Package opslevel
provides an OpsLevel API client implementation.
opslevel
requires Go version 1.8 or later.
go get -u github.com/opslevel/opslevel-go
Construct a client, specifying the API token. Then, you can use it to make GraphQL queries and mutations.
client := opslevel.NewClient("XXX_API_TOKEN_XXX")
// Use client...
You can validate the client can successfully talk to the OpsLevel API.
client := opslevel.NewClient("XXX_API_TOKEN_XXX")
if err := client.Validate(); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
Every resource (IE: service, lifecycle, tier, etc) in OpsLevel API has a corresponding data structure in go as well as the graphql query & mutation inputs. Additionally there is also some helper functions that use native go types like string
and []string
to make it easier to work with. The following are a handful of examples:
Find a service given an alias and print the owning team name:
foundService, foundServiceErr := client.GetServiceWithAlias("MyCoolService")
if foundServiceErr != nil {
panic(foundServiceErr)
}
fmt.Println(foundService.Owner.Name)
Create a new service in OpsLevel and print the ID:
serviceCreateInput := opslevel.ServiceCreateInput{
Name: "MyCoolService",
Product: "MyProduct",
Description: "The Coolest Service",
Language: "go",
}
newService, newServiceErr := client.CreateService(serviceCreateInput)
if newServiceErr != nil {
panic(newServiceErr)
}
fmt.Println(newService.Id)
Assign the tag {"hello": "world"}
to our newly created service and print all the tags currently on it:
allTagsOnThisService, err := client.AssignTagForId(newService.Id, "Hello", "World")
for tagKey, tagValue := range allTagsOnThisService {
fmt.Printf("Tag '{%s : %s}'", tagKey, tagValue)
}
List all the tags for a service:
tags, tagsErr := client.GetTagsForServiceWithAlias("MyCoolService")
for _, tag := range tags {
fmt.Printf("Tag '{%s : %s}'\n", tag.Key, tag.Value)
}
// OR
service, serviceErr := client.GetServiceWithAlias("MyCoolService")
tags, tagsErr := client.GetTagsForService(service.Id)
for _, tag := range tags {
fmt.Printf("Tag '{%s : %s}'\n", tag.Key, tag.Value)
}
Build a lookup table of teams:
func GetTeams(client *opslevel.Client) (map[string]opslevel.Team, error) {
teams := make(map[string]opslevel.Team)
data, dataErr := client.ListTeams()
if dataErr != nil {
return teams, dataErr
}
for _, team := range data {
teams[string(team.Alias)] = team
}
return teams, nil
}
The client also exposes functions Query
and Mutate
for doing custom query or mutations. We are running ontop of this go graphql library so you can read up on how to define go structures that represent a query or mutation there but examples of each can be found here.