Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
This is the official Go SDK for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure
Installation ¶
Refer to https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/blob/master/README.md#installing for installation instructions.
Configuration ¶
Refer to https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/blob/master/README.md#configuring for configuration instructions.
Quickstart ¶
The following example shows how to get started with the SDK. The example belows creates an identityClient struct with the default configuration. It then utilizes the identityClient to list availability domains and prints them out to stdout
import ( "context" "fmt" "github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/common" "github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/identity" ) func main() { c, err := identity.NewIdentityClientWithConfigurationProvider(common.DefaultConfigProvider()) if err != nil { fmt.Println("Error:", err) return } // The OCID of the tenancy containing the compartment. tenancyID, err := common.DefaultConfigProvider().TenancyOCID() if err != nil { fmt.Println("Error:", err) return } request := identity.ListAvailabilityDomainsRequest{ CompartmentId: &tenancyID, } r, err := c.ListAvailabilityDomains(context.Background(), request) if err != nil { fmt.Println("Error:", err) return } fmt.Printf("List of available domains: %v", r.Items) return }
More examples can be found in the SDK Github repo: https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/tree/master/example
Optional fields in the SDK ¶
Optional fields are represented with the `mandatory:"false"` tag on input structs. The SDK will omit all optional fields that are nil when making requests. In the case of enum-type fields, the SDK will omit fields whose value is an empty string.
Helper functions ¶
The SDK uses pointers for primitive types in many input structs. To aid in the construction of such structs, the SDK provides functions that return a pointer for a given value. For example:
// Given the struct type CreateVcnDetails struct { // Example: `172.16.0.0/16` CidrBlock *string `mandatory:"true" json:"cidrBlock"` CompartmentId *string `mandatory:"true" json:"compartmentId"` DisplayName *string `mandatory:"false" json:"displayName"` } // We can use the helper functions to build the struct details := core.CreateVcnDetails{ CidrBlock: common.String("172.16.0.0/16"), CompartmentId: common.String("someOcid"), DisplayName: common.String("myVcn"), }
Signing custom requests ¶
The SDK exposes a stand-alone signer that can be used to signing custom requests. Related code can be found here: https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/blob/master/common/http_signer.go.
The example below shows how to create a default signer.
client := http.Client{} var request http.Request request = ... // some custom request // Set the Date header request.Header.Set("Date", time.Now().UTC().Format(http.TimeFormat)) // And a provider of cryptographic keys provider := common.DefaultConfigProvider() // Build the signer signer := common.DefaultSigner(provider) // Sign the request signer.Sign(&request) // Execute the request client.Do(request)
The signer also allows more granular control on the headers used for signing. For example:
client := http.Client{} var request http.Request request = ... // some custom request // Set the Date header request.Header.Set("Date", time.Now().UTC().Format(http.TimeFormat)) // Mandatory headers to be used in the sign process defaultGenericHeaders = []string{"date", "(request-target)", "host"} // Optional headers optionalHeaders = []string{"content-length", "content-type", "x-content-sha256"} // A predicate that specifies when to use the optional signing headers optionalHeadersPredicate := func (r *http.Request) bool { return r.Method == http.MethodPost } // And a provider of cryptographic keys provider := common.DefaultConfigProvider() // Build the signer signer := common.RequestSigner(provider, defaultGenericHeaders, optionalHeaders, optionalHeadersPredicate) // Sign the request signer.Sign(&request) // Execute the request c.Do(request)
You can combine a custom signer with the exposed clients in the SDK. This allows you to add custom signed headers to the request. Following is an example:
//Create a provider of cryptographic keys provider := common.DefaultConfigProvider() //Create a client for the service you interested in c, _ := identity.NewIdentityClientWithConfigurationProvider(provider) //Define a custom header to be signed, and add it to the list of default headers customHeader := "opc-my-token" allHeaders := append(common.DefaultGenericHeaders(), customHeader) //Overwrite the signer in your client to sign the new slice of headers c.Signer = common.RequestSigner(provider, allHeaders, common.DefaultBodyHeaders()) //Set the value of the header. This can be done with an Interceptor c.Interceptor = func(request *http.Request) error { request.Header.Add(customHeader, "customvalue") return nil } //Execute your operation as before c.ListGroups(..)
Bear in mind that some services have a white list of headers that it expects to be signed. Therefore, adding an arbitrary header can result in authentications errors. To see a runnable example, see https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/blob/master/example/example_identity_test.go
For more information on the signing algorithm refer to: https://docs.us-phoenix-1.oraclecloud.com/Content/API/Concepts/signingrequests.htm
Polymorphic json requests and responses ¶
Some operations accept or return polymorphic json objects. The SDK models such objects as interfaces. Further the SDK provides structs that implement such interfaces. Thus, for all operations that expect interfaces as input, pass the struct in the SDK that satisfies such interface. For example:
c, err := identity.NewIdentityClientWithConfigurationProvider(common.DefaultConfigProvider()) if err != nil { panic(err) } // The CreateIdentityProviderRequest takes a CreateIdentityProviderDetails interface as input rCreate := identity.CreateIdentityProviderRequest{} // The CreateSaml2IdentityProviderDetails struct implements the CreateIdentityProviderDetails interface details := identity.CreateSaml2IdentityProviderDetails{} details.CompartmentId = common.String(getTenancyID()) details.Name = common.String("someName") //... more setup if needed // Use the above struct rCreate.CreateIdentityProviderDetails = details // Make the call rspCreate, createErr := c.CreateIdentityProvider(context.Background(), rCreate)
In the case of a polymorphic response you can type assert the interface to the expected type. For example:
rRead := identity.GetIdentityProviderRequest{} rRead.IdentityProviderId = common.String("aValidId") response, err := c.GetIdentityProvider(context.Background(), rRead) provider := response.IdentityProvider.(identity.Saml2IdentityProvider)
An example of polymorphic json request handling can be found here: https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/blob/master/example/example_core_test.go#L63
Pagination ¶
When calling a list operation, the operation will retrieve a page of results. To retrieve more data, call the list operation again, passing in the value of the most recent response's OpcNextPage as the value of Page in the next list operation call. When there is no more data the OpcNextPage field will be nil. An example of pagination using this logic can be found here: https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/blob/master/example/example_core_pagination_test.go
Logging and Debugging ¶
The SDK has a built-in logging mechanism used internally. The internal logging logic is used to record the raw http requests, responses and potential errors when (un)marshalling request and responses.
To expose debugging logs, set the environment variable "OCI_GO_SDK_DEBUG" to "1", or some other non empty string.
Retry ¶
Sometimes you may need to wait until an attribute of a resource, such as an instance or a VCN, reaches a certain state. An example of this would be launching an instance and then waiting for the instance to become available, or waiting until a subnet in a VCN has been terminated. You might also want to retry the same operation again if there's network issue etc... This can be accomplished by using the RequestMetadata.RetryPolicy. You can find the examples here: https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/blob/master/example/example_retry_test.go
Using the SDK with a proxy server ¶
The GO SDK uses the net/http package to make calls to OCI services. If your environment requires you to use a proxy server for outgoing HTTP requests then you can set this up in the following ways:
1. Configuring environment variable as described here https://golang.org/pkg/net/http/#ProxyFromEnvironment 2. Modifying the underlying Transport struct for a service client
In order to modify the underlying Transport struct in HttpClient, you can do something similar to (sample code for audit service client):
// create audit service client client, clerr := audit.NewAuditClientWithConfigurationProvider(common.DefaultConfigProvider()) // create a proxy url proxyURL, err := url.Parse("http(s)://[username]:[password]@[ip address]:[port]") client.HTTPClient = &http.Client{ // adding the proxy settings to the http.Transport Transport: &http.Transport{ Proxy: http.ProxyURL(proxyURL), }, }
Forward Compatibility ¶
Some response fields are enum-typed. In the future, individual services may return values not covered by existing enums for that field. To address this possibility, every enum-type response field is a modeled as a type that supports any string. Thus if a service returns a value that is not recognized by your version of the SDK, then the response field will be set to this value.
When individual services return a polymorphic json response not available as a concrete struct, the SDK will return an implementation that only satisfies the interface modeling the polymorphic json response.
Contributions ¶
Got a fix for a bug, or a new feature you'd like to contribute? The SDK is open source and accepting pull requests on GitHub https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk
License ¶
Licensing information available at: https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/blob/master/LICENSE.txt
Notifications ¶
To be notified when a new version of the Go SDK is released, subscribe to the following feed: https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk/releases.atom
Questions or Feedback ¶
Please refer to this link: https://github.com/oracle/oci-go-sdk#help
Directories ¶
Path | Synopsis |
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cmd
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Package common provides supporting functions and structs used by service packages
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Package common provides supporting functions and structs used by service packages |
auth
Package auth provides supporting functions and structs for authentication
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Package auth provides supporting functions and structs for authentication |
example
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