OpenFisca is a versatile microsimulation free software. Check the online documentation for more details.
This package contains the core features of OpenFisca, which are meant to be used by country packages such as OpenFisca-France. Bootstrapping your own country package should not take more than 5 minutes: check our country package template.
OpenFisca runs on Python 3.7. More recent versions should work but are not tested.
OpenFisca also relies strongly on NumPy. The last four minor versions should work, but only the latest/stable is tested.
If you're developing your own country package, you don't need to explicitly install OpenFisca-Core. It just needs to appear in your package dependencies. If you want to contribute to OpenFisca-Core itself, welcome! To install it locally you can use one of these two options:
openfisca-core
with pip
This installation requires Python 3.7+ and GIT installations.
To install openfisca-core
locally in development mode run the following commands in a shell terminal:
git clone https://github.com/openfisca/openfisca-core.git
cd openfisca-core
python3 -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
make install-deps install-edit
openfisca-core
with conda
Since openfisca-core
version 35.7.7, you could use conda
to install OpenFisca-Core.
Conda is the easiest way to use OpenFisca under Windows as by installing Anaconda you will get:
If you are familiar with the command line you could use Miniconda, which needs very much less disk space than Anaconda.
After installing conda, run these commands in an Anaconda Powershell Prompt
:
conda create --name openfisca python=3.7
to create an openfisca
environment.conda activate openfisca
to use your new environment.Then, choose one of the following options according to your use case:
conda install -c conda-forge openfisca-core
for default dependencies,conda install -c conda-forge openfisca-core-api
if you want the Web API part,conda install -c conda-forge -c openfisca openfisca-core-dev
if you want all the dependencies needed to contribute to the project.For information on how we publish to conda-forge, see openfisca-core-feedstock.
Install the test dependencies:
make install-deps install-edit install-test
For integration testing purposes,
openfisca-core
relies on country-template and extension-template. Because these packages rely at the same time onopenfisca-core
, they need to be installed separately.
To run the entire test suite:
make test
To run all the tests defined on a test file:
pytest tests/core/test_parameters.py
To run a single test:
pytest tests/core/test_parameters.py -k test_parameter_for_period
This repository relies on MyPy for optional dynamic & static type checking.
As NumPy introduced the typing
module in 1.20.0, to ensure type hints do not break the code at runtime, we run the checker against the last four minor NumPy versions.
Type checking is already run with make test
. To run the type checker alone:
make check-types
This repository adheres to a certain coding style, and we invite you to follow it for your contributions to be integrated promptly.
Style checking is already run with make test
. To run the style checker alone:
make check-style
To automatically style-format your code changes:
make format-style
To automatically style-format your code changes each time you commit:
touch .git/hooks/pre-commit
chmod +x .git/hooks/pre-commit
tee -a .git/hooks/pre-commit << END
#!/bin/sh
#
# Automatically format your code before committing.
exec make format-style
END
OpenFisca’s toolchain checks whether documentation builds correctly and updates it automatically with each contribution to this repository.
In the meantime, please take a look at our contributing guidelines for some general tips on how to document your contributions, and at our official documentation's repository to in case you want to know how to build it by yourself —and improve it!
OpenFisca-Core provides a Web-API. It is by default served on the 5000
port.
To run it with the mock country package openfisca_country_template
and another port value such as 2000
, run:
openfisca serve --country-package openfisca_country_template --port 2000
To read more about the openfisca serve
command, check out its documentation.
By default, the Web API uses 3 workers to avoid this issue. Without it, AJAX requests from Chrome sometimes take more than 20s to process. You can change the number of workers by specifying a --workers k
option.
You can test that the API is running by executing the command:
curl http://localhost:2000/parameters
For more information about endpoints and input formatting, see the official documentation.
The OpenFisca Web API comes with an optional tracker which allows you to measure the usage of the API.
The tracker is not installed by default. To install it, run:
pip install openfisca_core[tracker] --use-deprecated=legacy-resolver # Or `pip install --editable ".[tracker]"` for an editable installation
The tracker is activated when these two options are set:
--tracker-url
: An URL ending with piwik.php
. It defines the Piwik instance that will receive the tracking information. To use the main OpenFisca Piwik instance, use https://stats.data.gouv.fr/piwik.php
.--tracker-idsite
: An integer. It defines the identifier of the tracked site on your Piwik instance. To use the main OpenFisca piwik instance, use 4
.--tracker-token
: A string. It defines the Piwik API Authentication token to differentiate API calls based on the user IP. Otherwise, all API calls will seem to come from your server. The Piwik API Authentication token can be found in your Piwik interface when you are logged in.For instance, to run the Web API with the mock country package openfisca_country_template
and the tracker activated, run:
openfisca serve --country-package openfisca_country_template --port 5000 --tracker-url https://stats.data.gouv.fr/piwik.php --tracker-idsite 4 --tracker-token $TRACKER_TOKEN