The Official and Complete SoftLayer API Client for Golang (the Go programming language).
This library contains a complete implementation of the SoftLayer API for client application development in the Go programming language. Code for each API data type and service method is pre-generated, using the SoftLayer API metadata endpoint as input, thus ensuring 100% coverage of the API right out of the gate.
It was designed to feel as natural as possible for programmers familiar with other popular SoftLayer SDKs, and attempts to minimize unnecessary boilerplate and type assertions where possible.
Three easy steps:
// 1. Create a session
sess := session.New(username, apikey)
// 2. Get a service
accountService := services.GetAccountService(sess)
// 3. Invoke a method:
account, err := accountService.GetObject()
In addition to the example above, sessions can also be created using values set in the environment, or from the local configuration file (i.e. ~/.softlayer):
sess := session.New()
In this usage, the username, API key, and endpoint are read from specific environment variables, then the local configuration file (i.e. ~/.softlayer). First match ends the search:
- Username
- environment variable
SL_USERNAME
- environment variable
SOFTLAYER_USERNAME
- local config
username
.
- environment variable
- API Key
- environment variable
SL_API_KEY
- environment variable
SOFTLAYER_API_KEY
- local config
api_key
.
- environment variable
- Endpoint
- environment variable
SL_ENDPOINT_URL
- environment variable
SOFTLAYER_ENDPOINT_URL
- local config
endpoint_url
.
- environment variable
- Timeout
- environment variable
SL_TIMEOUT
- environment variable
SOFTLAYER_TIMEOUT
- local config
timeout
.
- environment variable
Note: Endpoint defaults to https://api.softlayer.com/rest/v3
if not configured through any of the above methods. Timeout defaults to 120 seconds.
Example of the ~/.softlayer local configuration file:
[softlayer]
username = <your username>
api_key = <your api key>
endpoint_url = <optional>
timeout = <optional>
To call a method on a specific instance, set the instance ID before making the call:
service := services.GetUserCustomerService(sess)
service.Id(6786566).GetObject()
All non-slice method parameters are passed as pointers. This is to allow for optional values to be omitted (by passing nil
)
guestId := 123456
userCustomerService.RemoveVirtualGuestAccess(&guestId)
For convenience, a set of helper functions exists that allocate storage for a literal and return a pointer. The above can be refactored to:
userCustomerService.RemoveVirtualGuestAccess(sl.Int(123456))
A complete library of SoftLayer API data type structs exists in the datatypes
package. Like method parameters, all non-slice members are declared as pointers. This has the advantage of permitting updates without re-sending the complete data structure (since nil
values are omitted from the resulting JSON). Use the same set of helper functions to assist in populating individual members.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"github.com/softlayer/softlayer-go/datatypes"
"github.com/softlayer/softlayer-go/services"
"github.com/softlayer/softlayer-go/session"
"github.com/softlayer/softlayer-go/sl"
)
func main() {
sess := session.New() // See above for details about creating a new session
// Get the Virtual_Guest service
service := services.GetVirtualGuestService(sess)
// Create a Virtual_Guest struct as a template
vGuestTemplate := datatypes.Virtual_Guest{
// Set Creation values - use helpers from the sl package to set pointer values.
// Unset (nil) values are not sent
Hostname: sl.String("sample"),
Domain: sl.String("example.com"),
MaxMemory: sl.Int(4096),
StartCpus: sl.Int(1),
Datacenter: &datatypes.Location{Name: sl.String("wdc01")},
OperatingSystemReferenceCode: sl.String("UBUNTU_LATEST"),
LocalDiskFlag: sl.Bool(true),
}
// Tell the API to create the virtual guest
newGuest, err := service.CreateObject(&vGuestTemplate)
// optional error checking...
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// Print the ID of the new guest. Don't forget to dereference
fmt.Printf("New guest %d created", *newGuest.Id)
}
Object masks, object filters, and pagination (limit and offset) can be set
by calling the Mask()
, Filter()
, Limit()
and Offset()
service methods
prior to invoking an API method.
For example, to set an object mask and filter that will be applied to the results of the Account.GetObject() method:
accountService := services.GetAccountService(sess)
accountService.
Mask("id;hostname").
Filter(`{"virtualGuests":{"domain":{"operation":"example.com"}}}`).
GetObject()
The mask and filter are applied to the current request only, and reset after the method returns. To preserve these options for future requests, save the return value:
accountServiceWithMaskAndFilter = accountService.Mask("id;hostname").
Filter(`{"virtualGuests":{"domain":{"operation":"example.com"}}}`)
Result limits are specified as separate Limit
and Offset
values:
accountService.
Offset(100). // start at the 100th element in the list
Limit(25). // limit to 25 results
GetVirtualGuests()
There is also a filter builder you can use to create a Filter instead of writing out the raw string:
// requires importing the filter package
accountServiceWithMaskAndFilter = accountService.
Mask("id;hostname").
Filter(filter.Path("virtualGuests.domain").Eq("example.com").Build())
You can also create a filter incrementally:
// Create initial filters
filters := filter.New(
filter.Path("virtualGuests.hostname").StartsWith("KM078"),
filter.Path("virtualGuests.id").NotEq(12345),
)
// ....
// Later, append another filter
filters = append(filters, filter.Path("virtualGuests.domain").Eq("example.com"))
accountServiceWithMaskAndFilter = accountService.
Mask("id;hostname").
Filter(filters.Build())
Or you can build all those filters in one step:
// Create initial filters
filters := filter.Build(
filter.Path("virtualGuests.hostname").StartsWith("KM078"),
filter.Path("virtualGuests.id").NotEq(12345),
filter.Path("virtualGuests.domain").Eq("example.com"),
)
accountServiceWithMaskAndFilter = accountService.
Mask("id;hostname").Filter(filters)
See filter/filters.go for the full range of operations supported. The file at examples/filters.go will show additional examples. Also, this is a good article that describes SoftLayer filters at length.
For any error that occurs within one of the SoftLayer API services, a custom error type is returned, with individual fields that can be parsed separately.
_, err := service.Id(0). // invalid object ID
GetObject()
if err != nil {
// Note: type assertion is only necessary for inspecting individual fields
apiErr := err.(sl.Error)
fmt.Printf("API Error:")
fmt.Printf("HTTP Status Code: %d\n", apiErr.StatusCode)
fmt.Printf("API Code: %s\n", apiErr.Exception)
fmt.Printf("API Error: %s\n", apiErr.Message)
}
Note that sl.Error
implements the standard error
interface, so it can
be handled like any other error, if the above granularity is not needed:
_, err := service.GetObject()
if err != nil {
fmt.Println("Error during processing: ", err)
}
To set a different endpoint (e.g., the backend network endpoint):
session.Endpoint = "https://api.service.softlayer.com/rest/v3"
To enable debug output:
session.Debug = true
By default, the debug output is sent to standard output. You can customize this by setting up your own logger:
import "github.com/softlayer/softlayer-go/session"
session.Logger = log.New(os.Stderr, "[CUSTOMIZED] ", log.LstdFlags)
You can also tell the session to retry the api requests if there is a timeout error:
// Specify how many times to retry the request, the request timeout, and how much time to wait
// between retries.
services.GetVirtualGuestService(
sess.SetTimeout(900).SetRetries(2).SetRetryWait(3)
).GetObject(...)
Password-based authentication (via requesting a token from the API) is only supported when talking to the API using the XML-RPC transport protocol.
To use the XML-RPC protocol, simply specify an XML-RPC endpoint url:
func main() {
// Create a session specifying an XML-RPC endpoint url.
sess := &session.Session{
Endpoint: "https://api.softlayer.com/xmlrpc/v3",
}
// Get a token from the api using your username and password
userService := services.GetUserCustomerService(sess)
token, err := userService.GetPortalLoginToken(username, password, nil, nil)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// Add user id and token to the session.
sess.UserId = *token.UserId
sess.AuthToken = *token.Hash
// You have a complete authenticated session now.
// Call any api from this point on as normal...
keys, err := userService.Id(sess.UserId).GetApiAuthenticationKeys()
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
log.Println("API Key:", *keys[0].AuthenticationKey)
}
This library supports IBM's IAM Authentication (used by the ibmcloud
cli for example). You will want to set the IAMToken
and IAMRefreshToken
properties on the session to make use of it.
token := "Bearer aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa..."
refreshToken := "bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb..."
sess := &session.Session{
Endpoint: "https://api.softlayer.com/rest/v3.1",
Debug: true,
Timeout: 90,
IAMToken: token,
IAMRefreshToken: refreshToken
}
You can bypass automatic IAM refresh by either not setting the IAMRefreshToken
property, or by manually configuring the TransportHandler
token := "Bearer aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa..."
handler := &session.RestTransport{}
sess := &session.Session{
Endpoint: "https://api.softlayer.com/rest/v3.1",
Debug: true,
Timeout: 90,
IAMToken: token,
TransportHandler handler,
}
If you want to be able to record the new tokens in a config file (or elsewhere), you can configure an IAMUpdaters
Observer which will take in as arguments the new tokens, allowing you to save them somewhere for reuse.
type MyIamUpdater struct {
debug bool
}
// This function is where you can configure the logic to save these new tokens somewhere
func (iamupdater *MyIamUpdater) Update(token string, refresh string) {
fmt.Printf("[DEBUG] New Token: %s\n", token)
fmt.Printf("[DEBUG] New Refresh Token: %s\n", refresh)
}
updater := &MyIamUpdater{debug: false}
token := "Bearer aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa..."
refreshToken := "bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb..."
sess := &session.Session{
Endpoint: "https://api.softlayer.com/rest/v3.1",
IAMToken: token,
IAMRefreshToken refreshToken,
}
sess.AddIAMUpdater(updater)
You can add multiple Updaters as well, they will be called in the order they are added. MyIamUpdater.Update(token, refresh)
in this example will only be called when the token is actually refreshed.
The Examples directory has a few rough examples scripts that can help you get started developing with this library.
The Examples have their own modules since there are a few dependencies here not needed in the normal softlayer-go repo. The following will get you started:
cd examples
go mod vendor
go run main.go --help
The examples use SPF13's Cobra Command library to build little command examples, which should be easy enough to expand upon if needed. The SoftLayer-CLI project is also a good example of how to use the softlayer-go library.
To get softlayer-go:
go get github.com/softlayer/softlayer-go/...
make
gofmt -w `find . -name '*.go' | grep -v vendor`
go vet -all $(go list ./... | grep -v datatypes)
go get -d -v ./...
go build ./...
make test
gofmt -w `find . -name '*.go' | grep -v vendor`
go generate ./session
go vet -all $(go list ./... | grep -v datatypes)
go mod vendor
go test $(go list ./... | grep -v '/vendor/') -timeout=30s -coverprofile coverage.out
make update_deps
This downloads the API definitions and creates go files for them.
(with make)
make generate
(manually)
go run ./tools generate
This software is Copyright (c) 2016-2024 IBM Corp. See the bundled LICENSE file for more information.