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PyTrader - Python-based crypto trading bot

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PyTrader

PyTrader is a Python trading client and auto-trading bot for the crypto-currency exchanges. It is designed to work in the Linux console and has a curses user interface. It can display live streaming market data and you can buy and sell with keyboard commands.

PyTrader also has a simple interface to plug in your own automated trading strategies, your own code can be reloaded at runtime, will receive events from the API and can act upon them.

Supported exchanges

  • Kraken
  • Poloniex (Ticker, Depth and History - Trading still needs testing)
  • Bitstamp (TODO)

Installation

Open a terminal in an empty folder or in the folder you usually use to clone repositories and clone the master branch:

git clone git://github.com/caktux/pytrader.git
cd pytrader && pip install -r requirements.txt

This will create a folder named pytrader containing all the needed files. Thats all, now it is installed and ready to use. You can now already watch live market data (without any trading functions being enabled), you can later add an API-key to it to have full access to your account but for now just proceed to the next step, start it without an account, just to make sure everything works.

Usage

Change into to the pytrader folder that was created in the previous step and start pytrader.py:

cd pytrader
 ./pytrader.py

Keyboard commands (only the ones useful in view-only mode, without an account on an exchange):

  • q quit
  • l (lower case "L") reload the strategy module (see advanced usage)
  • D (shift + d) switch to depth chart view
  • H (shift + h) switch to candlestick history chart view
  • S (shift + s) toggle summing up the volume of order book levels on/off
  • T (shift + t) toggle summing up the volume in the depth chart on/off
  • - order book zoom out (increase group size)
  • + order book zoom in (decrease group size)
  • , depth chart zoom out (increase group size)
  • . depth chart zoom in (decrease group size)

(There will be even more commands once you connect it to your exchange account)

There is also a pytrader.ini file, it will be created on the first start. In the .ini file there are some parameters you can change, for example the currency pair you want to trade or some parameters regarding the network protocol. Some of the .ini settings can be overridden by command line options (use the --help option to see a list).

Trading with your exchange account

First you will need to add an API key from your exchange, then do the following:

./pytrader.py --add-secret

This will now ask you for your key, secret and a password (not your exchange one) to secure those on your drive. The key and secret belong to a shared secret that is created by the exchange to authenticate your trading software against their API. You can request as many keys from the exchange as you need, every application you connect to your exchange account should have its own key, you can also at any time delete the keys again that you no longer need.

If you need a Key/Secret pair for pytrader, open your web browser, log in to your exchange account, click on "Security Center", click on "Advanced API Key Creation", choose a name for your key (every key will have a name so you can later easily tell them apart), make sure you check at least the boxes "Get Info" and "Trade" (this is what the application will be allowed to do with this key) and then finally click on "Create Key".

Your exchange will create 2 strings of cryptic numbers and letters, the "API-Key" and the "Secret". Now copy/paste the API-Key into the terminal where it asked you for "Key", press enter, now it will ask you for "Secret", copy/paste the Secret into the terminal, press enter and now it will ask you for a passphrase. It is important to understand what is going on here. The Key/Secret from above must under no circumstances ever come into the wrong hands, therefore pytrader won't just store them in the .ini file, pytrader will encrypt it and thats what the passphrase is needed for. Choose a secure passphrase (it will ask you twice to make sure there is no typo), you will also not see anything in the console (not even "*") while typing, this is not a bug, this is intentional. Choose a strong passphrase, type it into the terminal, press enter, repeat the passphrase, press enter again and now it will tell you that it has been encrypted and saved to the .ini file and exit.

Now start pytrader again:

./pytrader.py

Which will ask:

enter passphrase for secret:

From now on every time you start pytrader it will ask you for the passphrase in order to be able to decrypt and use the secret. Enter your passphrase, press enter. Now pytrader will start and you will notice that now it is showing your account balance at the top of the window. Now all trading functions are enabled.

Keyboard commands for trading:

  • F4 : New buy order
  • F5 : New sell order
  • F6 : View orders / cancel order(s)

In the cancel dialog you can move up/down with the arrow keys, use INS or = to select/unselect orders (you can select multiple orders and cancel them all at once) or if you just quickly want to cancel only one order just highlight to the order and hit F8. It behaves a little bit like deleting files in midnight commander.

When entering a new order you can move between the fields with up/down keys or move to the next field with tab or enter (but only if you entered a valid number into the previous field, decimal separator is . (not comma, even on European computers), send the order with enter.

All dialogs can be closed with F10 or ESC.

Strategy modules

Running all strategies:

./pytrader.py --strategy=balancer,buy,sell

Balancer

Portfolio rebalancing bot that will buy and sell to maintain a constant asset allocation ratio of exactly 50/50 = fiat/BTC.

  • i for information (how much currently out of balance)
  • o to see order book
  • r to rebalance with market order at current price (required before rebalancing)
  • p to add initial rebalancing orders
  • c to cancel all rebalancing orders
  • u to update account information, order list and wallet
  • s to switch between Live and Simulation modes
./pytrader.py --strategy=balancer

Buy strategy

Buy strategy module. Set buy_level at the price you want to buy, threshold above your level for a log alert and volume in fiat (0 for full balance). Set simulate to False to activate.

  • b to see Buy objective
./pytrader.py --strategy=buy

Sell strategy

Sell strategy module. Set sell_level at the price you want to sell, threshold below your level for a log alert and volume in fiat (0 for full balance). Set simulate to False to activate.

  • s to see Sell objective
./pytrader.py --strategy=sell

Making your own

You can write your own trading bots. There is a file named strategy.py, it contains a class Strategy() which constitutes a trading bot that by default does nothing (its an empty skeleton). It has event methods (slots) connected to signals that will be fired when certain events occur. From within these methods you can then do arbitrary stuff (peek around in api.orderbook to see where bids and asks are located, call api.buy(), api.sell() or api.cancel() methods to build a fully automated trading bot or you can use the key press slot (it will be called on all letter keys except l and q) to build a semi-automatic bot that reacts to key presses or to influence parameters of your bot or anything else you can imagine. Examples of simple bots will soon follow.

If you decide to make serious use of this then please create a new python file for your strategy. either make a copy of the default strategy.py skeleton or make a module that imports strategy and has a class Strategy(strategy.Strategy), give this module file a different name and leave strategy.py alone so it won't collide with upstream changes you pull from github. By default pytrader will load strategy.py but you can start it with the --strategy command line option to specify your own strategy module or a comma separated list of many modules:

./pytrader --strategy=mystrategy,otherstrategy

You can even edit the strategy while pytrader is running and then reload it at runtime (this can be very useful), just press the l key (lowercase L) and it will do the following things:

  • emit signal _strategy_unload, this will call slot_before_unload()
  • free the currently running instance of Strategy() (your __del__() method should be called)
  • re-import the changed module file
  • create a new instance of Strategy() and call your __init__() again.

You should persist the state of your bot (if needed) in slot_before_unload() and reload it in __init__(). Leave the __del__() method alone, its only there to print a log message to debug proper unloading!

Please make sure that you can see the debug output from the __del__() method in the log when the strategy is reloading, you must be sure its able to free and garbage collect your strategy! If you instantiate any circular references, even something as innocent as a double linked list or even just an object holding a reference to the strategy then this will effectively keep python from being able to garbage-collect it and hold it in memory indefinitely (and keep sending it signals!).

Use the slot_before_unload() method to del everything in your strategy that might hold any circular references. You can check that it works if you see the debug output of __del__() in the log scrolling by when you press l to reload it, the fact that __del__() was called is proof that it was properly garbage-collected.

Trading functions do NOT block, this means they also won't return the order ID, you need to find your own way of remembering which orders you have sent already. A few moments (seconds or minutes) after you have sent them they will be acked by the exchange and it will fire orderbook.signal_changed()and when this happens you will find it in the api.orderbook.owns list and it will have an official order ID. I know this is not optimal (because this part of the code is not yet complete, eventually there will be dedicated signals to notify your bot about the results of trading commands) and also this document is not yet a complete documentation. If you really want to dive into this: use the source, Luke. How to keep it up to date

Occasionally I will commit bugfixes, improvements, etc. To update your copy of pytrader (assuming you previously installed it with git clone and not by just downloading a zip file) do the following:

git pull

and if that complains because of local uncommitted changes because you edited the strategy.py module or did other changes to the code then try this:

git stash
git pull
git stash pop

Of course you could have also have followed my previous advise to not do anything other than simple throw-away experiments in strategy.py so you can always git reset --hard if everything else fails and use a separate file (and probably even separate git branches) for serious bot development but this is outside the scope of this document, there exist specialized howtos for git and github elsewhere.

Donations appreciated

ETH: 0xf05b7f96ac8b607fe62bf77b8aaf926d719d4294

BTC: 1EMtjvaxCGwFrLa8LHPwqa8xrxnj2VXFL5

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