⚠️ Beta alert! This library is in beta. See release status for more information.
- Release status
- Need help?
- Getting started
- Usage guide
- Configuration reference
- Building the SDK
- Contributing
This repository contains the Okta management SDK for Golang. This SDK can be used in your server-side code to interact with the Okta management API and
- Create and update users with the Users API
- Add security factors to users with the Factors API
- Manage groups with the Groups API
- Manage applications with the Apps API
- Much more!
We also publish these libraries for Golang:
You can learn more on the Okta + Golang page in our documentation.
This library uses semantic versioning and follows Okta's library version policy.
Version | Status |
---|---|
0.x | Beta Release |
The latest release can always be found on the releases page.
If you run into problems using the SDK, you can
- Ask questions on the Okta Developer Forums
- Post issues here on GitHub (for code errors)
To install the Okta Golang SDK in your project, run go get github.com/okta/okta-sdk-golang
You'll also need
- An Okta account, called an organization (sign up for a free developer organization if you need one)
- An API token
Construct a client instance by passing it your Okta domain name and API token:
config := okta.NewConfig().WithOrgUrl("{yourOktaDomain}").WithToken("{apiToken}")
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
Hard-coding the Okta domain and API token works for quick tests, but for real projects you should use a more secure way of storing these values (such as environment variables). This library supports a few different configuration sources, covered in the configuration reference section.
When calling okta.NewClient()
we allow for you to pass custom instances of http.Client
and cache.Cache
.
myClient := &http.Client{}
myCache := NewCustomCacheDriver()
config := okta.NewConfig().WithOrgUrl("{yourOktaDomain}").WithToken("{apiToken}")
client := okta.NewClient(config, myClient, myCache)
You can create a custom cache driver by implementing cache.Cache
type CustomCacheDriver struct {
}
func NewCustomCacheDriver() Cache {
return CustomCacheDriver{}
}
func (c CustomCacheDriver) Get(key string) *http.Response {
return nil
}
func (c CustomCacheDriver) Set(key string, value *http.Response) {}
func (c CustomCacheDriver) Delete(key string) {}
func (c CustomCacheDriver) Clear() {}
func (c CustomCacheDriver) Has(key string) bool {
return false
}
These examples will help you understand how to use this library. You can also browse the full API reference documentation.
Once you initialize a client
, you can call methods to make requests to the Okta API. Most methods are grouped by the API endpoint they belong to. For example, methods that call the Users API are organized under client.User
.
This library should only be used with the Okta management API. To call the Authentication API, you should construct your own HTTP requests.
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
user, resp, err := client.User.GetUser(user.Id, nil)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
users, resp, err := client.User.ListUsers()
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
filter := query.NewQueryParams(query.WithFilter("status eq \"ACTIVE\""))
users, resp, err := client.User.ListUsers(filter)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
p := &okta.PasswordCredential{
Value: "Abcd1234",
}
uc := &okta.UserCredentials{
Password: p,
}
profile := okta.UserProfile{}
profile["firstName"] = "John"
profile["lastName"] = "Activate"
profile["email"] = "[email protected]"
profile["login"] = "[email protected]"
u := &okta.User{
Credentials: uc,
Profile: &profile,
}
user, resp, err := client.User.CreateUser(*u, nil)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
newProfile := *user.Profile
newProfile["nickName"] = "Batman"
updatedUser := &okta.User{
Profile: &newProfile,
}
user, resp, err := client.User.UpdateUser(user.Id, *updatedUser, nil)
Custom attributes must first be defined in the Okta profile editor. Then, you can work with custom attributes on a user:
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
user, resp, err := client.User.GetUser(user.Id, nil)
nickName = user.Profile["nickName"]
You must first deactivate the user, and then you can delete the user.
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
resp, err := client.User.DeactivateUser(user.Id, nil)
resp, err := client.User.DeactivateOrDeleteUser(user.Id, nil)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
groups, resp, err := client.User.ListUserGroups(user.Id, nil)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
gp := &okta.GroupProfile{
Name: "Get Test Group",
}
g := &okta.Group{
Profile: gp,
}
group, resp, err := client.Group.CreateGroup(*g, nil)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
resp, err := client.Group.AddUserToGroup(group.Id, user.Id, nil)
Factors and Applications are currently not fully functioning. The SDK will be able to read factors and applications from the API, but they are not set to the correct types yet. This is coming soon.
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
factors, resp, err := client.Factor.ListFactors(group.Id, user.Id, nil)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
factorProfile := okta.SmsFactorProfile{
PhoneNumber: "5551234567",
}
factor := okta.SmsFactor{
Profile: &factorProfile,
}
factor, resp, err := client.Factor.AddFactor(user.Id, factor, nil)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
factor, resp, err := client.Factor.ActivateFactor(user.Id, factor.Id, nil)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
verifyFactorRequest := okta.VerifyFactorRequest{
PassCode: "123456"
}
verifyFactorResp, resp, err := client.Factor.VerifyFactor(user.Id, factor.Id, verifyFactorRequest, nil)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
applications, resp, err := client.Application.ListApplications(nil)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
application, resp, err := client.Applicaiton.GetApplication(applicationId, nil)
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
swaAppSettingsApp := okta.SwaApplicationSettingsApplication{
ButtonField: "btn-login",
PasswordField: "txtbox-password",
UsernameField: "txtbox-username",
Url: "https://example.com/login.html",
LoginUrlRegex: "REGEX_EXPRESSION",
}
swaAppSettings := okta.SwaApplicationSettings{
App: &swaAppSettingsApp,
}
swaApp := okta.SwaApplication{
Name: "Test App",
Settings: &swaAppSettings,
}
application, resp, err := client.Application.CreateApplication(swaApp, nil)
Not every API endpoint is represented by a method in this library. You can call any Okta management API endpoint using this generic syntax:
config := okta.NewConfig()
client := okta.NewClient(config, nil, nil)
url := "https://golang.oktapreview.com/api/v1/authorizationServers
type Signing struct {
RotationMode string `json:"rotationMode,omitempty"`
LastRotated *time.Time `json:"lastRotated,omitempty"`
NextRotation *time.Time `json:"nextRotation,omitempty"`
Kid string `json:"kid,omitempty"`
}
type Credentials struct {
Signing *Signing `json:"signing,omitempty"`
}
type AuthorizationServer struct {
Id string `json:"id,omitempty"`
Name string `json:"name,omitempty"`
Description string `json:"description,omitempty"`
Audiences []string `json:"audiences,omitempty"`
Issuer string `json:"issuer,omitempty"`
IssuerMode string `json:"issuerMode,omitempty"`
Status string `json:"status,omitempty"`
Created *time.Time `json:"created,omitempty"`
LastUpdated *time.Time `json:"lastUpdated,omitempty"`
Credentials *Credentials `json:"credentials,omitempty"`
Embedded interface{} `json:"_embedded,omitempty"`
Links interface{} `json:"_links,omitempty"`
}
as := AuthorizationServer{
Name: "Sample Authorization Server",
Description: "Sample Authorization Server description",
Audiences: []string{"api://default"},
}
req, err := m.client.requestExecutor.NewRequest("POST", url, as)
if err != nil {
return nil, nil, err
}
var authServer *AuthorizationServer
resp, err := m.client.requestExecutor.Do(req, &authServer)
if err != nil {
return nil, resp, err
}
return authServer, resp, nil
This library looks for configuration in the following sources:
- An
okta.yaml
file in a.okta
folder in the current user's home directory (~/.okta/okta.yaml
or%userprofile\.okta\okta.yaml
) - An
okta.yaml
file in a.okta
folder in the application or project's root directory - Environment variables
- Configuration explicitly passed to the constructor (see the example in Getting started)
Higher numbers win. In other words, configuration passed via the constructor will override configuration found in environment variables, which will override configuration in okta.yaml
(if any), and so on.
The full YAML configuration looks like:
okta:
client:
connectionTimeout: 30 # seconds
orgUrl: "https://{yourOktaDomain}"
proxy:
port: null
host: null
username: null
password: null
token: {apiToken}
Each one of the configuration values above can be turned into an environment variable name with the _
(underscore) character:
OKTA_CLIENT_CONNECTIONTIMEOUT
OKTA_CLIENT_TOKEN
- and so on
In most cases, you won't need to build the SDK from source. If you want to build it yourself, you'll need these prerequisites:
- Clone the repo
- Run
make build
from the root of the project
We're happy to accept contributions and PRs! Please see the contribution guide to understand how to structure a contribution.