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SoftLayer API Client for Ruby

The SoftLayer API Client for Ruby is a library for connecting to and calling the routines of The SoftLayer API from the Ruby programming language.

Overview

The client invokes methods in the API using a REST inspired URL scheme. HTTP calls are handled using the Net::HTTP classes that are part of the Ruby core library.

To make calls to the Ruby API through the client you will create an instance of the SoftLayer::Service class, optionally identifying an API endpoint, and providing authentication information in the form of a username and API key. You then make calls to the SoftLayer API by calling methods on the Service object. Results of those calls are communicated from the server to the client as JSON objects and then decoded and returned to you as standard Ruby objects.

Source code for the most up to date version of this library can be found on the SoftLayer github public repositories. The latest library should also be available as a Ruby gem. (see Installation below)

Should you encounter problems with the client, please contact us on the SoftLayer forums or open a support ticket in the SoftLayer customer portal.

Requirements

The Ruby client has been tested using a wide variety of Ruby implementations using both Ruby 1.8 and Ruby 1.9.

This gem relies on the JSON library which, at the time of this writing, is called simply json for most Ruby implementations and json-jruby for JRuby. Correspondingly we have created a softlayer_api gem and a softlayer_api_jruby gem to account for the difference.

A network connection is required, and a valid SoftLayer API username and key are required to call the SoftLayer API. A connection to the SoftLayer private network is required to connect to SoftLayer’s private network API endpoints.

Installation

The Ruby client is available as the softlayer_api Ruby gem. On most systems, the command:

gem install softlayer_api

installs the gem and makes it available to Ruby scripts. Where the gem is installed on your computer will depend on your particular distribution of Ruby. Refer to the gem documentation for your distribution for more information.

Usage

To begin using the Ruby client, you will have to create an instance of the SoftLayer::Service class for each the API Services that your code will call. To create the instance, you will have to provide information that the library will use to authenticate your account with the API servers.

Once you have created a service object, you will use that service object to call methods in the SoftLayer API.

Authentication

That instance will have to know your API authentication information consisting of your account username and API key. In addition, you will have to select an endpoint, the web address the client will use to contact the SoftLayer API. You may provide this information either through global variables, or by passing them to the constructor.

Providing authentication information through Globals

The SoftLayer Ruby Client makes use of three global variables, in the SoftLayer name space, related to creating instances of the SoftLayer::Service class:

$SL_API_USERNAME A string used as the default username used when creating Service objects
$SL_API_KEY A string used as the default API key used when creating Service objects.
$SL_API_BASE_URL The endpoint base URL used by the service. This variable defaults to API_PUBLIC_ENDPOINT

If you are going to create a lot of different Service objects and they are all going to use the same authentication information it may be convenient to set the values in these globals.

In addition to the globals, the SoftLayer namespace defines two constants representing the endpoints for the SoftLayer API on the private and public networks:

API_PUBLIC_ENDPOINT A constant containing the base address for the public network REST inspired endpoint of the SoftLayer APIhttps://api.softlayer.com/rest/v3/
API_PRIVATE_ENDPOINT A constant containing the base address for the private network REST inspired endpoint of the SoftLayer APIhttps://api.service.softlayer.com/rest/v3/

For more information about the two networks see Choosing_the_Public_or_Private_Network. You can change the default endpoint URL by setting the global variable $SL_API_BASE_URL to either of these two values.

Here is an example of using these globals to create a service:

$SL_API_USERNAME = "joeusername";
$SL_API_KEY = "omitted_for_brevity"

account_service = SoftLayer::Service.new("SoftLayer_Account")

Note that the endpoint URL is not specified. The default endpoint URL is set to the API_PUBLIC_ENDPOINT

Providing authentication information through the Constructor

You can provide the authentication information needed by a Service object as hash arguments in the constructor. The keys used in the hash arguments are symbols whose values should be strings:

:username The username used to authenticate with the server.
:api_key The API key used to authenticate with the server.
:endpoint_url The endpoint address that will receive the method calls.

Here is an example, analogous to the one for global variables, which provides the username and API key as hash arguments. This example also changes the endpoint with the :endpoint_url symbol so that the service will use the API on the SoftLayer Private Network:

account_service = SoftLayer::Service.new("SoftLayer_Account",
    :username => "joeusername",
    :api_key => "omitted_for_brevity",
    :endpoint_url => API_PRIVATE_ENDPOINT)

Calling Service Methods

With an instance of SoftLayer::Service in hand, you can call the methods provided by that service. Calling a API method on a service is as easy as calling a Ruby method on the service object. For example, given the account_service objects created above, a call to get a list of the open tickets on an account using the SoftLayer_Account service’s getOpenTickets method would look like this:

open_tickets = account_service.getOpenTickets

If the method requires arguments, you can supply them as arguments to the method you’re calling on the service object. The arguments should be arguments that can be encoded using the JSON encoder provided by the json gem. Generally this means your argument should be hashes, arrays, strings, numbers, booleans, or nil. Here is an example of calling the createStandardTicket method on a ticket service:

#authentication information will be found in the global variables
ticket_service = SoftLayer::Service.new("SoftLayer_Ticket")
new_ticket = ticket_service.createStandardTicket(
{
    "assignedUserId" => my_account_id,
    "subjectId" => 1022,
    "notifyUserOnUpdateFlag" => true
},
"This is a test ticket created from a Ruby client")

Identifying Particular Objects

Some method calls in the SoftLayer API are made on particular objects, rather than on the services themselves. These objects, however, are always obtained by a service. To call a method on a particular object you can chain a call to object_with_id onto the service that provides the object in question. object_with_id takes one argument, the object id of the object you are interested in. For example, if you were interested in getting the Ticket with a ticket id of 123456 you could so so by calling:

ticket_of_interest = ticket_service.object_with_id(123456).getObject

The object_with_id call returns an object that you can use as a reference to a particular object through the service. This allows you to reuse that object multiple times without having to repeatedly tack object_with_id on to all your requests. For example, if you want to find a ticket with the id 98765 and add an update to it if it’s assigned to user 123456, you might write code like this:

begin
    ticket_ref = ticket_service.object_with_id(98765)
    ticket = ticket_ref.object_mask("assignedUserId").getObject
    if ticket['assignedUserId'] == 123456
        updates = ticket_ref.addUpdate({"entry" => "Get to work on these tickets!"})
    end
rescue Exception => exception
    puts "An error occurred while updating the ticket: #{exception}"
end

The code creates a variable named ticket_ref which refers to ticket 98765 through the tickets_service. This ticket_ref is used with an object_mask to retrieve the ticket and, if the ticket meets the conditional requirement, that same ticket_ref is reused to add an update to the ticket.

Adding an object mask

If you wish to limit the volume of information that the server returns about a particular object, you can use an object mask to indicate exactly which attributes you are interested in. To provide an object mask you simply insert a call to object_mask in the call chain for the method you are invoking.

The arguments to object_mask can be strings, arrays, or hashes. The Strings provide the names of properties you are interested in and the hash and array elements allow you to structure your mask much as the properties themselves are structured.

To look at some examples, consider the following object from the server. It has four properties and an entity, and id, a title, a createDate (giving the date it was create), a modifyDate (the date it was last modified), and an assignedUser entity.

The assignedUser entity has three properties, id, username, and health.

{
    "id"=>1736473,
    "title"=>"VM Polling Failure - unable to login",
    "createDate"=>"2010-04-22T00:12:36-05:00",
    "modifyDate"=>"2010-06-09T06:44:18-05:00"
    "assignedUser"=> {
        "id"=>14
        "username"=>"AlfredQHacker",
        "health"=>"Fantastic"
    },
}

If we were making a request to the server to retrieve this object, or an array of such objects, we might want to limit the response so that it contains just the id fields:

an_api_service.object_mask("id").getObject
=> {"id"=>1736473}

If we want more than one property back from the server the call to object_mask can identify multiple properties as separate argumnents:

an_api_service.object_mask("id", "createDate").getObject  # object_mask with multiple arguments
=> {"id"=>1736473, "createDate"=>"2010-04-22T00:12:36-05:00"}

or it can include them in an array:

an_api_service.object_mask(["id", "createDate"]).getObject # multiple mask items presented in an array
=> {"id"=>1736473, "createDate"=>"2010-04-22T00:12:36-05:00"}

If we ask for the assignedUser we get back that entire entity:

an_api_service.object_mask("assignedUser").getObject
=> {"assignedUser"=> {"id"=>14, "username"=>"AlfredQHacker", "health"=>"Fantastic"}}

However, we may not be interested in the entire assigned user entity, we may
want to get just the id of the assigned user. To do that we pass a hash argument to object_mask. The has follows the hierarchical nature of the properties

an_api_service.object_mask({"assignedUser" => "id"}).getObject # using a hash to access the property hierarchy
=> {"assignedUser"=>{"id"=>14}}

We can identify a particular set of attributes we are interested in by combining the array and hash forms:

an_api_service.object_mask({"assignedUser" => ["id", "health"]}).getObject # retrieving multiple properties
=> {"assignedUser"=>{"id"=>14, "health"=>"Fantastic"}}

Object masks are sent to the server and applied on the server side. By carefully choosing an object mask, you can limit amount of information transferred from the server which may improve bandwidth and processing time.

You may add calls to both object_mask and object_with_id, but only one call to each should appear in any calling sequence.

Examples

Here are some examples that demonstrate using the SoftLayer API Ruby Client. The authentication information, of course, is left as an exercise for the reader. The first example uses the getObject method of the SoftLayer_Account service:

require 'rubygems'
require 'softlayer_api'
require 'pp'

begin
    # use an account service to get a list of the open tickets and print their IDs and titles
    account_service = SoftLayer::Service.new("SoftLayer_Account",
    :username => "joecustomer",             # enter your username here
    :api_key => "feeddeadbeefbadf00d...")   # enter your api key here

    account = account_service.getObject
    pp account
rescue Exception => exception
    puts "Unable to retrieve account information: #{exception}"
end

This second example retrieves some of the information in a support ticket then adds and update to that ticket. It uses an object_with_id to create an object
that references a ticket with a particular ID and reuses that reference later to refer to the same ticket. It combines that reference with an object_mask to limit the amount of information transferred from the server.

require 'rubygems'
require 'softlayer_api'
require 'pp'

ticket_service = SoftLayer::Service.new("SoftLayer_Ticket",
    :username => "joecustomer",              # enter your username here
    :api_key => "feeddeadbeefbadf00d...")    # enter your api key here

begin
    ticket_ref = ticket_service.object_with_id(123456)

    ticket = ticket_ref.object_mask({"updates" => ["entry", "createDate"]},
                                    "assignedUserId",
                                    {"attachedHardware" => "datacenter"}).getObject
    pp ticket
rescue Exception => exception
	puts "Unable to retrieve the ticket"
end

# update the ticket
begin
    updates = ticket_ref.addUpdate({"entry" => "An update from the Ruby client!"})
    puts "Update ticket 123456. The new update's id is #{updates[0]['id']}"
rescue Exception => exception
    puts "Unable to update the ticket: #{exception}"
end

Author

This software is written by the SoftLayer Development Team <sldn@softlayer.com>.

Copyright

This software is Copyright © 2010 SoftLayer Technologies, Inc. See the bundled LICENSE.textile file for more information.