Home

Awesome

Gopify

Go Reference

Gopify is a simple package for developing Shopify applications in Go.

Table of Contents

Usage

Oauth

When developing a public or custom Shopify application you need to get an access token using oauth to use Shopify APIs.

Start oauth process

The first thing you need to do to use this package is to create a Gopify instance like the following:

app := &gopify.Gopify{
		ApiKey:      "key",
		ApiSecret:   "secret",
		RedirectUrl: "https://example.com/auth/callback",
		Scopes:      []string{"read_products","read_orders"},
	}

Add a http handler to trigger the oauth process.

func startOauth(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
    shopName := r.URL.Query().Get("shop")
    authUrl := app.AuthorizationUrl(shopName, "unique token")
    http.Redirect(w, r, authUrl, http.StatusFound)
}

Oauth callback

After Shopify authenticates your app, it will send a request to the redirect url that you provided to gopify.Gopify{} above. Now you can obtain an access token using AccessToken method.

func oauthCallback(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	shopName := r.URL.Query().Get("shop")
	code := r.URL.Query().Get("code")
	token, err := app.AccessToken(shopName, code)

	// Do something with the token, like querying shopify API.
	...

	// redirect to your application home page
	http.Redirect(w, r, "app url", http.StatusFound)
}

API calls

We can make calls to both Shopify APIs, REST and Graphql using the Client object provided by this package.

client := gopify.NewClient("example.myshopify.com", "access token")

We can can also pass other options to NewClient like the API version, http timeout, ...

// We can use WithVersion to specify which API version
client := gopify.NewClient("example.myshopify.com", "access token", gopify.WithVersion("2022-04"))

// Use WithTimeout to set a custom http timeout instead of 10 seconds
client := gopify.NewClient("example.myshopify.com", "access token", WithTimeout(20))

REST

// Get a list of 10 products
products := []struct {
	Title string
}{}
queryParams := url.Values{
	"limit": {"10"},
}
_, err := client.Get("products.json", queryParams, &products)

// Create a product
product := struct {
	Title string
}{
	Title: "default",
}
responseBody := map[string]any{}
_, err := client.Post("products.json", product, &responseBody)

Graphql

To send a Graphql query, we use the Graphql method defined in the api Client type.

query := `
	{
      products (first: 10) {
        edges {
          node {
            id
            title
          }
        }
      }
    }
`
// the second parameter is for query variables, here we pass nil because we don't have any variables
products, nil := client.Graphql(query, nil)

Rate limiting

Shopify APIs are rate limited, so if that happens you can use the WithRetry option to specify how many times to retry a request.

// retry the request 10 times when hit the rate limit
client := gopify.NewClient("example.myshopify.com", "access token", WithRetry(10))

Session tokens

If you are building an embedded Shopify app then you need to authenticate your app with session tokens.

This package provides you with facilities for decoding a session token and extracting its payload, and also a way to verify the authenticity of the token.

// decode the token 
payload, err := app.DecodeSessionToken("token")

// verify the signature of the token
err := app.VerifyTokenSignature("token")

There is also a higher level way to verify the authenticity of token using the VerifyToken http middleware.

Verify a Shopify request

To verify the authenticity of the request from Shopify we can verify the signature of a hmac parameter included in every request from shopify using VerifyRequest http middleware.

Verify a webhook

To verify that a webhook request is from Shopify we can use VerifyWebhook function.