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Recurly

Contributor Covenant

This repository houses the official Go library for Recurly's V3 API.

Documentation for the HTTP API and example code can be found on our Developer Hub.

Getting Started

Installing

Install using go get:

go get -u github.com/recurly/recurly-client-go/v3

import with:

import (
    "github.com/recurly/recurly-client-go/v3"
)

Creating a client

A client represents a connection to the Recurly API. Every call to the server exists as a method on this struct. To initialize, you only need the private API key which can be obtained on the API Credentials Page.

client := recurly.NewClient("<apikey>")

Operations

Every operation that can be performed against the API has a corresponding method in the Client struct. The client_operations.go file implements these operations. This file also provides descriptions for each method and their returns. For example, to use the get_account endpoint, the GetAccount method can be called, as seen below. GetAccount() is used to fetch an account; it returns a pointer to the Account struct.

account, err := client.GetAccount(accountID)
if e, ok := err.(*recurly.Error); ok {
  if e.Type == recurly.ErrorTypeNotFound {
    fmt.Printf("Resource not found: %v", e)
    return nil, err
  }
  fmt.Printf("Unexpected Recurly error: %v", e)
  return nil, err
}
fmt.Printf("Fetched Account: %s", account.Id)

Creating Resources

Every Create method on the client takes a specific Request type to form the request.

accountReq := &recurly.AccountCreate{
  Code:      recurly.String("accountcode123"),
  FirstName: recurly.String("Isaac"),
  LastName:  recurly.String("Du Monde"),
  Email:     recurly.String("[email protected]"),
  BillingInfo: &recurly.BillingInfoCreate{
    FirstName: recurly.String("Isaac"),
    LastName:  recurly.String("Du Monde"),
    Address: &recurly.AddressCreate{
      Phone:      recurly.String("415-555-5555"),
      Street1:    recurly.String("400 Alabama St."),
      City:       recurly.String("San Francisco"),
      PostalCode: recurly.String("94110"),
      Country:    recurly.String("US"),
      Region:     recurly.String("CA"),
    },
    Number: recurly.String("4111111111111111"),
    Month:  recurly.String("12"),
    Year:   recurly.String("22"),
    Cvv:    recurly.String("123"),
  },
}

account, err := client.CreateAccount(accountReq)
if e, ok := err.(*recurly.Error); ok {
  if e.Type == recurly.ErrorTypeValidation {
    fmt.Printf("Failed validation: %v", e)
    return nil, err
  }
  fmt.Printf("Unexpected Recurly error: %v", e)
  return nil, err
}
fmt.Printf("Created Account: %s", account.Id)

Pagination

Pagination is accomplished via the *List types defined in [resources.go]. For example, AccountList allows you to paginate Account objects. All List* methods on the Client return pagers (pointers to these list types).

These list operations accept parameters for sorting and filtering the results (e.g. Ids, Limit, Sort, Order). Each list operation accepts its own parameters type. For example, ListAccounts() accepts a ListAccountsParams object. These types can be found in Client operations.

listParams := &recurly.ListAccountsParams{
    Sort:  recurly.String("created_at"),
    Order: recurly.String("desc"),
    Limit: recurly.Int(200),
}

accounts := client.ListAccounts(listParams)

Fetch() fetches the next page of resources and puts them in the Data array. After fetching the last page, HasMore will be false.

for accounts.HasMore {
    err := accounts.Fetch()
    if err != nil {
        fmt.Printf("Failed to retrieve next page: %v", err)
        break
    }
    for i, account := range accounts.Data {
        fmt.Printf("Account %3d: %s, %s\n",
            i,
            account.Id,
            account.Code,
        )
    }
}

Counting Resources

Count() can effeciently fetch the number of records that would be returned by the pager. It does this by calling HEAD on the endpoint and parsing and returning the Recurly-Total-Records header. It will respect any filtering parameters you give it:

listParams := &recurly.ListAccountsParams{
    Subscriber: recurly.Bool(true)
}
accounts := client.ListAccounts(listParams)
count, err := accounts.Count()
if err != nil {
    fmt.Printf("Request failed: %v", err)
    return nil, err
}
fmt.Printf("Number of subscribers: %v", *count)

Error Handling

Errors are configured in error.go. Common scenarios in which errors occur may involve "not found" or "validation" errors, which are included among the examples below. A complete list of error types can be found in error.go. You can use the list to customize your case statements.

account, err := client.CreateAccount(accountReq)
if e, ok := err.(*recurly.Error); ok {
  switch e.Type {
  case recurly.ErrorTypeValidation:
    fmt.Printf("Failed validation: %v", e)
    // You can dig into the individual parameters if needed
    for _, p := range e.Params {
      fmt.Printf("JSON key %v was invalid because %v", p.Property, p.Message)
    }
    return nil, err
  case recurly.ErrorTypeNotFound:
    fmt.Printf("Resource not found: %v", e)
    return nil, err
  case recurly.ErrorTypeTransaction:
    fmt.Printf("Transaction Error: %v", e)
    return nil, err
  case recurly.ErrorTypeInvalidToken:
    fmt.Printf("Invalid Token: %v", e)
    return nil, err
  case recurly.ErrorTypeTimeout:
    fmt.Printf("Timeout: %v", e)
    return nil, err
  // If an error occurs that is not covered by a case statement,
  // we can alert the user to a generic error from the API
  default:
    fmt.Printf("Unexpected Recurly error: %v", e)
    return nil, err
  }
}
fmt.Printf("Created Account: %s", account.Id)

HTTP Metadata

Sometimes you might want additional information about the underlying HTTP request and response. Instead of returning this information directly and forcing the programmer to handle it, we inject this metadata into the top level resource that was returned. You can access the response by calling GetResponse() on anything that implements the Resource interface. This includes the resource objects that are returned from operations, as well as Recurly errors.

Warning: Be careful logging or rendering ResponseMetadata objects as they may contain PII or sensitive data.

On a Resource

account, err := client.GetAccount(accountID)
if err != nil {
  return nil, err
}

// GetResponse() returns a *ResponseMetadata object
resp := account.GetResponse()
fmt.Println(resp.Request.ID)          // "58ac04b9d9218319-ATL"
fmt.Println(resp.StatusCode)          // 201
fmt.Println(resp.Request.Method)      // "POST"
fmt.Println(resp.Request.URL)         // "https://v3.recurly.com/accounts"
fmt.Println(resp.RateLimit.Limit)     // 2000
fmt.Println(resp.RateLimit.Remaining) // 1999

On an Error

It can be helpful to inspect the metadata on errors for logging purposes. Having the Request-Id on hand will help our support staff diagnose potential problems quickly.

account, err := client.CreateAccount(accountReq)
if e, ok := err.(*recurly.Error); ok {
  resp := e.GetResponse()
  fmt.Println("Unexpected Error. Request Id: {}", resp.Request.ID)
  return nil, err
}

On any Resource

Both resources and errors implement the Resource interface. This allows you to extract metadata from either in a generic way:

func LogRateLimit(resource *recurly.Resource) {
  fmt.Println("Requests Remaining: {}", resource.GetResponse().RateLimit.Remaining)
}
account, err := client.CreateAccount(accountReq)
if e, ok := err.(*recurly.Error); ok {
  LogRateLimit(e)
  return nil, err
}

LogRateLimit(account)

Contributing

Please see our Contributing Guide.

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Go library for Recurly's V3 API

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