A generic multi-client payment gateway so FlatRender, meezi.ir and bargevasat.ir can all pay through ZarinPal's single verified callback domain (pay.flatrender.ir). New Go service services/payment (clones the notification skeleton + vendored deps): - migration 31_payment_broker.sql — `payment` schema: client_apps, transactions, webhook_deliveries. - ZarinPal v4 client ported from the proven identity PaymentService (request.json -> StartPay -> verify.json; codes 100/101). - client API: POST /v1/pay/request + /v1/pay/inquiry, authed by X-Api-Key + HMAC body signature; GET /callback/zarinpal (the single verified endpoint) verifies, then 302s the user back to the site's return_url (signed) and fires a signed, retried webhook. - per-client ZarinPal merchant override (default = shared merchant); amount stored canonically in Rial, unit to ZarinPal env-configurable. - admin API /v1/admin/* (FlatRender admin JWT): client-app CRUD + key issue/rotate + transactions list. Deploy wiring: payment-svc in docker-compose.v2.yml (host port 1607), pay.flatrender.ir server block in mirror-nginx conf, ENV_FILE + README updates (cert SAN + manual migration note). Admin UI: src/components/admin/PaymentsAdmin.tsx (client apps with one-time key reveal + rotate, transactions table) + /admin/payments page + nav link + fa/en strings; pay-admin proxy route to payment-svc. Docs/SDK: deploy/PAYMENTS.md (integration contract) + deploy/sdk/flatpay.js (zero-dep Node client + webhook verifier) for meezi/any site. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
YAML support for the Go language
Introduction
The yaml package enables Go programs to comfortably encode and decode YAML values. It was developed within Canonical as part of the juju project, and is based on a pure Go port of the well-known libyaml C library to parse and generate YAML data quickly and reliably.
Compatibility
The yaml package supports most of YAML 1.2, but preserves some behavior from 1.1 for backwards compatibility.
Specifically, as of v3 of the yaml package:
- YAML 1.1 bools (yes/no, on/off) are supported as long as they are being decoded into a typed bool value. Otherwise they behave as a string. Booleans in YAML 1.2 are true/false only.
- Octals encode and decode as 0777 per YAML 1.1, rather than 0o777 as specified in YAML 1.2, because most parsers still use the old format. Octals in the 0o777 format are supported though, so new files work.
- Does not support base-60 floats. These are gone from YAML 1.2, and were actually never supported by this package as it's clearly a poor choice.
and offers backwards compatibility with YAML 1.1 in some cases. 1.2, including support for anchors, tags, map merging, etc. Multi-document unmarshalling is not yet implemented, and base-60 floats from YAML 1.1 are purposefully not supported since they're a poor design and are gone in YAML 1.2.
Installation and usage
The import path for the package is gopkg.in/yaml.v3.
To install it, run:
go get gopkg.in/yaml.v3
API documentation
If opened in a browser, the import path itself leads to the API documentation:
API stability
The package API for yaml v3 will remain stable as described in gopkg.in.
License
The yaml package is licensed under the MIT and Apache License 2.0 licenses. Please see the LICENSE file for details.
Example
package main
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"gopkg.in/yaml.v3"
)
var data = `
a: Easy!
b:
c: 2
d: [3, 4]
`
// Note: struct fields must be public in order for unmarshal to
// correctly populate the data.
type T struct {
A string
B struct {
RenamedC int `yaml:"c"`
D []int `yaml:",flow"`
}
}
func main() {
t := T{}
err := yaml.Unmarshal([]byte(data), &t)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("error: %v", err)
}
fmt.Printf("--- t:\n%v\n\n", t)
d, err := yaml.Marshal(&t)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("error: %v", err)
}
fmt.Printf("--- t dump:\n%s\n\n", string(d))
m := make(map[interface{}]interface{})
err = yaml.Unmarshal([]byte(data), &m)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("error: %v", err)
}
fmt.Printf("--- m:\n%v\n\n", m)
d, err = yaml.Marshal(&m)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("error: %v", err)
}
fmt.Printf("--- m dump:\n%s\n\n", string(d))
}
This example will generate the following output:
--- t:
{Easy! {2 [3 4]}}
--- t dump:
a: Easy!
b:
c: 2
d: [3, 4]
--- m:
map[a:Easy! b:map[c:2 d:[3 4]]]
--- m dump:
a: Easy!
b:
c: 2
d:
- 3
- 4