go-bo4e
Business Objects for Energy (BO4E) Implementation in Go. Highlights are
- includes
json
tags for easy (un)marshalling
- comes with builtin validator logic
- is linted and has decent test coverage
This package (as of November 2021) implements
- BO Ansprechpartner
- BO Bilanzierung (not official BO4E Standard yet)
- BO Energiemenge
- BO Geschaeftspartner
- BO Lastgang
- BO Marktlokation
- BO Marktteilnehmer
- BO Messlokation
- BO Preisblatt
- BO Rechnung
- BO Vertrag
- BO Zaehler
so far.
Installation
go get github.com/hochfrequenz/go-bo4e
Minimal Working Example
package main
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"github.com/go-playground/validator/v10"
"github.com/hochfrequenz/go-bo4e/bo"
"github.com/hochfrequenz/go-bo4e/com"
"github.com/hochfrequenz/go-bo4e/enum/botyp"
"github.com/hochfrequenz/go-bo4e/enum/landescode"
"github.com/hochfrequenz/go-bo4e/enum/sparte"
)
func main() {
melo := bo.Messlokation{
Geschaeftsobjekt: bo.Geschaeftsobjekt{
BoTyp: botyp.MESSLOKATION,
VersionStruktur: "1",
ExterneReferenzen: nil,
},
MesslokationsId: "DE0000011111222223333344444555556",
Sparte: sparte.STROM,
Messadresse: &com.Adresse{
Postleitzahl: "82031",
Ort: "Grünwald",
Strasse: "Nördliche Münchner Straße",
Hausnummer: "27A",
Landescode: landescode.DE,
},
}
vali := validator.New()
err := vali.Struct(melo)
if err == nil {
fmt.Println("The MeLo is valid.")
}
meloBytes, err := json.Marshal(melo)
meloJson := string(meloBytes)
fmt.Print(meloJson)
}
Use this in the Go Playground.
Caveats
When serializing decimals (e.g. Zaehlwerk.Wandlerfaktor
) you'll notice that the decimals are by default serialized as strings
{ "wandlerfaktor": "0.8" }
instead of a number like
{ "wandlerfaktor": 0.8 }
This is the default behaviour defined in the decimal package.
You can change the behaviour by setting
decimal.MarshalJSONWithoutQuotes = true
as described f.e. in issue 21 there.
Version Notes
General Default Value Marshalling Behaviour since v0.0.22
Since v0.0.22 default values are no longer marshalled/included in serialized Business Objects or COMponents.
Prior to v0.0.22 default values of required fields serialized as f.e. empty string, null
or empty slice.
For enums this behaviour had already been introduced in v0.0.19 (see below).
This is a step towards decoupling of serialization and validation.
Default Enum Marshalling Behaviour since v0.0.19
Since version v0.0.19 default enum values are no longer serialized/marshalled.
Prior to v0.0.19 fields with an enum type that are required but were uninitialized had been serialized as NameOfEnum(0)
.
This change is a step towards decoupling of serialization and validation.
Breaking Changes introduced in v0.0.13 and v0.0.14:
- The struct that is embedded in all BusinessObjects is now called
Geschaeftsobjekt
(was BusinessObject
<=v0.0.12) to be consistent with the official documentation
BusinessObject
is now the name of the interface that all structs with embedded Geschaeftsobjekt
implement
- Enums are consistently written in upper case (PR 32)
Other Noteworthy BO4E Implementations
Contributing
Contributions are welcome. Feel free to open a Pull Request against the main branch of this repository. Please provide
unit tests if you contribute logic beyond bare bare business object definitions. We do track our modification proposals
to the official BO4E standard in a separate
repository: BO4E-modification-proposals.
Adding Enums
When adding Enums there are two packages (stringer, jsonenums) needed to go-generate additional files, which contain an implementation of the fmt.Stringer
and json.Marshaler
interface for the respective enum.
Since they are just needed for the code generation, but not a real dependency we don't want them in the go.mod file.
One way to install them is outside of your directory with:
go install github.com/campoy/jsonenums@latest
go install golang.org/x/tools/cmd/stringer@latest
Hochfrequenz
Hochfrequenz Unternehmensberatung GmbH is a Grünwald (near Munich) based consulting
company with offices in Berlin and Bremen. We're not only the main contributor to open source BO4E software but,
according to Kununu ratings, also among the most
attractive employers within the German energy market. Applications of talented developers are welcome at any time!
Please consider visiting
our career page (
German only).