go-sdk
This repository is a fork from https://github.com/ovh/go-ovh merged with https://github.com/admdwrf/ovhcli.
/!\ This project is under active development and contains a subset of OVH API GO Structures.
Lightweight Go wrapper around OVH's APIs. Handles all the hard work including credential creation and requests signing.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/ovhlabs/go-sdk/ovh"
)
// PartialMe holds the first name of the currently logged-in user.
// Visit https://api.ovh.com/console/#/me#GET for the full definition
type PartialMe struct {
Firstname string `json:"firstname"`
}
// Instantiate an OVH client and get the firstname of the currently logged-in user.
// Visit https://api.ovh.com/createToken/index.cgi?GET=/me to get your credentials.
func main() {
var me PartialMe
client, _ := ovh.NewClient(
"ovh-eu",
YOUR_APPLICATION_KEY,
YOUR_APPLICATION_SECRET,
YOUR_CONSUMER_KEY,
)
client.Get("/me", &me)
fmt.Printf("Welcome %s!\n", me.Firstname)
}
Installation
The Golang wrapper has been tested with Golang 1.5+. It may worker with older versions although it has not been tested.
To use it, just include it to your import
and run go get
:
import (
...
"github.com/ovhlabs/go-sdk/ovh"
)
Configuration
The straightforward way to use OVH's API keys is to embed them directly in the
application code. While this is very convenient, it lacks of elegance and
flexibility.
Alternatively it is suggested to use configuration files or environment
variables so that the same code may run seamlessly in multiple environments.
Production and development for instance.
This wrapper will first look for direct instanciation parameters then
OVH_ENDPOINT
, OVH_APPLICATION_KEY
, OVH_APPLICATION_SECRET
and
OVH_CONSUMER_KEY
environment variables. If either of these parameter is not
provided, it will look for a configuration file of the form:
[default]
; general configuration: default endpoint
endpoint=ovh-eu
[ovh-eu]
; configuration specific to 'ovh-eu' endpoint
application_key=my_app_key
application_secret=my_application_secret
consumer_key=my_consumer_key
Depending on the API you want to use, you may set the endpoint
to:
ovh-eu
for OVH Europe API
ovh-ca
for OVH North-America API
soyoustart-eu
for So you Start Europe API
soyoustart-ca
for So you Start North America API
kimsufi-eu
for Kimsufi Europe API
kimsufi-ca
for Kimsufi North America API
ovhlabs-ca
for ovhlabs API
- Or any arbitrary URL to use in a test for example
The client will successively attempt to locate this configuration file in
- Current working directory:
./ovh.conf
- Current user's home directory
~/.ovh.conf
- System wide configuration
/etc/ovh.conf
This lookup mechanism makes it easy to overload credentials for a specific
project or user.
Register your app
OVH's API, like most modern APIs is designed to authenticate both an application and
a user, without requiring the user to provide a password. Your application will be
identified by its "application secret" and "application key" tokens.
Hence, to use the API, you must first register your application and then ask your
user to authenticate on a specific URL. Once authenticated, you'll have a valid
"consumer key" which will grant your application on specific APIs.
The user may choose the validity period of its authorization. The default period is
24h. He may also revoke an authorization at any time. Hence, your application should
be prepared to receive 403 HTTP errors and prompt the user to re-authenticated.
This process is detailed in the following section. Alternatively, you may only need
to build an application for a single user. In this case you may generate all
credentials at once. See below.
Use the API on behalf of a user
Visit https://eu.api.ovh.com/createApp and create your app
You'll get an application key and an application secret. To use the API you'll need a consumer key.
The consumer key has two types of restriction:
- path: eg. only the
GET
method on /me
- time: eg. expire in 1 day
Then, get a consumer key. Here's an example on how to generate one.
First, create a 'ovh.conf' file in the current directory with the application key and
application secret. You can add the consumer key once generated. For alternate
configuration method, please see the configuration section.
[ovh-eu]
application_key=my_app_key
application_secret=my_application_secret
; consumer_key=my_consumer_key
Then, you may use a program like this example to create a consumer key for the application:
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/ovhlabs/go-sdk/ovh"
)
func main() {
// Create a client using credentials from config files or environment variables
client, err := ovh.NewEndpointClient("ovh-eu")
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Error: %q\n", err)
return
}
ckReq := client.NewCkRequest()
// Allow GET method on /me
ckReq.AddRules(ovh.ReadOnly, "/me")
// Allow GET method on /xdsl and all its sub routes
ckReq.AddRecursiveRules(ovh.ReadOnly, "/xdsl")
// Run the request
response, err := ckReq.Do()
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Error: %q\n", err)
return
}
// Print the validation URL and the Consumer key
fmt.Printf("Generated consumer key: %s\n", response.ConsumerKey)
fmt.Printf("Please visit %s to validate it\n", response.ValidationURL)
}
Use the API for a single user
Alternatively, you may generate all creadentials at once, including the consumer key. You will
typically want to do this when writing automation scripts for a single projects.
If this case, you may want to directly go to https://eu.api.ovh.com/createToken/ to generate
the 3 tokens at once. Make sure to save them in one of the 'ovh.conf' configuration file.
Please see the configuration section.
ovh.conf
should look like:
[ovh-eu]
application_key=my_app_key
application_secret=my_application_secret
consumer_key=my_consumer_key
Use the lib
These examples assume valid credentials are available in the configuration.
GET
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/ovhlabs/go-sdk/ovh"
)
func main() {
client, err := ovh.NewEndpointClient("ovh-eu")
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Error: %q\n", err)
return
}
// Get all the xdsl services
xdslServices := []string{}
if err := client.Get("/xdsl/", &xdslServices); err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Error: %q\n", err)
return
}
// xdslAccess represents a xdsl access returned by the API
type xdslAccess struct {
Name string `json:"accessName"`
Status string `json:"status"`
Pairs int `json:"pairsNumber"`
// Insert the other properties here
}
// Get the details of each service
for i, serviceName := range xdslServices {
access := xdslAccess{}
url := "/xdsl/" + serviceName
if err := client.Get(url, &access); err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Error: %q\n", err)
return
}
fmt.Printf("#%d : %+v\n", i+1, access)
}
}
PUT
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/ovhlabs/go-sdk/ovh"
)
func main() {
client, err := ovh.NewEndpointClient("ovh-eu")
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Error: %q\n", err)
return
}
// Params
type AccessPutParams struct {
Description string `json:"description"`
}
// Update the description of the service
params := &AccessPutParams{Description: "My awesome access"}
if err := client.Put("/xdsl/xdsl-yourservice", params, nil); err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Error: %q\n", err)
return
}
fmt.Println("Description updated")
}
API Documentation
Create a client
- Use
ovh.NewClient()
to have full controll over ther authentication
- Use
ovh.NewEndpointClient()
to create a client for a specific API and use credentials from config files or environment
- Use
ovh.NewDefaultClient()
to create a client unsing endpoint and credentials from config files or environment
Query
Each HTTP verb has its own Client method. Some API methods supports unauthenticated calls. For
these methods, you may want to use the *UnAuth
variant of the Client which will bypass
request signature.
Each helper accepts a method
and resType
argument. method
is the full URI, including
the query string, and resType
is a reference to an object in which the json response will
be unserialized.
Additionally, Post
, Put
and their UnAuth
variant accept a reqBody which is a
reference to a json serializable object or nil.
Alternatively, you may directly use the low level CallAPI
method.
- Use
client.Get()
for GET requests
- Use
client.Post()
for POST requests
- Use
client.Put()
for PUT requests
- Use
client.Delete()
for DELETE requests
Or, for unautenticated requests:
- Use
client.GetUnAuth()
for GET requests
- Use
client.PostUnAuth()
for POST requests
- Use
client.PutUnAuth()
for PUT requests
- Use
client.DeleteUnAuth()
for DELETE requests
Request consumer keys
Consumer keys may be restricted to a subset of the API. This allows to delegate the API to manage
only a specific server or domain name for example. This is called "scoping" a consumer key.
Rules are simple. They combine an HTTP verb (GET, POST, PUT or DELETE) with a pattern. A pattern
is a plain API method and may contain the '*' wilcard to match "anything". Just like glob on a
Unix machine.
While this is simple and may be managed directly with the API as-is, this can be cumbersome to do
and we recommend using the CkRequest
helper. It basically manages the list of authorizations
for you and the actual request.
example: Grant on all /sms and identity
client, err := ovh.NewEndpointClient("ovh-eu")
if err == nil {
// Do something
}
req := client.NewCkRequest()
req.AddRules(ovh.ReadOnly, "/me")
req.AddRecursiveRulesRules(ovh.ReadWrite, "/sms")
pendingCk, err := req.Do()
This example will generate a request for:
- GET /me
- GET /sms
- GET /sms/*
- POST /sms
- POST /sms/*
- PUT /sms
- PUT /sms/*
- DELETE /sms
- DELETE /sms/*
Which would be tedious to do by hand...
Create a CkRequest
:
req := client.NewCkRequest()
Request access on a specific path and method (advanced):
// Use this method for fine-grain access control. In most case, you'll
// want to use the methods below.
req.AddRule("VERB", "PATTERN")
Request access on specific path:
// This will generate all patterns for GET PATH
req.AddRules(ovh.ReadOnly, "/PATH")
// This will generate all patterns for PATH for all HTTP verbs
req.AddRules(ovh.ReadWrite, "/PATH")
// This will generate all patterns for PATH for all HTTP verbs, except DELETE
req.AddRules(ovh.ReadWriteSafe, "/PATH")
Request access on path and all sub-path:
// This will generate all patterns for GET PATH
req.AddRecursiveRules(ovh.ReadOnly, "/PATH")
// This will generate all patterns for PATH for all HTTP verbs
req.AddRecursiveRules(ovh.ReadWrite, "/PATH")
// This will generate all patterns for PATH for all HTTP verbs, except DELETE
req.AddRecusriveRules(ovh.ReadWriteSafe, "/PATH")
Create key:
pendingCk, err := req.Do()
This will initiate the consumer key validation process and return both a consumer key and
a validation URL. The consumer key is automatically added to the client which was used to
create the request. It may be used as soon as the user has authenticated the request on the
validation URL.
pendingCk
contains 3 fields:
ValidationURL
the URL the user needs to visit to activate the consumer key
ConsumerKey
the new consumer key. It won't be active until validation
State
the consumer key state. Always "pendingValidation" at this stage
Use SDK
Example for listing domains
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/ovhlabs/go-sdk/ovh"
)
func main() {
client, err := ovh.NewDefaultClient()
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Error:%s", err)
}
domains, err := client.DomainList()
if err != nil {
fmt.Printf("Error:%s", err)
}
for _, domain := range domains {
fmt.Printf("Domain:%s", domain.Domain)
}
}
Hacking
This wrapper uses standard Go tools, so you should feel at home with it.
Here is a quick outline of what it may look like.
Get the sources
go get github.com/ovhlabs/go-sdk/ovh
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/ovhlabs/go-sdk/ovh
go get
You've developed a new cool feature ? Fixed an annoying bug ? We'd be happy
to hear from you ! See CONTRIBUTING.md
for more informations
Run the tests
Simply run go test
. Since we all love quality, please
note that we do not accept contributions lowering coverage.
# Run all tests, with coverage
go test -cover
# Validate code quality
golint ./...
go vet ./...
Supported APIs
OVH Europe
OVH North America
So you Start Europe
So you Start North America
Kimsufi Europe
Kimsufi North America
License
3-Clause BSD