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go-cfclient

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Overview

go-cfclient is a go module library to assist you in writing apps that need to interact the Cloud Foundry Cloud Controller v3 API. The v2 API is no longer supported, however if you really need to use the older API you may use the go-cfclient v2 branch and releases.

NOTE - The v3 version in the main branch is currently under development and may have breaking changes until a v3.0.0 release is cut. Until then, you may want to pin to a specific v3.0.0-alpha.x release.

Installation

go-cfclient is compatible with modern Go releases in module mode, with Go installed:

go get github.com/cloudfoundry/go-cfclient/v3

Will resolve and add the package to the current development module, along with its dependencies. Eventually this library will cut releases that will be tagged with v3.0.0, v3.0.1 etc, see the Versioning section below.

Usage

Using go modules import the client, config and resource packages:

import (
    "github.com/cloudfoundry/go-cfclient/v3/client"
    "github.com/cloudfoundry/go-cfclient/v3/config"
    "github.com/cloudfoundry/go-cfclient/v3/resource"
)

Authentication

Construct a new CF client configuration object. The configuration object configures how the client will authenticate to the CF API. There are various supported auth mechanisms.

The simplest being - use the existing CF CLI configuration and auth token:

cfg, _ := config.NewFromCFHome()
cf, _ := client.New(cfg)

Username and password:

cfg, _ := config.New("https://api.example.org", config.UserPassword("user", "pass"))
cf, _ := client.New(cfg)

Client and client secret:

cfg, _ := config.New("https://api.example.org", config.ClientCredentials("cf", "secret"))
cf, _ := client.New(cfg)

Static OAuth token, which requires both an access and refresh token:

cfg, _ := config.New("https://api.example.org", config.Token(accessToken, refreshToken))
cf, _ := client.New(cfg)

For more detailed examples of using the various authentication and configuration options, see the auth example.

Resources

The services of a client divide the API into logical chunks and correspond to the structure of the CF API documentation at https://v3-apidocs.cloudfoundry.org. In other words each major resource type has its own service client that is accessible via the main client instance.

apps, _ := cf.Applications.ListAll(context.Background(), nil)
for _, app := range apps {
    fmt.Printf("Application %s is %s\n", app.Name, app.State)
}

All clients and their functions that interact with the CF API live in the client package. The client package is responsible for making HTTP requests using the resources defined in the resource package. All generic serializable resource definitions live in the resource package and could be reused with other client's outside this library.

NOTE - Using the context package you can easily pass cancellation signals and deadlines to various client calls for handling a request. In case there is no context available, then context.Background() can be used as a starting point.

Pagination

All requests for resource collections (apps, orgs, spaces etc) support pagination. Pagination options are described in the client.ListOptions struct and passed to the list methods directly or as an embedded type of a more specific list options struct (for example client.AppListOptions).

Example iterating through all apps one page at a time:

opts := client.NewAppListOptions()
for {
    apps, pager, _ := cf.Applications.List(context.Background(), opts)
    for _, app := range apps {
        fmt.Printf("Application %s is %s\n", app.Name, app.State)
    }  
    if !pager.HasNextPage() {
        break
    }
    pager.NextPage(opts)
}

If you'd rather get all of the resources in one go and not worry about paging, every collection has a corresponding All method that gathers all the resources from every page before returning. While this may be convenient, this could have negative performance consequences on larger foundations/collections.

opts := client.NewAppListOptions()
apps, _ := cf.Applications.ListAll(context.Background(), opts)
for _, app := range apps {
    fmt.Printf("Application %s is %s\n", app.Name, app.State)
}

Asynchronous Jobs

Some API calls are long-running so immediately return a JobID (GUID) instead of waiting and returning a resource. In those cases you only know if the job was accepted. You will need to poll the Job API to find out when the job finishes. There's a PollComplete utility function that you can use to block until the job finishes:

jobGUID, err := cf.Manifests.ApplyManifest(context.Background(), spaceGUID, manifest))
if err != nil {
    return err
}
opts := client.NewPollingOptions()
err = cf.Jobs.PollComplete(context.Background(), jobGUID, opts)
if err != nil {
    return err
}

The timeout and polling interval can be configured using the PollingOptions struct.

The PollComplete function will return a nil error if the job completes successfully. If PollComplete times out waiting for the job to complete a client.AsyncProcessTimeoutError is returned. If the job itself failed then the job API is queried for the job error which is then returned as a resource.CloudFoundryError which can be inspected to find the failure cause.

Error Handling

All client methods will return a resource.CloudFoundryError or sub-type for any response that isn't a 200 level status code. All CF errors have a corresponding error code and the client uses those codes to construct a specific client side error type. This allows you to easily branch your logic based off specific API error codes using one of the many resource.IsSomeTypeOfError(err error) functions, for example:

params, err := cf.ServiceCredentialBindings.GetParameters(guid)
if resource.IsServiceFetchBindingParametersNotSupportedError(err) {
    fmt.Println(err.(resource.CloudFoundryError).Detail)
} else if err != nil {
    return err // all other errors
} else {
    fmt.Printf("Parameters: %v\n", params)
}

Migrating v2 to v3

A very basic example using the v2 client:

c := &cfclient.Config{
    ApiAddress: "https://api.sys.example.com",
    Username:   "user",
    Password:   "password",
}
client, _ := cfclient.NewClient(c)
apps, _ := client.ListApps()
for _, a := range apps {
	fmt.Println(a.Name)
}

Converted to do the same in the v3 client:

cfg, _ := config.New("https://api.sys.example.org", config.UserPassword("user", "pass"))
client, _ := client.New(cfg)
apps, _ := client.Applications.ListAll(context.Background(), nil)
for _, app := range apps {
    fmt.Println(app.Name)
}

If you need to migrate over to the new client iteratively you can do that by referencing both the old and new modules simultaneously and creating two separate client instances - one for each module version.

Some of the main differences between the old client and the new v3 client include:

  • The old v2 client supported most v2 resources and few a v3 resources. The new v3 client supports all v3 resources and no v2 resources. While most v2 resources are similar to their v3 counterparts, some code changes will need to be made.
  • The v2 client had a single type that contained resource functions disambiguated by function name. The v3 client has a separate client nested under the main client for each resource. For example: client.ListApps() vs client.Applications.ListAll()
  • All v3 client functions take a cancellable context object as their first parameter.
  • All v3 client list functions take a type specific options struct that support type safe filtering.
  • All v3 client list functions support paging natively in the client for ease of use.
  • The v3 client supports shared access across goroutines.

Versioning

In general, go-cfclient follows semver as closely as we can for tagging releases of the package. We've adopted the following versioning policy:

  • We increment the major version with any incompatible change to non-preview functionality, including changes to the exported Go API surface or behavior of the API.
  • We increment the minor version with any backwards-compatible changes to functionality
  • We increment the patch version with any backwards-compatible bug fixes.

Development

All development takes place on feature branches and is merged to the main branch. Therefore the main branch is considered a potentially unstable branch until a new release (see below) is cut.

make all

Please attempt to use standard go naming conventions for all structs, for example use GUID over Guid. All client functions should have at least once basic unit test.

Errors

If the Cloud Foundry error definitions change at https://github.com/cloudfoundry/cloud_controller_ng/blob/master/vendor/errors/v2.yml then the error predicate functions in this package need to be regenerated.

To do this, simply use Go to regenerate the code:

make generate

Contributing

Pull requests welcome. Please ensure you run all the unit tests, go fmt the code, and golangci-lint via make all