connect-go
fx
connect-go | fx | |
---|---|---|
26 | 31 | |
3 | 5,230 | |
- | 2.2% | |
0.0 | 8.3 | |
9 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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connect-go
- Code generation for REST inter service communication?
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Flutter + gRPC for Desktop and Mobile App Development - Good choice?
In my opinion it's a good idea, it's the architecture we use at work, and it works well for us. The main limitation to be aware of is that many PaaS don't support gRPC traffic (because of the proxies used). For example, DigitalOcean App Platform or Heroku if I remember correctly. If the way you want to host your backend is OK with HTTP/2 and gRPC traffic, then it's not a limitation. One way around this limitation is to use the gRPC-Web protocol, or the Connect protocol (https://connect.build/). Unfortunately, Dart's gRPC client does not support the gRPC-Web protocol outside the web platform. So for a mobile application, it's not usable at the moment. (If this PR were accepted, it would solve the issue: https://github.com/grpc/grpc-dart/pull/557.) As for Connect, no client is currently offered by Buf for Dart. Don't hesitate if you want to know more. That said, I'd advise you to use the Connect implementation for Go to implement your backend. Connect will enable your server to speak all three protocols (gRPC, gRPC-Web and Connect), which is very useful in the long term. What's more, the code is cleaner, and you benefit from official support for observability with OpenTelemetry. If you don't know Buf (the creators of Connect),I suggest you visit their website: https://buf.build/. :-) Good luck!
- How do I provide bot RPC and REST endpoints?
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Building a modern gRPC-powered microservice using Node.js, Typescript, and Connect
As mentioned in the intro, we are going to use Buf and Connect as our tools. We’ll start by installing the dependencies.
- Ask HN: Is it possible to compile TypeScript to Golang?
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gRPC + Envoy + grpc-web = scalable multiplexed streaming?
Its annoying, because the rest of Connect (https://connect.build/) looks really really cool. But its no good for me in a complex app if I can't have multiple streams from the server :/
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Issues with proxying gRPC services to web, and a potential prototype
Consider checking out https://connect.build from https://buf.build. Supports a simpler protocol than grpc-web. Includes a js/ts client for frontend. Then you don’t necessarily need a rest layer, but could leverage the proxy your building.
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Best Web Sever Framework?
Twirp (though I'd move to https://connect.build for my next project) to do JSON based RPC using protobufs.
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GRPC Gateway API Client?
my backend is go via https://github.com/bufbuild/connect-go , it's stable and all open source. just try and test it for your purpose. my project run all in 300 server more....
- Connect – A Better gRPC
fx
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I write HTTP services in Go after 13 years (Mat Ryer, 2024)
I found fx(https://github.com/uber-go/fx) to be a super simple yet versatile tool to design my application around.
All the advice in the article is still helpful, but it takes the "how do I make sure X is initialized when Y needs it" part completely out of the equation and reduces it from an N*M problem to an N problem, ie I only have to worry about how to initialize individual pieces, not about how to synchronize initialization between them.
I've used quite a few dependency injection libraries in various languages over the years (and implemented a couple myself) and the simplicity and versatility of fx makes it my favorite so far.
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go-ecommerce-microservices: A practical e-commerce microservices, built with cqrs, event sourcing, vertical slice architecture, event-driven architecture.
Some of the features: - ✅ Using Vertical Slice Architecture as a high level architecture - ✅ Using Event Driven Architecture on top of RabbitMQ Message Broker with a custom [Event Bus](pkg/messaging/bus/) - ✅ Using Event Sourcing in Audit Based services like [Orders Service](services/orders/) - ✅ Using CQRS Pattern and Mediator Patternon top of Go-MediatR library - ✅ Using Dependency Injection and Inversion of Controlon top of uber-go/fx library - ✅ Using RESTFul api with Echo framework and using swagger with swaggo/swag library - ✅ Using Postgres and EventStoreDB to write databases with fully supports transactions(ACID) - ✅ Using MongoDB and Elastic Search for read databases (NOSQL) - ✅ Using OpenTelemetry for collection Distributed Tracing with using Jaeger and Zipkin - ✅ Using OpenTelemetry for collection Metrics with using Prometheus and Grafana - ✅ Using Unit Test for testing small units with mocking dependent classes and using Mockery for mocking dependencies - ✅ Using End2End Test and Integration Test for testing features with all of their real dependeinces using docker containers (cleanup tests) and testcontainers-go library
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Gorilla,wow
any take on https://github.com/uber-go/fx?
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App init and graceful watch lib recommendations ?
I’m not sure of much that can do all of that - maybe it’s a use case for https://github.com/uber-go/fx
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How normal is it to stare at your screen, getting nothing done when stuck and waiting for help?
If I still find myself stuck/waiting, I switch over to studying more about our team's main language Go. Currently looking around at Fx ( https://github.com/uber-go/fx ). Which is interesting, though I doubt we'll actually migrate anything for it, but might make a neat lunch and learn topic.
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Zerolog printing logs multiple times
Hello gophers, I am using https://github.com/uber-go/fx and https://github.com/rs/zerolog for logging.
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Does this project structure make sense?
Also, I like to use Uber FX for my DI stuff. You can check it out here:https://github.com/uber-go/fx
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As a Go programmer, what design pattern, programming techniques have you actually used, implemented regularly in your workplace which made your life much easier?
I only have private and work repos... But I use Uber fx. https://github.com/uber-go/fx
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Does Golang has any framework like Springboot?
Spring Boot is notable for its dependency injection / inversion of control. The closest Go has to this is Uber's Fx which also includes some lifecycle management.
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Config for production and mocking (db connections, http parsers etc)
If you have such a complex and deep dependency graph, and you don't want to manually maintain it, you could use some DI library to handle that for you. Something like https://github.com/google/wire for small-medium size stuff, or https://github.com/uber-go/fx for larger scale, more enterprise projects.
What are some alternatives?
grpc-go - The Go language implementation of gRPC. HTTP/2 based RPC
dig - A reflection based dependency injection toolkit for Go.
grpc-gateway - gRPC to JSON proxy generator following the gRPC HTTP spec
wire - Compile-time Dependency Injection for Go
protobuf-es - Protocol Buffers for ECMAScript. The only JavaScript Protobuf library that is fully-compliant with Protobuf conformance tests.
wire - Strict Runtime Dependency Injection for Golang
twirp - A simple RPC framework with protobuf service definitions
container - A lightweight yet powerful IoC dependency injection container for the Go programming language
examples-go - An example Go server built with Connect.
captcha - :sunglasses:Package captcha provides an easy to use, unopinionated API for captcha generation
drpc - drpc is a lightweight, drop-in replacement for gRPC
wild-workouts-go-ddd-example - Go DDD example application. Complete project to show how to apply DDD, Clean Architecture, and CQRS by practical refactoring.