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mvg

This package aims to provide a clean, performant and barrier-free interface to timetable information of the Münchner Verkehrsgesellschaft (MVG), responsible for public transport in Munich. It exports the class MvgApi to retrieve stations, lines and departures from the unofficial JSON API at https://www.mvg.de.

Disclaimer

This project is not an official project from the Münchner Verkehrsgesellschaft (MVG). It was developed as a private project from lack of a documented and openly accessible API. It simply reproduces the requests made by https://www.mvg.de to provide a barrier-free access to local timetable information.

Therefore, the following usage restrictions from the MVG Imprint do apply to all users of this package:

Our systems are used for direct customer interaction. The processing of our content or data by third parties requires our express consent. For private, non-commercial purposes, moderate use is tolerated without our explicit consent. Any form of data mining does not constitute moderate use. We reserve the right to revoke this permission in principle or in individual cases. Please direct any questions to: [email protected]

(from https://www.mvg.de/impressum.html, accessed on 04. Feb 2023)

Why another MVG package?

The project was inspired by two existing packages:

  • The package PyMVGLive from 2017 does provide an interface to the former MVGLive API at mvg-live.de. As of 2022 the MVGLive website does not exist anymore and the package has been archived. Although the old API still works for some stations, it does not for others - mainly due to updated station identifiers. Therefore, the package is considered deprecated and cannot be used for new designs.
  • The newer package mvg-api offers an implementation from 2020 based on the API at www.mvg.de/api/fahrinfo, which went offline in 2024. It considered the updated station identifiers and provided the basis for other projects such as mvg-cli.

So why another MVG API package? In the end three reasons were decisive:

  • The recent website at uses a new API at www.mvg.de/api/bgw-pt/v3, which seems to be more performant than the previous one.
  • None of the existing packages offer asynchronous calls for concurrent code projects.
  • An optimized package was required to develop a Home Assistant integration.

Installation

Install from the Python Package Index (PyPI) using pip:

pip install mvg

Basic Usage

The interface was designed to be simple and intuitive. Basic usage follows these steps:

  • Find a station using MvgApi.station(station) by its name and place (e.g. "Universität, München") or its global station identifier (e.g. "de:09162:70").
  • Alternatively, MvgApi.nearby(latitude, longitude) finds the nearest station.
  • Create an API instance using MvgApi(station) by its global identifier.
  • Use the method .departures() to retrieve information from the API.

A basic example looks like this:

from mvg import MvgApi

station = MvgApi.station('Universität, München')
if station:
    mvgapi = MvgApi(station['id'])
    departures = mvgapi.departures()
    print(station, departures)

Available Stations and Lines

The static methods MvgApi.stations() and MvgApi.lines() expose a list of all available stations and a list of all available lines from designated API endpoints. While these calls are great for reference, they are also quite extensive and should not be used within a frequent query loop.

Filters

The results from .departures(limit, offset, transport_types) can be filtered using the following arguments:

  • limit limits the output to the given number of departures, defaults to 10
  • offset adds an offset (e.g. walking distance to the station) in minutes, defaults to 0
  • transport_types filters the result by a list of transport types (e.g. [TransportType.UBAHN])

A filtered example looks like this:

from mvg import MvgApi, TransportType

station = MvgApi.station('Universität, München')
if station:
    mvgapi = MvgApi(station['id'])
    departures = mvgapi.departures(
        limit=3,
        offset=5,
        transport_types=[TransportType.UBAHN])
    print(station, departures)

Example results

station() or nearby() results a dict:

{ 
'id': 'de:09162:70', 
'name': 'Universität', 
'place': 'München'
'latitude': 48.15007, 
'longitude': 11.581
}

departures() results a list of dict:

[{
'time': 1668524580,
'planned': 1668524460,
'line': 'U3',
'destination': 'Fürstenried West',
'type': 'U-Bahn',
'icon': 'mdi:subway',
'cancelled': False,
'messages': []
}, ... ]

Advanced Usage: Asynchronous Methods

The class MvgApi internally calls asynchronous methods using asyncio and aiohttp to perform the web requests efficiently. These asynchronous methods are marked by the suffix _async and can be utilized by users in projects with concurrent code.

The basic example but with asynchronous calls looks like this:

import asyncio
from mvg import MvgApi

async def demo() -> None:
    station = await MvgApi.station_async('Universität, München')
    if station:
        departures = MvgApi.departures_async(station['id'])
        print(station, await departures)
loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
loop.run_until_complete(demo())