A go library for using the Authy public API.
This API is not stable yet. Use it at your own risk.
If you don't have $GOPATH
configured please type the following commands:
$ export GOPATH=$HOME/GoCode
$ mkdir -p $GOPATH/src
$ echo 'export GOPATH=$HOME/GoCode' >> ~/.bashrc
If you already have $GOPATH
configured then install the package:
$ go get github.com/dcu/go-authy
To use this client you just need to import go-authy
package and initialize it with your API KEY
import(
"github.com/dcu/go-authy"
)
authyAPI := authy.NewAuthyAPI("#your_api_key")
Now that you have an Authy API object you can start sending requests.
By default, most operations and errors are logged to stderr
. You can
access authy.Logger
to replace the logger. Example:
authy.Logger = log.New(...)
NOTE: User is matched based on cellphone and country code not e-mail. A cellphone is uniquely associated with an authy_id.
Creating users is very easy, you need to pass an email, a cellphone and a country code:
user, err := authyAPI.RegisterUser("[email protected]", 44, "405-342-5699", url.Values{})
in this case 44
is the country code(UK), use 1
for USA or Canada.
You can easily see if the user was created by calling user.Valid()
.
If request went right, you need to store the authy id
in your database. Use user.Id
to get this id
in your database.
if user.Valid() {
# store userResponse.User.Id in your user database
}
If something goes wrong user.Valid()
will return false
and you can see the errors using the following code
user.Errors
it returns a map[string]string
explaining what went wrong with the request.
To verify users you need the user id and a token. The token you get from the user through your login form.
verification, err := authyAPI.VerifyToken(authy-id, "token-entered-by-the-user", url.Values{"ip":{"<user ip>"}})
Once again you can use verification.Valid
to verify whether the token was valid or not.
if verification.Valid() {
# the user is valid
}
To request a SMS token you only need the user id.
sms, err := authyAPI.RequestSMS("authy-id", url.Values{})
As always, you can use sms.Valid()
to verify if the token was sent. To be able to use this method you need to have activated the SMS plugin for your Authy App.
You should force this request to ensure the user will get a token even if it's using the Authy Mobile App.
To request a token via Phone Call you only need the user id.
phoneCall, err := authyAPI.RequestPhoneCall("authy-id", url.Values{"force":{"true"}})
As always, you can use phoneCall.Valid()
to verify if the token was sent. To be able to use this method you need to have activated the Phone Call plugin for your Authy App.
You should force this request to ensure the user will get a token even if it's using the Authy App.
To send the push notification to a user use the method SendApprovalRequest
which receives the Authy ID of the user, a message, the details to show to the user and any extra http param you want to send to the server.
details := authy.Details{
"Type": "SSH Server",
"Server IP": serverIP,
"User IP": clientIP,
"User": os.Getenv("USER"),
}
approvalRequest, err := authyAPI.SendApprovalRequest(authyID, "Log to your ssh server", details, url.Values{})
An easy way to get the response of the user is polling. The method WaitForApprovalRequest
wraps all the polling code in just one method, use it as follows:
status, err := authyAPI.WaitForApprovalRequest(approvalRequest.UUID, 45, url.Values{})
if status == authy.OneTouchStatusApproved {
// the request was approved.
}
To start a phone verification use the following code:
verification, err := authyAPI.StartPhoneVerification(1, "555-555-5555",
authy.SMS)
To check a phone verification use the following code:
verification, err := authyAPI.CheckPhoneVerification(1, "555-555-5555",
"000000")
if verification.Success {
}
Get the code:
$ go get -u github.com/dcu/go-authy
$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/dcu/go-authy
and start coding.
To run the test just type:
make test
You can fine the full API documentation in the official documentation page.