Recurly is a Go (golang) API Client for the Recurly API.
As of v2.10, Recurly has released data structure and API changes to support the credit invoice release. All sites created after May 8, 2018, have this turned on automatically. Existing sites must turn it on no later than Nov 1, 2018. New features will be applicable once the feature is turned on; legacy (existing) invoices will continue to use some deprecated features until they are closed. Most new code can coexist with existing, allowing you to write code to support your transition smoothly. Note that the new_dunning_event
webhook data structure will change and both may be sent while you have both legacy and new invoices with dunning events. Please review the Parse
and ParseDeprecated
methods if you listen for this webhook. Deprecated code will be removed with any library updates no earlier than December 1, 2018.
- API Reference
- Recurly API Documentation
- recurly.js Documentation
- Documentation and examples below. Unit tests also provide thorough examples.
Install using the "go get" command:
go get github.com/blacklightcms/recurly
import "github.com/blacklightcms/recurly"
Construct a new Recurly Client and then work off of that. For example, to list accounts:
client := recurly.NewClient("subdomain", "apiKey", nil)
resp, accounts, err := client.Accounts.List(recurly.Params{"per_page": 20})
recurly.Response embeds http.Response and provides some convenience methods:
if resp.IsOK() {
fmt.Println("Response was a 200-299 status code")
} else if resp.IsError() {
fmt.Println("Response was NOT a 200-299 status code")
// Loop through errors (422 status code only)
for _, e := range resp.Errors {
fmt.Printf("Message: %s; Field: %s; Symbol: %s\n", e.Message, e.Field, e.Symbol)
}
}
if resp.IsClientError() {
fmt.Println("You messed up. Response was a 400-499 status code")
} else if resp.IsServerError() {
fmt.Println("Try again later. Response was a 500-599 status code")
}
// Get status code from http.response
if resp.StatusCode == 422 {
// ...
}
The basic usage format is to create a client, and then operate directly off of each of the services.
The services are (each link to the GoDoc documentation):
- Accounts
- AddOns
- Adjustments
- Billing
- Coupons
- CreditPayments
- Invoices
- Plans
- Redemptions
- Subscriptions
- Transactions
- Purchases
Each of the services correspond to their respective sections in the Recurly API Documentation.
Here are a few examples:
resp, a, err := client.Accounts.Create(recurly.Account{
Code: "1",
FirstName: "Verena",
LastName: "Example",
Email: "verena@example.com",
})
if resp.IsOK() {
log.Printf("Account successfully created. Hosted Login Token: %s", a.HostedLoginToken)
}
resp, a, err := client.Accounts.Get("1")
if resp.IsOK() {
log.Printf("Account Found: %+v", a)
}
All paginated methods (usually named List or List*) support a per_page
and cursor
parameter. Example usage:
resp, accounts, err := client.Accounts.List(recurly.Params{"per_page": 10})
if resp.IsError() {
// Error occurred
}
for i, a := range accounts {
// Loop through accounts
}
// Check for next page
next := resp.Next()
if next == "" {
// No next page
}
// Retrieve next page
resp, accounts, err := client.Accounts.List(recurly.Params{
"per_page": 10,
"cursor": next,
})
// Check for prev page
prev := resp.Prev()
if prev == "" {
// No prev page
}
// Retrieve prev page
resp, accounts, err := client.Accounts.List(recurly.Params{
"per_page": 10,
"cursor": prev,
})
resp, err := client.Accounts.Close("1")
resp, err := client.Accounts.Reopen("1")
// 1 is the account code
resp, b, err := client.Billing.CreateWithToken("1", token)
// 1 is the account code
resp, b, err := client.Billing.UpdateWithToken("1", token)
resp, b, err := client.Billing.Create("1", recurly.Billing{
FirstName: "Verena",
LastName: "Example",
Address: "123 Main St.",
City: "San Francisco",
State: "CA",
Zip: "94105",
Country: "US",
Number: 4111111111111111,
Month: 10,
Year: 2020,
})
resp, b, err := client.Billing.Create("134", recurly.Billing{
FirstName: "Verena",
LastName: "Example",
Address: "123 Main St.",
City: "San Francisco",
State: "CA",
Zip: "94105",
Country: "US",
NameOnAccount: "Acme, Inc",
RoutingNumber: "123456780",
AccountNumber: "111111111",
AccountType: "checking",
})
Subscriptions have different formats for creating and reading.
Due to that, they have a special use case when creating -- a NewSubscription
struct respectively. NewSubscription
structs are only used for creating.
When updating a subscription, you should use the UpdateSubscription
struct.
All other creates/updates throughout use the same struct to create/update as to read.
// s will return a Subscription struct after creating using the
// NewSubscription struct.
resp, s, err := client.Subscriptions.Create(recurly.NewSubscription{
PlanCode: "gold",
Currency: "EUR",
Account: recurly.Account{
Code: "b6f5783",
Email: "verena@example.com",
FirstName: "Verena",
LastName: "Example",
BillingInfo: &recurly.Billing{
Number: 4111111111111111,
Month: 12,
Year: 2017,
VerificationValue: 123,
Address: "400 Alabama St",
City: "San Francisco",
State: "CA",
Zip: "94110",
},
},
})
This package has a few null types that ensure that zero values will marshal or unmarshal properly.
For example, booleans have a zero value of false
in Go. If you need to
explicitly send a false value, go will see that as a zero value and the omitempty
option will ensure it doesn't get sent.
Likewise if you attempt to unmarshal empty/nil values into a struct, you will also get errors. The Null types help ensure things work as expected.
NullBool is a basic struct that looks like this:
NullBool struct {
Bool bool
Valid bool
}
The Valid field determines if the boolean value stored in Bool was intentionally set there, or if it should be discarded since the default will be false.
Here's how to work with NullBool:
// Create a new NullBool:
t := recurly.NewBool(true)
// Check if the value held in the bool is what you expected
fmt.Printf("%v", t.Is(true)) // true
fmt.Printf("%v", t.Is(false)) // false
If, however, NullBool looked like this:
recurly.NullBool{
Bool: false,
Valid: false,
}
Then those checks will always return false:
fmt.Printf("%v", t.Is(true)) // false
fmt.Printf("%v", t.Is(false)) // false
NullInt works the same way as NullBool, but for integers.
i := recurly.NewInt(0)
i = recurly.NewInt(1)
i = recurly.NewInt(50)
NullTime won't breakdown if an empty string / nil value is returned from the Recurly API. It also ensures times are always in UTC.
t := time.Now()
nt := recurly.NewTime(t) // time is now in UTC
fmt.Println(t.String()) // 2015-08-03T19:11:33Z
You can then use s.Account.Code to retrieve account info, or s.Invoice.Code to retrieve invoice info.
In addition to the Errors property in the recurly.Response, response also contains a TransactionError field for Transaction Errors.
Be sure to check resp.TransactionError
for any API calls that may return a transaction
error for additional info. The TransactionError
struct is defined like this:
TransactionError struct {
XMLName xml.Name `xml:"transaction_error"`
ErrorCode string `xml:"error_code,omitempty"`
ErrorCategory string `xml:"error_category,omitempty"`
MerchantMessage string `xml:"merchant_message,omitempty"`
CustomerMessage string `xml:"customer_message,omitempty"`
GatewayErrorCode string `xml:"gateway_error_code,omitempty"`
}
Link to transaction error documentation.
Initial webhook support is in place. The following webhooks are supported:
Account Notifications
NewAccountNotification
UpdatedAccountNotification
CanceledAccountNotification
BillingInfoUpdatedNotification
BillingInfoUpdateFailedNotification
Subscription Notifications
NewSubscriptionNotification
UpdatedSubscriptionNotification
RenewedSubscriptionNotification
ExpiredSubscriptionNotification
CanceledSubscriptionNotification
PausedSubscriptionNotification
ResumedSubscriptionNotification
ScheduledSubscriptionPauseNotification
SubscriptionPauseModifiedNotification
PausedSubscriptionRenewalNotification
SubscriptionPauseCanceledNotification
ReactivatedAccountNotification
Invoice Notifications
NewInvoiceNotification
PastDueInvoiceNotification
ProcessingInvoiceNotification
ClosedInvoiceNotification
Payment Notifications
SuccessfulPaymentNotification
FailedPaymentNotification
VoidPaymentNotification
SuccessfulRefundNotification
ScheduledPaymentNotification
ProcessingPaymentNotification
Dunning Event Notifications
NewDunningEventNotification
Webhooks can be used by passing an io.Reader
to webhooks.Parse
, then using a switch statement with type assertions to determine the webhook returned.
PRs are welcome for additional webhooks.
recurly is available under the MIT License.