Go Stripe
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The official Stripe Go client library.
Requirements
Installation
Make sure your project is using Go Modules (it will have a go.mod
file in its
root if it already is):
go mod init
Then, reference stripe-go in a Go program with import
:
import (
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76"
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76/customer"
)
Run any of the normal go
commands (build
/install
/test
). The Go
toolchain will resolve and fetch the stripe-go module automatically.
Alternatively, you can also explicitly go get
the package into a project:
go get -u github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76
Documentation
For a comprehensive list of examples, check out the API
documentation.
See video demonstrations covering how to use the library.
For details on all the functionality in this library, see the Go
documentation.
Below are a few simple examples:
Customers
params := &stripe.CustomerParams{
Description: stripe.String("Stripe Developer"),
Email: stripe.String("gostripe@stripe.com"),
PreferredLocales: stripe.StringSlice([]string{"en", "es"}),
}
c, err := customer.New(params)
PaymentIntents
params := &stripe.PaymentIntentListParams{
Customer: stripe.String(customer.ID),
}
i := paymentintent.List(params)
for i.Next() {
pi := i.PaymentIntent()
}
if err := i.Err(); err != nil {
}
Events
i := event.List(nil)
for i.Next() {
e := i.Event()
}
Alternatively, you can use the event.Data.Raw
property to unmarshal to the
appropriate struct.
Authentication with Connect
There are two ways of authenticating requests when performing actions on behalf
of a connected account, one that uses the Stripe-Account
header containing an
account's ID, and one that uses the account's keys. Usually the former is the
recommended approach. See the documentation for more information.
To use the Stripe-Account
approach, use SetStripeAccount()
on a ListParams
or Params
class. For example:
listParams := &stripe.CustomerListParams{}
listParams.SetStripeAccount("acct_123")
params := &stripe.CustomerParams{}
params.SetStripeAccount("acct_123")
To use a key, pass it to API
's Init
function:
import (
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76"
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76/client"
)
stripe := &client.API{}
stripe.Init("access_token", nil)
Google AppEngine
If you're running the client in a Google AppEngine environment, you'll need to
create a per-request Stripe client since the http.DefaultClient
is not
available. Here's a sample handler:
import (
"fmt"
"net/http"
"google.golang.org/appengine"
"google.golang.org/appengine/urlfetch"
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76"
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76/client"
)
func handler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
c := appengine.NewContext(r)
httpClient := urlfetch.Client(c)
sc := client.New("sk_test_123", stripe.NewBackends(httpClient))
params := &stripe.CustomerParams{
Description: stripe.String("Stripe Developer"),
Email: stripe.String("gostripe@stripe.com"),
}
customer, err := sc.Customers.New(params)
if err != nil {
fmt.Fprintf(w, "Could not create customer: %v", err)
}
fmt.Fprintf(w, "Customer created: %v", customer.ID)
}
Usage
While some resources may contain more/less APIs, the following pattern is
applied throughout the library for a given $resource$
:
Without a Client
If you're only dealing with a single key, you can simply import the packages
required for the resources you're interacting with without the need to create a
client.
import (
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76"
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76/$resource$"
)
stripe.Key = "sk_key"
resource, err := $resource$.New(&stripe.$Resource$Params{})
resource, err = $resource$.Get(id, &stripe.$Resource$Params{})
resource, err = $resource$.Update(id, &stripe.$Resource$Params{})
resourceDeleted, err := $resource$.Del(id, &stripe.$Resource$Params{})
i := $resource$.List(&stripe.$Resource$ListParams{})
for i.Next() {
resource := i.$Resource$()
}
if err := i.Err(); err != nil {
}
With a Client
If you're dealing with multiple keys, it is recommended you use client.API
.
This allows you to create as many clients as needed, each with their own
individual key.
import (
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76"
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76/client"
)
sc := &client.API{}
sc.Init("sk_key", nil)
$resource$, err := sc.$Resource$s.New(&stripe.$Resource$Params{})
$resource$, err = sc.$Resource$s.Get(id, &stripe.$Resource$Params{})
$resource$, err = sc.$Resource$s.Update(id, &stripe.$Resource$Params{})
$resource$Deleted, err := sc.$Resource$s.Del(id, &stripe.$Resource$Params{})
i := sc.$Resource$s.List(&stripe.$Resource$ListParams{})
for i.Next() {
$resource$ := i.$Resource$()
}
if err := i.Err(); err != nil {
}
Accessing the Last Response
Use LastResponse
on any APIResource
to look at the API response that
generated the current object:
c, err := coupon.New(...)
requestID := coupon.LastResponse.RequestID
Similarly, for List
operations, the last response is available on the list
object attached to the iterator:
it := coupon.List(...)
for it.Next() {
requestID := it.CouponList().LastResponse.RequestID
}
See the definition of APIResponse
for available fields.
Note that where API resources are nested in other API resources, only
LastResponse
on the top-level resource is set.
Automatic Retries
The library automatically retries requests on intermittent failures like on a
connection error, timeout, or on certain API responses like a status 409 Conflict
. Idempotency keys are always added to requests to
make any such subsequent retries safe.
By default, it will perform up to two retries. That number can be configured
with MaxNetworkRetries
:
import (
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76"
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76/client"
)
config := &stripe.BackendConfig{
MaxNetworkRetries: stripe.Int64(0),
}
sc := &client.API{}
sc.Init("sk_key", &stripe.Backends{
API: stripe.GetBackendWithConfig(stripe.APIBackend, config),
Uploads: stripe.GetBackendWithConfig(stripe.UploadsBackend, config),
})
coupon, err := sc.Coupons.New(...)
Configuring Logging
By default, the library logs error messages only (which are sent to stderr
).
Configure default logging using the global DefaultLeveledLogger
variable:
stripe.DefaultLeveledLogger = &stripe.LeveledLogger{
Level: stripe.LevelInfo,
}
Or on a per-backend basis:
config := &stripe.BackendConfig{
LeveledLogger: &stripe.LeveledLogger{
Level: stripe.LevelInfo,
},
}
It's possible to use non-Stripe leveled loggers as well. Stripe expects loggers
to comply to the following interface:
type LeveledLoggerInterface interface {
Debugf(format string, v ...interface{})
Errorf(format string, v ...interface{})
Infof(format string, v ...interface{})
Warnf(format string, v ...interface{})
}
Some loggers like Logrus and Zap's SugaredLogger
support this interface out-of-the-box so it's possible to set
DefaultLeveledLogger
to a *logrus.Logger
or *zap.SugaredLogger
directly.
For others it may be necessary to write a thin shim layer to support them.
Expanding Objects
All expandable objects in stripe-go take the form of a
full resource struct, but unless expansion is requested, only the ID
field of
that struct is populated. Expansion is requested by calling AddExpand
on
parameter structs. For example:
c, _ := charge.Get("ch_123", nil)
c.Customer.ID
c.Customer.Name
p := &stripe.ChargeParams{}
p.AddExpand("customer")
c, _ = charge.Get("ch_123", p)
c.Customer.ID
c.Customer.Name
How to use undocumented parameters and properties
stripe-go is a typed library and it supports all public properties or parameters.
Stripe sometimes launches private beta features which introduce new properties or parameters that are not immediately public. These will not have typed accessors in the stripe-go library but can still be used.
Parameters
To pass undocumented parameters to Stripe using stripe-go you need to use the AddExtra()
method, as shown below:
params := &stripe.CustomerParams{
Email: stripe.String("jenny.rosen@example.com")
}
params.AddExtra("secret_feature_enabled", "true")
params.AddExtra("secret_parameter[primary]","primary value")
params.AddExtra("secret_parameter[secondary]","secondary value")
customer, err := customer.Create(params)
Properties
You can access undocumented properties returned by Stripe by querying the raw response JSON object. An example of this is shown below:
customer, _ = customer.Get("cus_1234", nil);
var rawData map[string]interface{}
_ = json.Unmarshal(customer.LastResponse.RawJSON, &rawData)
secret_feature_enabled, _ := string(rawData["secret_feature_enabled"].(bool))
secret_parameter, ok := rawData["secret_parameter"].(map[string]interface{})
if ok {
primary := secret_parameter["primary"].(string)
secondary := secret_parameter["secondary"].(string)
}
Webhook signing
Stripe can optionally sign the webhook events it sends to your endpoint, allowing you to validate that they were not sent by a third-party. You can read more about it here.
Testing Webhook signing
You can use stripe.webhook.GenerateTestSignedPayload
to mock webhook events that come from Stripe:
payload := map[string]interface{}{
"id": "evt_test_webhook",
"object": "event",
"api_version": stripe.APIVersion,
}
testSecret := "whsec_test_secret"
payloadBytes, err := json.Marshal(payload)
signedPayload := webhook.GenerateTestSignedPayload(&webhook.UnsignedPayload{Payload: payloadBytes, Secret: testSecret})
event, err := webhook.ConstructEvent(signedPayload.Payload, signedPayload.Header, signedPayload.Secret)
if event.ID == payload["id"] {
} else {
}
Writing a Plugin
If you're writing a plugin that uses the library, we'd appreciate it if you
identified using stripe.SetAppInfo
:
stripe.SetAppInfo(&stripe.AppInfo{
Name: "MyAwesomePlugin",
URL: "https://myawesomeplugin.info",
Version: "1.2.34",
})
This information is passed along when the library makes calls to the Stripe
API. Note that while Name
is always required, URL
and Version
are
optional.
Telemetry
By default, the library sends telemetry to Stripe regarding request latency and feature usage. These
numbers help Stripe improve the overall latency of its API for all users, and
improve popular features.
You can disable this behavior if you prefer:
config := &stripe.BackendConfig{
EnableTelemetry: stripe.Bool(false),
}
Mocking clients for unit tests
To mock a Stripe client for a unit tests using GoMock:
- Generate a
Backend
type mock.
mockgen -destination=mocks/backend.go -package=mocks github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76 Backend
- Use the
Backend
mock to initialize and call methods on the client.
import (
"example/hello/mocks"
"testing"
"github.com/golang/mock/gomock"
"github.com/stretchr/testify/assert"
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76"
"github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76/account"
)
func UseMockedStripeClient(t *testing.T) {
mockCtrl := gomock.NewController(t)
defer mockCtrl.Finish()
mockBackend := mocks.NewMockBackend(mockCtrl)
client := account.Client{B: mockBackend, Key: "key_123"}
mockBackend.EXPECT().Call("GET", "/v1/accounts/acc_123", gomock.Any(), gomock.Any(), gomock.Any()).
Return(nil).
Do(func(method string, path string, key string, params stripe.ParamsContainer, v *stripe.Account) {
*v = stripe.Account{
ID: "acc_123",
}
}).Times(1)
acc, _ := client.GetByID("acc_123", nil)
assert.Equal(t, acc.ID, "acc_123")
}
Beta SDKs
Stripe has features in the beta phase that can be accessed via the beta version of this package.
We would love for you to try these and share feedback with us before these features reach the stable phase.
To install a beta version of stripe-go use the commit notation of the go get
command to point to a beta tag:
go get -u github.com/stripe/stripe-go/v76@v73.3.0-beta.1
Note
There can be breaking changes between beta versions.
We highly recommend keeping an eye on when the beta feature you are interested in goes from beta to stable so that you can move from using a beta version of the SDK to the stable version.
If your beta feature requires a Stripe-Version
header to be sent, set the stripe.APIVersion
field using the stripe.AddBetaVersion
function to set it:
Note
The APIVersion
can only be set in beta versions of the library.
stripe.AddBetaVersion("feature_beta", "v3")
Support
New features and bug fixes are released on the latest major version of the Stripe Go client library. If you are on an older major version, we recommend that you upgrade to the latest in order to use the new features and bug fixes including those for security vulnerabilities. Older major versions of the package will continue to be available for use, but will not be receiving any updates.
Development
Pull requests from the community are welcome. If you submit one, please keep
the following guidelines in mind:
- Code must be
go fmt
compliant. - All types, structs and funcs should be documented.
- Ensure that
make test
succeeds.
Test
The test suite needs testify's require
package to run:
github.com/stretchr/testify/require
Before running the tests, make sure to grab all of the package's dependencies:
go get -t -v
It also depends on stripe-mock, so make sure to fetch and run it from a
background terminal (stripe-mock's README also contains
instructions for installing via Homebrew and other methods):
go get -u github.com/stripe/stripe-mock
stripe-mock
Run all tests:
make test
Run tests for one package:
go test ./invoice
Run a single test:
go test ./invoice -run TestInvoiceGet
For any requests, bug or comments, please open an issue or submit a
pull request.