item name
- Retrieving a document & file name from 1Password, based on UUID
op = do_signin()
# File name and document title in 1Password are often different.
# so we get back the file name, and the bytes object representing the document
file_name, document_bytes = op.document_get("Example Login - 1Password Logo")
# we can also look up the document by UUID
file_name, document_bytes = op.document_get(
"bmxpvuthureo7e52uqmvqcr4dy")
open(file_name, "wb").write(document_bytes)
Below is an example demonstrating:
- Signing in, then signing out of 1Password
- Signing out and also forgetting a 1Password account
Note: Currently
pyonepassword
's sign-out & forget support requires a signed-in session. It is not yet possible to forget an arbitrary account.
def main():
op = do_signin()
# do signout
op.signout()
try:
print(op.item_get_password("Example Login"))
except OPItemGetException:
# lookup fails since we signed out
pass
# now let's sign in again, then signout with forget=True
op = do_signin()
op.signout(forget=True)
try:
do_signin()
except OPSigninException:
# Sign-in fails since we erased the initial sign-in with forget=True
pass
op = OP(password=my_password)
# User's name:
user: OPUser = op.user_get("Firstname Lastname")
# or the user's UUID
user: OPUser = op.user_get(user_uuid)
op = OP(password=my_password)
# Group name:
group: OPGroup = op.group_get("Team Members")
# or the group's UUID
group: OPGroup = op.group_get("yhdg6ovhkjcfhn3u25cp2bnl6e")
op = OP(password=my_password)
# Group name:
vault: OPVault = op.vault_get("Test Data")
# or the group's UUID
vault: OPVault = op.vault_get("yhdg6ovhkjcfhn3u25cp2bnl6e")
If any of the item types (login, password, etc.) are missing or don't provide sufficient properties or methods, it's very easy to add new ones or extend existing ones.
Here's an example extending OPLoginItem
.
from pyonepassword import OP
from pyonepassword.api.decorators import op_register_item_type
from pyonepassword.api.object_types import OPLoginItem
@op_register_item_type
class OPEnhancedLoginItem(OPLoginItem):
@property
def custom_property(self):
return self["custom_field"]
op = OP()
enhanced_login = op.item_get("Example Login", vault="Test Data")
print(enhanced_login.custom_property)
from pyonepassword import OP # noqa: E402
from pyonepassword.api.exceptions import OPItemDeleteException # noqa: E402
def main():
op: OP()
try:
# op.item_delete() can take any identifier accepted by the 'op' command:
# Usage: op item delete [{ <itemName> | <itemID> | <shareLink> | - }] [flags]
deleted_uuid = op.item_delete("Example Login") # noqa: F841
# if desired inspect resulting UUID to ensure it's what was
# Expected
except OPItemDeleteException as ope:
# 'op' command can fail for a few reaons, including
# - item not found
# - duplicate item names
# Inspect the error message from the command
print(ope.err_output)
For details on creating new items in a 1Password vault, see item-creation.md
Also see the examples in examples/item_creation
For details on editing existing items in a 1Password vault, see item-editing.md
Also see the examples in examples/item_editing
For details on editing existing document item file contents, see document-editing.md
See examples in examples/document_editing
User editing is supported via the OP.user_edit()
method. It supports toggling travel mode on and off, as well as setting a new user name. Only one user at a time may be edited via this method.
See examples in examples/user_editing
Lots more examples are available in the examples
directory