Load Flow API data in Python using dltHub

Build a Flow API-to-database or-dataframe pipeline in Python using dlt with automatic Cursor support.

In this guide, we'll set up a complete Flow API data pipeline from API credentials to your first data load in just 10 minutes. You'll end up with a fully declarative Python pipeline based on dlt's REST API connector, like in the partial example code below:

Example code
@dlt.source def flow_api_source(access_token=dlt.secrets.value): config: RESTAPIConfig = { "client": { "base_url": "https://api.flow.bio/", "auth": { "type": "bearer", "token": access_token, }, }, "resources": [ me, token ], } [...] yield from rest_api_resources(config) def get_data() -> None: # Connect to destination pipeline = dlt.pipeline( pipeline_name='flow_api_pipeline', destination='duckdb', dataset_name='flow_api_data', ) # Load the data load_info = pipeline.run(flow_api_source()) print(load_info)

Why use dltHub Workspace with LLM Context to generate Python pipelines?

  • Accelerate pipeline development with AI-native context
  • Debug pipelines, validate schemas and data with the integrated Pipeline Dashboard
  • Build Python notebooks for end users of your data
  • Low maintenance thanks to Schema evolution with type inference, resilience and self documenting REST API connectors. A shallow learning curve makes the pipeline easy to extend by any team member
  • dlt is the tool of choice for Pythonic Iceberg Lakehouses, bringing mature data loading to pythonic Iceberg with or without catalogs

What you’ll do

We’ll show you how to generate a readable and easily maintainable Python script that fetches data from flow_api’s API and loads it into Iceberg, DataFrames, files, or a database of your choice. Here are some of the endpoints you can load:

  • Authentication: Login and token management endpoints for user access
  • User Profile: Retrieve current user information and account details

You will then debug the Flow API pipeline using our Pipeline Dashboard tool to ensure it is copying the data correctly, before building a Notebook to explore your data and build reports.

Setup & steps to follow

💡

Before getting started, let's make sure Cursor is set up correctly:

Now you're ready to get started!

  1. ⚙️ Set up dlt Workspace

    Install dlt with duckdb support:

    pip install dlt[workspace]

    Initialize a dlt pipeline with Flow API support.

    dlt init dlthub:flow_api duckdb

    The init command will setup the necessary files and folders for the next step.

  2. 🤠 Start LLM-assisted coding

    Here’s a prompt to get you started:

    Prompt
    Please generate a REST API Source for Flow API API, as specified in @flow_api-docs.yaml Start with endpoint(s) me and token and skip incremental loading for now. Place the code in flow_api_pipeline.py and name the pipeline flow_api_pipeline. If the file exists, use it as a starting point. Do not add or modify any other files. Use @dlt rest api as a tutorial. After adding the endpoints, allow the user to run the pipeline with python flow_api_pipeline.py and await further instructions.
  3. 🔒 Set up credentials

    Flow uses a two-token authentication system. Refresh tokens are long-lived JWTs stored in HTTP-only cookies obtained from POST /login with username and password credentials. Access tokens are short-lived JWTs obtained from GET /token endpoint using the refresh token cookie and must be included in HTTP request headers for authenticated requests.

Key details: Refresh tokens last one year and are set as HTTP-only cookies by the /login endpoint. Access tokens last thirty minutes and are retrieved from /token endpoint by sending the refresh token cookie. Authenticated requests require the access token in HTTP headers (exact header name not fully specified in provided text).

To get the appropriate API keys, please visit the original source at docs.api.flow.bio.
If you want to protect your environment secrets in a production environment, look into [setting up credentials with dlt](https://dlthub.com/docs/walkthroughs/add_credentials).

4. 🏃‍♀️ Run the pipeline in the Python terminal in Cursor

```shell
python flow_api_pipeline.py
```

If your pipeline runs correctly, you’ll see something like the following:

```shell
Pipeline flow_api load step completed in 0.26 seconds
1 load package(s) were loaded to destination duckdb and into dataset flow_api_data
The duckdb destination used duckdb:/flow_api.duckdb location to store data
Load package 1749667187.541553 is LOADED and contains no failed jobs
```

5. 📈 Debug your pipeline and data with the Pipeline Dashboard

Now that you have a running pipeline, you need to make sure it’s correct, so you do not introduce silent failures like misconfigured pagination or incremental loading errors. By launching the dlt Workspace Pipeline Dashboard, you can see various information about the pipeline to enable you to test it. Here you can see:
- Pipeline overview: State, load metrics
- Data’s schema: tables, columns, types, hints
- You can query the data itself

```shell
dlt pipeline flow_api_pipeline show 
```

6. 🐍 Build a Notebook with data explorations and reports

With the pipeline and data partially validated, you can continue with custom data explorations and reports. To get started, paste the snippet below into a new marimo Notebook and ask your LLM to go from there. Jupyter Notebooks and regular Python scripts are supported as well.


```python
import dlt

data = dlt.pipeline("flow_api_pipeline").dataset()

get me table as Pandas frame

data.me.df().head() ```

Extra resources:

Next steps