go-incident: Go client library for Incident.io
Go client library for accessing the Incident.io API.
go-incident is compatible with modern Go releases in module mode, with Go installed:
go get github.com/andygrunwald/go-incident
will resolve and add the package to the current development module, along with its dependencies.
Alternatively the same can be achieved if you use import in a package:
import "github.com/andygrunwald/go-incident"
and run go get
without parameters.
Finally, to use the top-of-trunk version of this repo, use the following command:
go get github.com/andygrunwald/go-incident@main
import "github.com/andygrunwald/go-incident"
Construct a new Incident.io client, then use the various services on the client to access different parts of the Incident.io API. For example:
apiKey := "<my-secret-api-key>"
client := incident.NewClient(apiKey, nil)
// List all incidents for your organisation.
incidents, response, err := client.Incidents.List(context.Background(), nil)
Some API methods have optional parameters that can be passed. For example:
apiKey := "<my-secret-api-key>"
client := incident.NewClient(apiKey, nil)
// List only closed incidents for your organisation in page chunks of 5.
opt := &incident.IncidentsListOptions{
PageSize: 5,
Status: []string{
incident.IncidentStatusClosed,
},
}
incidents, response, err := client.Incidents.List(context.Background(), opt)
The services of a client divide the API into logical chunks and correspond to the structure of the Incident.io API documentation .
NOTE: Using the context package, one can easily pass cancelation signals and deadlines to various services of the client for handling a request.
In case there is no context available, then context.Background()
can be used as a starting point.
For more sample code snippets, head over to the example directory.
For all requests made to the incident.io API, you'll need an API key. Right now, there is no public incident.io API.
To create an API key, head to the incident dashboard and visit API keys.
The API key will be passed as the first argument, when constructing a new client:
apiKey := "<my-secret-api-key>"
client := incident.NewClient(apiKey, nil)
Errors provided by the Incident.io API will be mapped to the ErrorResponse type and can be investigated further:
// Do a API call ...
if err != nil {
if responseErr, ok := err.(*incident.ErrorResponse); ok {
// Do something with responseErr, like printing
fmt.Printf("%+v", responseErr.Type)
}
}
All error details provided by the API are available. See Making requests > Errors in the Incident.ip API docs for more details.
Some requests support pagination. Pagination options are described in the options per API call once supported. The returned data contains a PaginationMeta struct with paging information.
apiKey := "<my-secret-api-key>"
client := incident.NewClient(apiKey, nil)
opt := &incident.IncidentsListOptions{
PageSize: 5,
}
// Get all pages of incidents
var allIncidents []incident.Incident
for {
incidents, _, err := client.Incidents.List(context.Background(), opt)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
allIncidents = append(allIncidents, incidents.Incidents...)
// Calculate if there is a next page
if incidents.PaginationMeta.TotalRecordCount == int64(len(allIncidents)) {
break
}
opt.After = incidents.Incidents[len(incidents.Incidents)-1].Id
}
I would like to cover the entire Incident.io API and contributions are of course always welcome. The calling pattern is pretty well established, so adding new methods is relatively straightforward.
The structure, code and documentation of this project is inspired by google/go-github.
This library is distributed under the MIT License found in the LICENSE file.