gobel-client-example
Gobel is a headless cms built with golang. (by bmf-san)
goblin
A golang http router based on trie tree. (by bmf-san)
gobel-client-example | goblin | |
---|---|---|
1 | 8 | |
2 | 76 | |
- | - | |
4.1 | 5.9 | |
28 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.
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.
gobel-client-example
Posts with mentions or reviews of gobel-client-example.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-09-01.
-
Scratch and mange the my blog
A private repository with gobel-client-example as a template to manage user-side source code
goblin
Posts with mentions or reviews of goblin.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2024-04-26.
-
From Homemade HTTP Router to New ServeMux
Up until now, I have been using a homemade HTTP router called goblin in my application, but since the ServeMux functionality has been expanded in Go1.22, I have started using ServeMux. It became so.
- Help wanted about my router allocs
-
Implemented a bench marker to compare Go's HTTP Router
Regarding bmf-san/goblin, we found that it is a proprietary extension of the tri-tree, which is not very optimized and has poor performance compared to other HTTP Routers. (We will do our best to improve it...)
-
Improving the performance of your code starting with Go
When I decided to improve the performance of goblin, a homebrew HTTP Router, I tried to work on performance improvement in Go, so I write about my approach and the efforts I put into practice.
-
Scratch and mange the my blog
goblin
-
Release goblin fully compatible with net/http
goblin is an HTTP router made by golang based on the trie tree.
-
Summary of "Introduction to Golang HTTP router made with net/http"
From the above code, if you read the net / http code with the following points in mind, you can see what to implement. - Where and how the multiplexer registers handlers, and what are the specifications for matching URLs and patterns? - How to create a handler (whether there is a variation of handler creation, what interface should be satisfied) Details [bmf-tech.com-Chapter 3 HTTP Server Code Reading] (https://bmf-tech.com/posts/net%EF%BC%8Fhttp%E3%81%A7%E3%81%A4 % E3% 81% 8F% E3% 82% 8BHTTP% E3% 83% AB% E3% 83% BC% E3% 82% BF% E3% 83% BC% E8% 87% AA% E4% BD% 9C% E5 % 85% A5% E9% 96% 80 #% E7% AC% AC3% E7% AB% A0HTTP% E3% 82% B5% E3% 83% BC% E3% 83% 90% E3% 83% BC% E3% 81% AE% E3% 82% B3% E3% 83% BC% E3% 83% 89% E3% 83% AA% E3% 83% BC% E3% 83% 87% E3% 82% A3% E3% 83% B3% E3% 82% B0), so please refer to it if you have time. # Implementation As I introduced at the beginning, the HTTP router implemented this time is in the following repository. [bmf-san/introduction-to-golang-http-router-made-with-net-http] (https://github.com/bmf-san/introduction-to-golang-http-router-made-with- net-http /) This time we will implement a simple HTTP router that "supports method-based routing". * Since it is a summary version, detailed explanation of the code is omitted. Method-based routing means that you can register URLs by HTTP method. In the function of Go standard package only, if you want to route by method, you need to implement conditional branching in the handler. `` `go // ex. func indexHandler (w http.ResponseWriter, r * http.Request) { switch r.Method { case http.MethodGet: // do something ... case http.MethodPost: // do something ... ... default: default: `` ``` This time, we will implement it only with the goal of eliminating this trouble. In order to achieve method-based routing, we will adopt a tri-tree-based data structure. Since it is a simple function, a simpler data structure (such as making it possible to use the standard multiplexer function for each method) is fine, but we will adopt it in anticipation of various implementations later. (To be honest, I just simplified the implementation of [bmf-san / goblin] (https://github.com/bmf-san/goblin).) The general things to do in implementing an HTTP router are as follows. - Process to add URL and handler mapping to data structure - https://github.com/bmf-san/introduction-to-golang-http-router-made-with-net-http/blob/main/trie.go#L51 - Process to search for matching data from the mapped data structure (≈ tri-tree-based data structure) - https://github.com/bmf-san/introduction-to-golang-http-router-made-with-net-http/blob/main/trie.go#L93 --Implementation of DSL for registering mapping - Around here https://github.com/bmf-san/introduction-to-golang-http-router-made-with-net-http/blob/main/router.go#L47 - Implementation of function as a multiplexer (≈ implementation of ServeHTTP) - https://github.com/bmf-san/introduction-to-golang-http-router-made-with-net-http/blob/main/router.go#L54 The first thing you want to do to implement is to implement the data structure. ! [tree_for_implementation] (https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/13291041/138551924-ca2e28f5-a0c1-4ae4-ac9f-76d6ee1c46d9.png) It is easier to work if you use the debug function of the editor (using delve in vscode) or write test code to check if it is implemented well. For implementation details, see [bmf-tech.com-Chapter 4 HTTP Router Implementation] (https://bmf-tech.com/posts/net%EF%BC%8Fhttp%E3%81%A7%E3%81] % A4% E3% 81% 8F% E3% 82% 8BHTTP% E3% 83% AB% E3% 83% BC% E3% 82% BF% E3% 83% BC% E8% 87% AA% E4% BD% 9C % E5% 85% A5% E9% 96% 80 #% E7% AC% AC4% E7% AB% A0HTTP% E3% 83% AB% E3% 83% BC% E3% 82% BF% E3% 83% BC% See E3% 81% AE% E5% AE% 9F% E8% A3% 85). # Summary HTTP routers are almost indispensable for creating web applications, and aren't they very much taken care of? My motivation was that I wanted to make something that I used as a matter of course and use it myself. There are already a lot of great HTTP routers out there, so I think one of the real thrills is that it's worth researching. This time I implemented it in Go, but if I understand the mechanism, I think that it can be implemented in languages other than Go. In Go, the interface is provided in a form that makes it easy to extend the function of the standard package, so I felt that it was relatively easy to make by myself. If you are interested in this article, I would be grateful if you could take a look at [bmf-san/goblin] (https://github.com/bmf-san/goblin). Feel free to send an Issue or Pull Request. :D
-
Introduction to Golang HTTP router made with net/http
The author has released an HTTP router package called bmf-san/goblin.