free-gophers-pack
migrate
free-gophers-pack | migrate | |
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3 | 72 | |
3,253 | 14,000 | |
- | 2.0% | |
10.0 | 8.0 | |
over 1 year ago | 8 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
free-gophers-pack
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Using migrations with Golang
Gopher credits
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Behind the Scenes of Go Scheduler
OK, no more surprises. I promised with that, we now have a full understanding of the main ideas, both big and sneaky, behind the Go scheduler. We started out with a list of goals. How did we do with our goals? Use a small number of kernel threads. We can support high concurrency and we can leverage parallelism. We scale to N-cores and this falls out of those three ideas that we discussed. Let's move on to the harder questions. What are the limitations of the scheduler? Well, for one, there is no notion of goroutine's priority. It uses a first in, first out runQueue vs Linux scheduler which uses a priority queue. Now the cost-benefit tradeoff is doing this might not actually make sense for go programs. The second limitation is there's no strong preemption, so there is no strong fairness in latency guarantees. It's entirely possible for a goroutine in certain cases to bring the inspire system to slow down in a fault. And finally, the third limitation that I want to touch upon today is the scheduler is not aware of the actual hardware topology, so there's no real guaranteed locality between the data and the Goroutine computation, and with that we have come to an end and thank you for reading. Gopher Artwork credit Maria Letta Ashley Mcnamara
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Generate an NFT Collection in Go
I used the Gophers from here - https://github.com/MariaLetta/free-gophers-pack/ and did give a credit to the author in the video and put a link in the description
migrate
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Using migrations with Golang
Go does not natively support the use of migrations, but we could use the ORM that has this functionality, such as GORM which is the most used by the community, but We can use migrations without using an ORM, for this we will use the golang-migrate package.
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How to use SQLC with Golang
$ curl -L https://github.com/golang-migrate/migrate/releases/download/$version/migrate.$os-$arch.tar.gz | tar xvz
- Looking for recommendations for model/schema/migration management in Golang
- API completa em Golang - Parte 1
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Building RESTful API with Hexagonal Architecture in Go
Golang-migrate is a database migration tool designed for Go applications. It helps manage and apply changes to the database schema as the application grows, ensuring that the code and database structure stay in sync.
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Python: Just Write SQL
First of all, thank you for SQLAlchemy! If I ever had to make a final choice in how I would interact with a database for a very large project that involves a considerable dev team, I would always bet on SQLAlchemy. Not that I would necessarily like all aspects of it, but when it comes to Python and SQL - “Nobody ever got fired for picking SQLAlchemy.”.
With that out of the way, despite ORMs doing much more than "just writing SQL", it is exactly on that point that I flinch: Most devs should be exposed to SQL. And if your project allows you to build around simple enough abstractions so that you aren't reinventing the wheel, you should definitely be writing SQL. Especially if you don't know SQL yet - which is the growing case of new devs coming into the job market.
You can achieve a lot with SQlAlchemy Core, a tool that I absolutely recommend, but my post is just a simple alternative to get developers to think about their approach. If that results in some devs reconsidering using "full fat" SQLAlchemy and to try SQLAlchemy Core, that's a win for me!
Your gist tries to highlight the difficulty of doing certain things without an ORM. Migrations (as just 1 example) doesn't need to be hard, simple tools like flyway, or migrate (https://github.com/golang-migrate/migrate) achieve a similar result (while also keeping you on the path of writing SQL!). Deep and complex relationships between objects also don't need to be hard - typically people approach this subject with a requirement to be very flexible in the way they want to build queries and objects, but that to me in a sign that maybe they should reconsider their business logic AND reconsider that, just maybe, their project doesn't require all that flexibility, it is fairly straightforward to extend objects and introduce some more complex representations as and when it is needed - will all of this make me write code faster? Absolutely not. That is why you have spent so much time perfecting SQLAlchemy, but then again, I am not advocating for devs to go and replace their usage of ORMs, just presenting an alternative that may or may not fit their needs for a new project + give devs the chance to learn something that the ORM might have taken away.
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best practices for testing of stored procedure calls?
Doing this now with a mysql db for my use case. Using sp to take a large chunk of data migration load off my data layer code. I am using migrate (go library) for migrations and hooked it up with a bunch of test suites for all SP and Triggers it creates. I test it against a testDB maintained as part of my CI/CD. Haven’t had an issue with production yet. It does however require quite a bit of initial setup.
- Database migration tool
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REST API with Go, Chi, MySQL and sqlx
Before we can start using MySQL we need to create a table to store our data. I will be using excellent migrate database migrations tool, it can also be imported as a libraray.
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Authentication system using Golang and Sveltekit - User registration
We need a database table to store our application's users' data. To generate and migrate a schema, we'll use golang migrate. Kindly follow these instructions to install it on your Operating system. To create a pair of migration files (up and down) for our user table, issue the following command in your terminal and at the root of your project:
What are some alternatives?
gokoban - 3D Puzzle Game written in Go
goose
purplecrayon - An SVG library for GoLang
goose - A database migration tool. Supports SQL migrations and Go functions.
social-icons - Collection of SVG & PNG social media icons. Embeddable Social Icons, Use directly on your websites.
pgx - PostgreSQL driver and toolkit for Go
vector-search-class-notes - Class notes for the course "Long Term Memory in AI - Vector Search and Databases" COS 597A @ Princeton Fall 2023
tern - The SQL Fan's Migrator
indigo - Go source code for Bluesky's atproto services.
gormigrate - Minimalistic database migration helper for Gorm ORM
pure - a blog based on github discussion
sqlx - general purpose extensions to golang's database/sql