Skip to content

mpetrinidev/bnc-cli

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 
Β 

Repository files navigation

Binance CLI

This package provides a unified command-line interface to interact with Binance API (https://binance-docs.github.io/apidocs)

ℹ️ This is an unofficial package, and this project is not related or affiliated with Binance.

🚨 Use the package at your own risk. We highly recommend using the testnet version at the beginning.

Jump to:

Getting started

We have released a special version of the Binance CLI package for testing purposes. It is called bnc_testnet and it contains the same functionality as bnc.

Both versions can co-exist on the same computer because they are independent and use different folders for configuration.

The complete documentation of the Binance CLI package will refer to bnc. When you want to use testnet version, you have to replace bnc with bnc_testnet.

We highly recommend using bnc_testnet at the beginning to gain experience using the Binance CLI package and then switch to bnc.

Keep in mind that use a testnet version implies not using real money.

Requirements

The Binance CLI package works on Python versions:

  • 3.8.x and greater

Installation

Installation of the Binance CLI and its dependencies use various packaging features provided by pip and setuptools. It's recommended to use:

  • pip: 21.1
  • setuptools: 56.0

The safest way to install the Binance CLI is to use pip in a virtualenv:

$ python -m pip install bnc

Testnet

$ python -m pip install bnc_testnet

or, if you are not installing in a virtualenv, to install globally:

$ sudo python -m pip install bnc 

Testnet

$ sudo python -m pip install bnc_testnet

or for your user:

$ python -m pip install --user bnc 

Testnet

$ python -m pip install --user bnc_testnet

If you have the Binance CLI package installed and want to upgrade to the latest version, you can run:

$ python -m pip install --upgrade bnc 

Testnet

$ python -m pip install --upgrade bnc_testnet

NOTE

At this moment, we only use pip to install the Binance CLI package. We are planning to add more options for the distribution and installation of the Binance CLI package.

Generate API Key and Secret Key

You should have an active Binance account to create a valid API key and secret key.

You can follow this step-by-step guide provided by Binance:

Create an API Key

For testnet you can follow:

Generate API key for Testnet

Add credentials

Before using BNC CLI, you need to tell it about your credentials. You can do this in several ways:

  • Configuration file (recommended)
  • Environment variables

The quickest way to get started is to run the bnc credentials add command:

$ bnc credentials add --api_key="YOUR_API_KEY" --secret="YOUR_SECRET_KEY"

Binance CLI's credentials added successfully.

When you add your credentials using the previous command, it will create an INI formatted file called credentials under ~/.bnc directory with the following structure:

[api_credentials]
bnc_cli_api_key = <YOUR_API_KEY>
bnc_cli_secret_key = <YOUR_SECRET_KEY>

To use environment variables, do the following:

$ export BNC_CLI_API_KEY=<YOUR_API_KEY>
$ export BNC_CLI_SECRET_KEY=<YOUR_SECRET_KEY>

The testnet version uses different environment variables:

$ export BNC_TESTNET_CLI_API_KEY=<YOUR_API_KEY>
$ export BNC_TESTNET_CLI_SECRET_KEY=<YOUR_SECRET_KEY>

Basic Commands

A BNC CLI command has the following structure:

$ bnc <command> [options and parameters]
$ bnc <command> <group_commands> <command> [options and parameters]

To view help documentation, use one of the following:

$ bnc --help
$ bnc <command> --help
$ bnc <command> <group_commands> --help
$ bnc <command> <group_commands> <command> --help

To get the version of the BNC CLI:

$ bnc --version

To turn on verbose output:

$ bnc --verbose <command>
$ bnc --verbose <group_commands> <command>

Command Output

The default output for commands is currently JSON.

YAML format is also available to format output. You can select either style with the --output option at the root command bnc.

Example

JSON (Default)

$ bnc spot account_info
{
  "makerCommission": 0,
  "takerCommission": 0,
  "buyerCommission": 0,
  "sellerCommission": 0,
  "canTrade": true,
  "canWithdraw": false,
  "canDeposit": false,
  "updateTime": 1616376905442,
  "accountType": "SPOT",
  "balances": [
    {
      "asset": "BNB",
      "free": "1000.00000000",
      "locked": "0.00000000"
    },
    {
      "asset": "BTC",
      "free": "0.98181601",
      "locked": "0.00000000"
    }
  ],
  "permissions": [
    "SPOT"
  ]
}

YAML

$ bnc --output=yaml spot account_info
makerCommission: 0
takerCommission: 0
buyerCommission: 0
sellerCommission: 0
canTrade: true
canWithdraw: false
canDeposit: false
updateTime: 1616376905442
accountType: SPOT
balances:
- asset: BNB
  free: '1000.00000000'
  locked: '0.00000000'
- asset: BTC
  free: '0.98181601'
  locked: '0.00000000'
permissions:
- SPOT

JMESPath (--query)

Some commands have an --query option that allows extracting and transforming elements from a JSON. It is very useful on occasions where you need to filter a very long response from Binance API. For more information on the expression language used for this option, you can read the JMESPath Tutorial