BookStack Python API Docs | dltHub
Build a BookStack-to-database pipeline in Python using dlt with AI Workbench support for Claude Code, Cursor, and Codex.
Last updated:
BookStack has a built-in REST API for external interaction. The API documentation is available at https://bookstack.bassopaolo.com/api/docs. The API allows consumption of BookStack data. The REST API base URL is https://{your-instance-domain}/api and All requests require an API Token (Token ID and Token Secret) passed in the Authorization header.
dlt is an open-source Python library that handles authentication, pagination, and schema evolution automatically. dlthub provides AI context files that enable code assistants to generate production-ready pipelines. Install with uv pip install "dlt[workspace]" and start loading BookStack data in under 10 minutes.
What data can I load from BookStack?
Here are some of the endpoints you can load from BookStack:
| Resource | Endpoint | Method | Data selector | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| books | /books | GET | data | List books visible to the user (paginated; returns {"data": [...], "total": n}) |
| books_read | /books/{id} | GET | Read a single book (includes "content" structure with pages/chapters) | |
| chapters | /chapters | GET | data | List chapters visible to the user |
| pages | /pages | GET | data | List pages visible to the user |
| pages_read | /pages/{id} | GET | Read a single page (includes html, raw_html, comments tree) | |
| shelves | /shelves | GET | data | List shelves visible to the user |
| search | /search | GET | data | Search across shelves/books/chapters/pages; results include a "type" property |
| image_gallery | /image-gallery | GET | data | List images (includes "thumbs", "content", "url") |
| users | /users | GET | data | List users (requires manage users permission) |
| attachments | /attachments | GET | data | List attachments (has "external" flag) |
How do I authenticate with the BookStack API?
Create an API token on a user profile (requires the "Access System API" permission). Use the Token ID and Token Secret in the Authorization header as: Authorization: Token <token_id>:<token_secret>.
1. Get your credentials
- Log into your BookStack instance as an admin or a user with the "Access System API" permission.
- Open the user profile and locate the "API Tokens" section.
- Click "Create Token", give it a name and optional expiry, then save.
- Copy the displayed Token ID and Token Secret (shown only once) and use them in the Authorization header as: Authorization: Token <token_id>:<token_secret>.
2. Add them to .dlt/secrets.toml
[sources.bookstack_source] api_key = "<token_id>:<token_secret>"
dlt reads this automatically at runtime — never hardcode tokens in your pipeline script. For production environments, see setting up credentials with dlt for environment variable and vault-based options.
How do I set up and run the pipeline?
Set up a virtual environment and install dlt:
uv venv && source .venv/bin/activate uv pip install "dlt[workspace]"
1. Install the dlt AI Workbench:
dlt ai init --agent <your-agent> # <agent>: claude | cursor | codex
This installs project rules, a secrets management skill, appropriate ignore files, and configures the dlt MCP server for your agent. Learn more →
2. Install the rest-api-pipeline toolkit:
dlt ai toolkit rest-api-pipeline install
This loads the skills and context about dlt the agent uses to build the pipeline iteratively, efficiently, and safely. The agent uses MCP tools to inspect credentials — it never needs to read your secrets.toml directly. Learn more →
3. Start LLM-assisted coding:
Use /find-source to load data from the BookStack API into DuckDB.
The rest-api-pipeline toolkit takes over from here — it reads relevant API documentation, presents you with options for which endpoints to load, and follows a structured workflow to scaffold, debug, and validate the pipeline step by step.
4. Run the pipeline:
python bookstack_pipeline.py
If everything is configured correctly, you'll see output like this:
Pipeline bookstack_pipeline load step completed in 0.26 seconds 1 load package(s) were loaded to destination duckdb and into dataset bookstack_data The duckdb destination used duckdb:/bookstack.duckdb location to store data Load package 1749667187.541553 is LOADED and contains no failed jobs
Inspect your pipeline and data:
dlt pipeline bookstack_pipeline show
This opens the Pipeline Dashboard where you can verify pipeline state, load metrics, schema (tables, columns, types), and query the loaded data directly.
Python pipeline example
This example loads books and pages from the BookStack API into DuckDB. It mirrors the endpoint and data selector configuration from the table above:
import dlt from dlt.sources.rest_api import RESTAPIConfig, rest_api_resources @dlt.source def bookstack_source(api_token=dlt.secrets.value): config: RESTAPIConfig = { "client": { "base_url": "https://{your-instance-domain}/api", "auth": { "type": "api_key", "api_key": api_token, }, }, "resources": [ {"name": "books", "endpoint": {"path": "books", "data_selector": "data"}}, {"name": "pages", "endpoint": {"path": "pages", "data_selector": "data"}} ], } yield from rest_api_resources(config) def get_data() -> None: pipeline = dlt.pipeline( pipeline_name="bookstack_pipeline", destination="duckdb", dataset_name="bookstack_data", ) load_info = pipeline.run(bookstack_source()) print(load_info)
To add more endpoints, append entries from the resource table to the "resources" list using the same name, path, and data_selector pattern.
How do I query the loaded data?
Once the pipeline runs, dlt creates one table per resource. You can query with Python or SQL.
Python (pandas DataFrame):
import dlt data = dlt.pipeline("bookstack_pipeline").dataset() sessions_df = data.pages.df() print(sessions_df.head())
SQL (DuckDB example):
SELECT * FROM bookstack_data.pages LIMIT 10;
In a marimo or Jupyter notebook:
import dlt data = dlt.pipeline("bookstack_pipeline").dataset() data.pages.df().head()
See how to explore your data in marimo Notebooks and how to query your data in Python with dataset.
What destinations can I load BookStack data to?
dlt supports loading into any of these destinations — only the destination parameter changes:
| Destination | Example value |
|---|---|
| DuckDB (local, default) | "duckdb" |
| PostgreSQL | "postgres" |
| BigQuery | "bigquery" |
| Snowflake | "snowflake" |
| Redshift | "redshift" |
| Databricks | "databricks" |
| Filesystem (S3, GCS, Azure) | "filesystem" |
Change the destination in dlt.pipeline(destination="snowflake") and add credentials in .dlt/secrets.toml. See the full destinations list.
Next steps
Continue your data engineering journey with the other toolkits of the dltHub AI Workbench:
data-exploration— Build custom notebooks, charts, and dashboards for deeper analysis with marimo notebooks.dlthub-runtime— Deploy, schedule, and monitor your pipeline in production.
dlt ai toolkit data-exploration install dlt ai toolkit dlthub-runtime install
Was this page helpful?
Community Hub
Need more dlt context for BookStack?
Request dlt skills, commands, AGENT.md files, and AI-native context.