api

module wandb.apis.public

Use the Public API to export or update data that you have saved to W&B.

Before using this API, you’ll want to log data from your script — check the Quickstart for more details.

You might use the Public API to

  • update metadata or metrics for an experiment after it has been completed,
  • pull down your results as a dataframe for post-hoc analysis in a Jupyter notebook, or
  • check your saved model artifacts for those tagged as ready-to-deploy.

For more on using the Public API, check out our guide.

class RetryingClient

method RetryingClient.__init__

__init__(client: wandb_gql.client.Client)

property RetryingClient.app_url


property RetryingClient.server_info


method RetryingClient.execute

execute(*args, **kwargs)

method RetryingClient.version_supported

version_supported(min_version: str)  bool

class Api

Used for querying the W&B server.

Examples:

import wandb

wandb.Api()

method Api.__init__

__init__(
    overrides: Optional[Dict[str, Any]] = None,
    timeout: Optional[int] = None,
    api_key: Optional[str] = None
)  None

Initialize the API.

Args:

  • overrides (dict[str, Any] | None): You can set base_url if you are
  • using a W&B server other than https: //api.wandb.ai. You can also set defaults for entity, project, and run.
  • timeout (int | None): HTTP timeout in seconds for API requests. If not specified, the default timeout will be used.
  • api_key (str | None): API key to use for authentication. If not provided, the API key from the current environment or configuration will be used.

property Api.api_key

Returns W&B API key.


property Api.client

Returns the client object.


property Api.default_entity

Returns the default W&B entity.


property Api.user_agent

Returns W&B public user agent.


property Api.viewer

Returns the viewer object.


method Api.artifact

artifact(name: str, type: Optional[str] = None)

Returns a single artifact.

Args:

  • name: The artifact’s name. The name of an artifact resembles a filepath that consists, at a minimum, the name of the project the artifact was logged to, the name of the artifact, and the artifact’s version or alias. Optionally append the entity that logged the artifact as a prefix followed by a forward slash. If no entity is specified in the name, the Run or API setting’s entity is used.
  • type: The type of artifact to fetch.

Returns: An Artifact object.

Raises:

  • ValueError: If the artifact name is not specified.
  • ValueError: If the artifact type is specified but does not match the type of the fetched artifact.

Examples: In the proceeding code snippets “entity”, “project”, “artifact”, “version”, and “alias” are placeholders for your W&B entity, name of the project the artifact is in, the name of the artifact, and artifact’s version, respectively.

import wandb

# Specify the project, artifact's name, and the artifact's alias
wandb.Api().artifact(name="project/artifact:alias")

# Specify the project, artifact's name, and a specific artifact version
wandb.Api().artifact(name="project/artifact:version")

# Specify the entity, project, artifact's name, and the artifact's alias
wandb.Api().artifact(name="entity/project/artifact:alias")

# Specify the entity, project, artifact's name, and a specific artifact version
wandb.Api().artifact(name="entity/project/artifact:version")

Note:

This method is intended for external use only. Do not call api.artifact() within the wandb repository code.


method Api.artifact_collection

artifact_collection(type_name: str, name: str)  public.ArtifactCollection

Returns a single artifact collection by type.

You can use the returned ArtifactCollection object to retrieve information about specific artifacts in that collection, and more.

Args:

  • type_name: The type of artifact collection to fetch.
  • name: An artifact collection name. Optionally append the entity that logged the artifact as a prefix followed by a forward slash.

Returns: An ArtifactCollection object.

Examples: In the proceeding code snippet “type”, “entity”, “project”, and “artifact_name” are placeholders for the collection type, your W&B entity, name of the project the artifact is in, and the name of the artifact, respectively.

import wandb

collections = wandb.Api().artifact_collection(
    type_name="type", name="entity/project/artifact_name"
)

# Get the first artifact in the collection
artifact_example = collections.artifacts()[0]

# Download the contents of the artifact to the specified root directory.
artifact_example.download()

method Api.artifact_collection_exists

artifact_collection_exists(name: str, type: str)  bool

Whether an artifact collection exists within a specified project and entity.

Args:

  • name: An artifact collection name. Optionally append the entity that logged the artifact as a prefix followed by a forward slash. If entity or project is not specified, infer the collection from the override params if they exist. Otherwise, entity is pulled from the user settings and project will default to “uncategorized”.
  • type: The type of artifact collection.

Returns: True if the artifact collection exists, False otherwise.

Examples: In the proceeding code snippet “type”, and “collection_name” refer to the type of the artifact collection and the name of the collection, respectively.

import wandb

wandb.Api.artifact_collection_exists(type="type", name="collection_name")

method Api.artifact_collections

artifact_collections(
    project_name: str,
    type_name: str,
    per_page: int = 50
)  public.ArtifactCollections

Returns a collection of matching artifact collections.

Args:

  • project_name: The name of the project to filter on.
  • type_name: The name of the artifact type to filter on.
  • per_page: Sets the page size for query pagination. None will use the default size. Usually there is no reason to change this.

Returns: An iterable ArtifactCollections object.


method Api.artifact_exists

artifact_exists(name: str, type: Optional[str] = None)  bool

Whether an artifact version exists within the specified project and entity.

Args:

  • name: The name of artifact. Add the artifact’s entity and project as a prefix. Append the version or the alias of the artifact with a colon. If the entity or project is not specified, W&B uses override parameters if populated. Otherwise, the entity is pulled from the user settings and the project is set to “Uncategorized”.
  • type: The type of artifact.

Returns: True if the artifact version exists, False otherwise.

Examples: In the proceeding code snippets “entity”, “project”, “artifact”, “version”, and “alias” are placeholders for your W&B entity, name of the project the artifact is in, the name of the artifact, and artifact’s version, respectively.

import wandb

wandb.Api().artifact_exists("entity/project/artifact:version")
wandb.Api().artifact_exists("entity/project/artifact:alias")

method Api.artifact_type

artifact_type(
    type_name: str,
    project: Optional[str] = None
)  public.ArtifactType

Returns the matching ArtifactType.

Args:

  • type_name: The name of the artifact type to retrieve.
  • project: If given, a project name or path to filter on.

Returns: An ArtifactType object.


method Api.artifact_types

artifact_types(project: Optional[str] = None)  public.ArtifactTypes

Returns a collection of matching artifact types.

Args:

  • project: The project name or path to filter on.

Returns: An iterable ArtifactTypes object.


method Api.artifact_versions

artifact_versions(type_name, name, per_page=50)

Deprecated. Use Api.artifacts(type_name, name) method instead.


method Api.artifacts

artifacts(
    type_name: str,
    name: str,
    per_page: int = 50,
    tags: Optional[List[str]] = None
)  public.Artifacts

Return an Artifacts collection.

Args: type_name: The type of artifacts to fetch. name: The artifact’s collection name. Optionally append the entity that logged the artifact as a prefix followed by a forward slash. per_page: Sets the page size for query pagination. If set to None, use the default size. Usually there is no reason to change this. tags: Only return artifacts with all of these tags.

Returns: An iterable Artifacts object.

Examples: In the proceeding code snippet, “type”, “entity”, “project”, and “artifact_name” are placeholders for the artifact type, W&B entity, name of the project the artifact was logged to, and the name of the artifact, respectively.

import wandb

wandb.Api().artifacts(type_name="type", name="entity/project/artifact_name")

method Api.automation

automation(name: str, entity: Optional[str] = None)  Automation

Returns the only Automation matching the parameters.

Args:

  • name: The name of the automation to fetch.
  • entity: The entity to fetch the automation for.

Raises:

  • ValueError: If zero or multiple Automations match the search criteria.

Examples: Get an existing automation named “my-automation”:

    import wandb

    api = wandb.Api()
    automation = api.automation(name="my-automation")
    ``` 

Get an existing automation named "other-automation", from the entity "my-team": 

```python
    automation = api.automation(name="other-automation", entity="my-team")
    ``` 

---

### <kbd>method</kbd> `Api.automations`

```python
automations(
    entity: Optional[str] = None,
    name: Optional[str] = None,
    per_page: int = 50
)  Iterator[ForwardRef('Automation')]

Returns an iterator over all Automations that match the given parameters.

If no parameters are provided, the returned iterator will contain all Automations that the user has access to.

Args:

  • entity: The entity to fetch the automations for.
  • name: The name of the automation to fetch.
  • per_page: The number of automations to fetch per page. Defaults to 50. Usually there is no reason to change this.

Returns: A list of automations.

Examples: Fetch all existing automations for the entity “my-team”:

    import wandb

    api = wandb.Api()
    automations = api.automations(entity="my-team")
    ``` 

---

### <kbd>method</kbd> `Api.create_automation`

```python
create_automation(
    obj: 'NewAutomation',
    fetch_existing: bool = False,
    **kwargs: typing_extensions.Unpack[ForwardRef('WriteAutomationsKwargs')]
)  Automation

Create a new Automation.

Args: obj: The automation to create. fetch_existing: If True, and a conflicting automation already exists, attempt to fetch the existing automation instead of raising an error. **kwargs: Any additional values to assign to the automation before creating it. If given, these will override any values that may already be set on the automation: - name: The name of the automation. - description: The description of the automation. - enabled: Whether the automation is enabled. - scope: The scope of the automation. - event: The event that triggers the automation. - action: The action that is triggered by the automation.

Returns: The saved Automation.

Examples: Create a new automation named “my-automation” that sends a Slack notification when a run within a specific project logs a metric exceeding a custom threshold:

     import wandb
     from wandb.automations import OnRunMetric, RunEvent, SendNotification

     api = wandb.Api()

     project = api.project("my-project", entity="my-team")

     # Use the first Slack integration for the team
     slack_hook = next(api.slack_integrations(entity="my-team"))

     event = OnRunMetric(
         scope=project,
         filter=RunEvent.metric("custom-metric") > 10,
     )
     action = SendNotification.from_integration(slack_hook)

     automation = api.create_automation(
         event >> action,
         name="my-automation",
         description="Send a Slack message whenever 'custom-metric' exceeds 10.",
     )
    ``` 

---

### <kbd>method</kbd> `Api.create_project`

```python
create_project(name: str, entity: str)  None

Create a new project.

Args:

  • name: The name of the new project.
  • entity: The entity of the new project.

method Api.create_registry

create_registry(
    name: str,
    visibility: Literal['organization', 'restricted'],
    organization: Optional[str] = None,
    description: Optional[str] = None,
    artifact_types: Optional[List[str]] = None
)  Registry

Create a new registry.

Args:

  • name: The name of the registry. Name must be unique within the organization.
  • visibility: The visibility of the registry.
  • organization: Anyone in the organization can view this registry. You can edit their roles later from the settings in the UI.
  • restricted: Only invited members via the UI can access this registry. Public sharing is disabled.
  • organization: The organization of the registry. If no organization is set in the settings, the organization will be fetched from the entity if the entity only belongs to one organization.
  • description: The description of the registry.
  • artifact_types: The accepted artifact types of the registry. A type is no
  • more than 128 characters and do not include characters /or ``:. If not specified, all types are accepted. Allowed types added to the registry cannot be removed later.

Returns: A registry object.

Examples:

   import wandb

   api = wandb.Api()
   registry = api.create_registry(
       name="my-registry",
       visibility="restricted",
       organization="my-org",
       description="This is a test registry",
       artifact_types=["model"],
   )
   ``` 

---

### <kbd>method</kbd> `Api.create_run`

```python
create_run(
   run_id: Optional[str] = None,
   project: Optional[str] = None,
   entity: Optional[str] = None
)  public.Run

Create a new run.

Args:

  • run_id: The ID to assign to the run. If not specified, W&B creates a random ID.
  • project: The project where to log the run to. If no project is specified, log the run to a project called “Uncategorized”.
  • entity: The entity that owns the project. If no entity is specified, log the run to the default entity.

Returns: The newly created Run.


method Api.create_run_queue

create_run_queue(
    name: str,
    type: 'public.RunQueueResourceType',
    entity: Optional[str] = None,
    prioritization_mode: Optional[ForwardRef('public.RunQueuePrioritizationMode')] = None,
    config: Optional[dict] = None,
    template_variables: Optional[dict] = None
)  public.RunQueue

Create a new run queue in W&B Launch.

Args:

  • name: Name of the queue to create
  • type: Type of resource to be used for the queue. One of “local-container”, “local-process”, “kubernetes”,“sagemaker”, or “gcp-vertex”.
  • entity: Name of the entity to create the queue. If None, use the configured or default entity.
  • prioritization_mode: Version of prioritization to use. Either “V0” or None.
  • config: Default resource configuration to be used for the queue. Use handlebars (eg. {{var}}) to specify template variables.
  • template_variables: A dictionary of template variable schemas to use with the config.

Returns: The newly created RunQueue.

Raises: ValueError if any of the parameters are invalid wandb.Error on wandb API errors


method Api.create_team

create_team(team: str, admin_username: Optional[str] = None)  public.Team

Create a new team.

Args:

  • team: The name of the team
  • admin_username: Username of the admin user of the team. Defaults to the current user.

Returns: A Team object.


method Api.create_user

create_user(email: str, admin: Optional[bool] = False)

Create a new user.

Args:

  • email: The email address of the user.
  • admin: Set user as a global instance administrator.

Returns: A User object.


method Api.delete_automation

delete_automation(obj: Union[ForwardRef('Automation'), str])  Literal[True]

Delete an automation.

Args:

  • obj: The automation to delete, or its ID.

Returns: True if the automation was deleted successfully.


method Api.flush

flush()

Flush the local cache.

The api object keeps a local cache of runs, so if the state of the run may change while executing your script you must clear the local cache with api.flush() to get the latest values associated with the run.


method Api.from_path

from_path(path: str)

Return a run, sweep, project or report from a path.

Args:

  • path: The path to the project, run, sweep or report

Returns: A Project, Run, Sweep, or BetaReport instance.

Raises: wandb.Error if path is invalid or the object doesn’t exist.

Examples: In the proceeding code snippets “project”, “team”, “run_id”, “sweep_id”, and “report_name” are placeholders for the project, team, run ID, sweep ID, and the name of a specific report, respectively.

import wandb

api = wandb.Api()

project = api.from_path("project")
team_project = api.from_path("team/project")
run = api.from_path("team/project/runs/run_id")
sweep = api.from_path("team/project/sweeps/sweep_id")
report = api.from_path("team/project/reports/report_name")

method Api.integrations

integrations(
    entity: Optional[str] = None,
    per_page: int = 50
)  Iterator[ForwardRef('Integration')]

Return an iterator of all integrations for an entity.

Args:

  • entity: The entity (e.g. team name) for which to fetch integrations. If not provided, the user’s default entity will be used.
  • per_page: Number of integrations to fetch per page. Defaults to 50. Usually there is no reason to change this.

Yields:

  • Iterator[SlackIntegration | WebhookIntegration]: An iterator of any supported integrations.

method Api.job

job(name: Optional[str], path: Optional[str] = None)  public.Job

Return a Job object.

Args:

  • name: The name of the job.
  • path: The root path to download the job artifact.

Returns: A Job object.


method Api.list_jobs

list_jobs(entity: str, project: str)  List[Dict[str, Any]]

Return a list of jobs, if any, for the given entity and project.

Args:

  • entity: The entity for the listed jobs.
  • project: The project for the listed jobs.

Returns: A list of matching jobs.


method Api.project

project(name: str, entity: Optional[str] = None)  public.Project

Return the Project with the given name (and entity, if given).

Args:

  • name: The project name.
  • entity: Name of the entity requested. If None, will fall back to the default entity passed to Api. If no default entity, will raise a ValueError.

Returns: A Project object.


method Api.projects

projects(entity: Optional[str] = None, per_page: int = 200)  public.Projects

Get projects for a given entity.

Args:

  • entity: Name of the entity requested. If None, will fall back to the default entity passed to Api. If no default entity, will raise a ValueError.
  • per_page: Sets the page size for query pagination. If set to None, use the default size. Usually there is no reason to change this.

Returns: A Projects object which is an iterable collection of Projectobjects.


method Api.queued_run

queued_run(
    entity: str,
    project: str,
    queue_name: str,
    run_queue_item_id: str,
    project_queue=None,
    priority=None
)

Return a single queued run based on the path.

Parses paths of the form entity/project/queue_id/run_queue_item_id.


method Api.registries

registries(
    organization: Optional[str] = None,
    filter: Optional[Dict[str, Any]] = None
)  Registries

Returns a Registry iterator.

Use the iterator to search and filter registries, collections, or artifact versions across your organization’s registry.

Examples: Find all registries with the names that contain “model” ```python import wandb

 api = wandb.Api()  # specify an org if your entity belongs to multiple orgs
 api.registries(filter={"name": {"$regex": "model"}})
``` 

Find all collections in the registries with the name “my_collection” and the tag “my_tag” python api.registries().collections(filter={"name": "my_collection", "tag": "my_tag"})

Find all artifact versions in the registries with a collection name that contains “my_collection” and a version that has the alias “best” python api.registries().collections( filter={"name": {"$regex": "my_collection"}} ).versions(filter={"alias": "best"})

Find all artifact versions in the registries that contain “model” and have the tag “prod” or alias “best” python api.registries(filter={"name": {"$regex": "model"}}).versions( filter={"$or": [{"tag": "prod"}, {"alias": "best"}]} )

Args:

  • organization: (str, optional) The organization of the registry to fetch. If not specified, use the organization specified in the user’s settings.
  • filter: (dict, optional) MongoDB-style filter to apply to each object in the registry iterator. Fields available to filter for collections are name, description, created_at, updated_at. Fields available to filter for collections are name, tag, description, created_at, updated_at Fields available to filter for versions are tag, alias, created_at, updated_at, metadata

Returns: A registry iterator.


method Api.registry

registry(name: str, organization: Optional[str] = None)  Registry

Return a registry given a registry name.

Args:

  • name: The name of the registry. This is without the wandb-registry- prefix.
  • organization: The organization of the registry. If no organization is set in the settings, the organization will be fetched from the entity if the entity only belongs to one organization.

Returns: A registry object.

Examples: Fetch and update a registry ```python import wandb

api = wandb.Api()
registry = api.registry(name="my-registry", organization="my-org")
registry.description = "This is an updated description"
registry.save()
``` 

method Api.reports

reports(
    path: str = '',
    name: Optional[str] = None,
    per_page: int = 50
)  public.Reports

Get reports for a given project path.

Note: wandb.Api.reports() API is in beta and will likely change in future releases.

Args:

  • path: The path to project the report resides in. Specify the entity that created the project as a prefix followed by a forward slash.
  • name: Name of the report requested.
  • per_page: Sets the page size for query pagination. If set to None, use the default size. Usually there is no reason to change this.

Returns: A Reports object which is an iterable collection of BetaReport objects.

Examples:

import wandb

wandb.Api.reports("entity/project")

method Api.run

run(path='')

Return a single run by parsing path in the form entity/project/run_id.

Args:

  • path: Path to run in the form entity/project/run_id. If api.entity is set, this can be in the form project/run_id and if api.project is set this can just be the run_id.

Returns: A Run object.


method Api.run_queue

run_queue(entity: str, name: str)

Return the named RunQueue for entity.

See Api.create_run_queue for more information on how to create a run queue.


method Api.runs

runs(
    path: Optional[str] = None,
    filters: Optional[Dict[str, Any]] = None,
    order: str = '+created_at',
    per_page: int = 50,
    include_sweeps: bool = True
)

Return a set of runs from a project that match the filters provided.

Fields you can filter by include:

  • createdAt: The timestamp when the run was created. (in ISO 8601 format, e.g. “2023-01-01T12:00:00Z”)
  • displayName: The human-readable display name of the run. (e.g. “eager-fox-1”)
  • duration: The total runtime of the run in seconds.
  • group: The group name used to organize related runs together.
  • host: The hostname where the run was executed.
  • jobType: The type of job or purpose of the run.
  • name: The unique identifier of the run. (e.g. “a1b2cdef”)
  • state: The current state of the run.
  • tags: The tags associated with the run.
  • username: The username of the user who initiated the run

Additionally, you can filter by items in the run config or summary metrics. Such as config.experiment_name, summary_metrics.loss, etc.

For more complex filtering, you can use MongoDB query operators. For details, see: https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/operator/query The following operations are supported:

  • $and
  • $or
  • $nor
  • $eq
  • $ne
  • $gt
  • $gte
  • $lt
  • $lte
  • $in
  • $nin
  • $exists
  • $regex

Args:

  • path: (str) path to project, should be in the form: “entity/project”
  • filters: (dict) queries for specific runs using the MongoDB query language. You can filter by run properties such as config.key, summary_metrics.key, state, entity, createdAt, etc.
  • For example: {"config.experiment_name": "foo"} would find runs with a config entry of experiment name set to “foo”
  • order: (str) Order can be created_at, heartbeat_at, config.*.value, or summary_metrics.*. If you prepend order with a + order is ascending. If you prepend order with a - order is descending (default). The default order is run.created_at from oldest to newest.
  • per_page: (int) Sets the page size for query pagination.
  • include_sweeps: (bool) Whether to include the sweep runs in the results.

Returns: A Runs object, which is an iterable collection of Run objects.

Examples:

# Find runs in project where config.experiment_name has been set to "foo"
api.runs(path="my_entity/project", filters={"config.experiment_name": "foo"})
# Find runs in project where config.experiment_name has been set to "foo" or "bar"
api.runs(
    path="my_entity/project",
    filters={
         "$or": [
             {"config.experiment_name": "foo"},
             {"config.experiment_name": "bar"},
         ]
    },
)
# Find runs in project where config.experiment_name matches a regex
# (anchors are not supported)
api.runs(
    path="my_entity/project",
    filters={"config.experiment_name": {"$regex": "b.*"}},
)
# Find runs in project where the run name matches a regex
# (anchors are not supported)
api.runs(
    path="my_entity/project", filters={"display_name": {"$regex": "^foo.*"}}
)
# Find runs in project sorted by ascending loss
api.runs(path="my_entity/project", order="+summary_metrics.loss")

method Api.slack_integrations

slack_integrations(
    entity: Optional[str] = None,
    per_page: int = 50
)  Iterator[ForwardRef('SlackIntegration')]

Returns an iterator of Slack integrations for an entity.

Args:

  • entity: The entity (e.g. team name) for which to fetch integrations. If not provided, the user’s default entity will be used.
  • per_page: Number of integrations to fetch per page. Defaults to 50. Usually there is no reason to change this.

Yields:

  • Iterator[SlackIntegration]: An iterator of Slack integrations.

Examples: Get all registered Slack integrations for the team “my-team”: ```python import wandb

api = wandb.Api()
slack_integrations = api.slack_integrations(entity="my-team")
``` 

Find only Slack integrations that post to channel names starting with “team-alerts-”: python slack_integrations = api.slack_integrations(entity="my-team") team_alert_integrations = [ ig for ig in slack_integrations if ig.channel_name.startswith("team-alerts-") ]


method Api.sweep

sweep(path='')

Return a sweep by parsing path in the form entity/project/sweep_id.

Args:

  • path: Path to sweep in the form entity/project/sweep_id. If api.entity is set, this can be in the form project/sweep_id and if api.project is set this can just be the sweep_id.

Returns: A Sweep object.


method Api.sync_tensorboard

sync_tensorboard(root_dir, run_id=None, project=None, entity=None)

Sync a local directory containing tfevent files to wandb.


method Api.team

team(team: str)  public.Team

Return the matching Team with the given name.

Args:

  • team: The name of the team.

Returns: A Team object.


method Api.update_automation

update_automation(
    obj: 'Automation',
    create_missing: bool = False,
    **kwargs: typing_extensions.Unpack[ForwardRef('WriteAutomationsKwargs')]
)  Automation

Update an existing automation.

Args:

  • obj: The automation to update. Must be an existing automation. create_missing (bool): If True, and the automation does not exist, create it. **kwargs: Any additional values to assign to the automation before updating it. If given, these will override any values that may already be set on the automation: - name: The name of the automation. - description: The description of the automation. - enabled: Whether the automation is enabled. - scope: The scope of the automation. - event: The event that triggers the automation. - action: The action that is triggered by the automation.

Returns: The updated automation.

Examples: Disable and edit the description of an existing automation (“my-automation”):

    import wandb

    api = wandb.Api()

    automation = api.automation(name="my-automation")
    automation.enabled = False
    automation.description = "Kept for reference, but no longer used."

    updated_automation = api.update_automation(automation)
    ``` 

OR: 

```python
    import wandb

    api = wandb.Api()

    automation = api.automation(name="my-automation")

    updated_automation = api.update_automation(
         automation,
         enabled=False,
         description="Kept for reference, but no longer used.",
    )
    ``` 

---

### <kbd>method</kbd> `Api.upsert_run_queue`

```python
upsert_run_queue(
    name: str,
    resource_config: dict,
    resource_type: 'public.RunQueueResourceType',
    entity: Optional[str] = None,
    template_variables: Optional[dict] = None,
    external_links: Optional[dict] = None,
    prioritization_mode: Optional[ForwardRef('public.RunQueuePrioritizationMode')] = None
)

Upsert a run queue in W&B Launch.

Args:

  • name: Name of the queue to create
  • entity: Optional name of the entity to create the queue. If None, use the configured or default entity.
  • resource_config: Optional default resource configuration to be used for the queue. Use handlebars (eg. {{var}}) to specify template variables.
  • resource_type: Type of resource to be used for the queue. One of “local-container”, “local-process”, “kubernetes”, “sagemaker”, or “gcp-vertex”.
  • template_variables: A dictionary of template variable schemas to be used with the config.
  • external_links: Optional dictionary of external links to be used with the queue.
  • prioritization_mode: Optional version of prioritization to use. Either “V0” or None

Returns: The upserted RunQueue.

Raises: ValueError if any of the parameters are invalid wandb.Error on wandb API errors


method Api.user

user(username_or_email: str)  Optional[ForwardRef('public.User')]

Return a user from a username or email address.

This function only works for local administrators. Use api.viewer to get your own user object.

Args:

  • username_or_email: The username or email address of the user.

Returns: A User object or None if a user is not found.


method Api.users

users(username_or_email: str)  List[ForwardRef('public.User')]

Return all users from a partial username or email address query.

This function only works for local administrators. Use api.viewer to get your own user object.

Args:

  • username_or_email: The prefix or suffix of the user you want to find.

Returns: An array of User objects.


method Api.webhook_integrations

webhook_integrations(
    entity: Optional[str] = None,
    per_page: int = 50
)  Iterator[ForwardRef('WebhookIntegration')]

Returns an iterator of webhook integrations for an entity.

Args:

  • entity: The entity (e.g. team name) for which to fetch integrations. If not provided, the user’s default entity will be used.
  • per_page: Number of integrations to fetch per page. Defaults to 50. Usually there is no reason to change this.

Yields:

  • Iterator[WebhookIntegration]: An iterator of webhook integrations.

Examples: Get all registered webhook integrations for the team “my-team”: ```python import wandb

api = wandb.Api()
webhook_integrations = api.webhook_integrations(entity="my-team")
``` 

Find only webhook integrations that post requests to “https://my-fake-url.com”: python webhook_integrations = api.webhook_integrations(entity="my-team") my_webhooks = [ ig for ig in webhook_integrations if ig.url_endpoint.startswith("https://my-fake-url.com") ]