grpc-go
validator
Our great sponsors
grpc-go | validator | |
---|---|---|
29 | 68 | |
19,836 | 15,503 | |
1.0% | 2.1% | |
9.5 | 7.4 | |
about 10 hours ago | 3 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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.
grpc-go
-
Reverse Engineering Protobuf Definitions from Compiled Binaries
The reflection service is open-sourced (at least for some sdks):
* https://github.com/grpc/grpc-go/blob/master/Documentation/se...
* https://chromium.googlesource.com/external/github.com/grpc/g...
-
gRPC Name Resolution & Load Balancing on Kubernetes: Everything you need to know (and probably a bit more)
We’re hoping to make this rate at least optional via this pull request but as the time of writing this blog, it’s nothing we can do to circle our way around it.
-
Full Stack Forays with Go and gRPC
First, I started with gRPC’s recommended starter repository for learning gRPC, their **helloworld **example, which is a part of the official gRPC repository.
-
Tools besides Go for a newbie
IDE: use whatever make you productive. I personally use vscode. VCS: git, as golang communities use github heavily as base for many libraries. AFAIK Linter: use staticcheck for linting as it looks like mostly used linting tool in go, supported by many also. In Vscode it will be recommended once you install go plugin. Libraries/Framework: actually the standard libraries already included many things you need, decent enough for your day-to-day development cycles(e.g. `net/http`). But here are things for extra: - Struct fields validator: validator - Http server lib: chi router , httprouter , fasthttp (for non standard http implementations, but fast) - Web Framework: echo , gin , fiber , beego , etc - Http client lib: most already covered by stdlib(net/http), so you rarely need extra lib for this, but if you really need some are: resty - CLI: cobra - Config: godotenv , viper - DB Drivers: sqlx , postgre , sqlite , mysql - nosql: redis , mongodb , elasticsearch - ORM: gorm , entgo , sqlc(codegen) - JS Transpiler: gopherjs - GUI: fyne - grpc: grpc - logging: zerolog - test: testify , gomock , dockertest - and many others you can find here
-
Curl 8.0.1 because I jinked it
If you read the first comment, you’ll see the API was documented as being experimental.
https://github.com/grpc/grpc-go/issues/3798#issuecomment-670...
-
When is go not a good choice?
The lack of this analysis still results in bugs and CVEs. See how many races are found and fixed in gRPC releases: https://github.com/grpc/grpc-go/releases (search "race"). It's a shame Google does not publish these as CVEs, because many of them qualify.
-
Rust for backend. Is it recommended?
I like to point people at this release to show that not even Google -- in its own language on its own library for its own RPC protocol -- can write thread-safe Go, so what chance does anyone else have. Maybe we have to stop thinking of Go as a language for mission critical parallel computing and think of it more like a Python 4 made for low-risk prototyping. Mature libraries help for that prototyping, you know how to put them together and get something working, that something just won't be scaleable, efficient, or thread-safe.
-
Partially-Implemented Interfaces in Go
I first learned about this technique when gRPC generated code started using it. See the short readme and the long issue discussion. I think a lot more of the rationale from the discussion should have made it into the readme, since this is the only time most Go developers will ever see this technique used, especially since it can't be retrofitted to existing interfaces without breaking existing implementations.
-
goRPC or gRPC?
I don't have any experience with goRPC (I'm assuming you're referring to https://github.com/valyala/gorpc), but just to note that that repo hasn't been updated in 7 years and has open issues that are that old, too. https://github.com/grpc/grpc-go has 17.5k stars and is actively maintained. That doesn't say anything about their relative performance - goRPC might be faster - but you probably won't have a fun time if you run into issues.
-
Golang is evil on shitty networks
Found the root cause from https://github.com/grpc/grpc-go/commit/383b1143 (original issue: https://github.com/grpc/grpc-go/issues/75):
// Note that ServeHTTP uses Go's HTTP/2 server implementation which is
validator
- API completa em Golang - Parte 7
- API completa em Golang - Parte 3
-
Is there any equivalent to pydantic, serde, etc?
go-playground/validator
- API completa em Golang - Parte 1
-
API validation in Gin: Ensuring Data Integrity in Your API
If you want to know all the available validation in Gin. Then you can look at this package because Gin uses this package under the hood. Package: https://github.com/go-playground/validator Specific-file: https://github.com/go-playground/validator/blob/master/baked_in.go#L73
-
Yet another validator 0.9.5
Now it has most of the Playground validator's common checks and a few own tricks.
-
Openapi server generation
In Go I've found this package - https://github.com/go-playground/validator. It seems popular in the community, but it is tag-based. It looks like if I wanted to use it - I would have to basically duplicate structs.
-
Validator in handler or domain
so I am working on a ecommerce api as a hobby project which is mostly inspired by wtf dial project I like to use validator package to remove boilerplate over my domain package for example take a look https://github.com/mortezadadgar/ecommerce-api/blob/b0bf43d042d62fdca1c2d097ec51b05bc539cef2/domain/users.go#L33 I have to option either add validate.Struct() to my domain which is suggested to avoid by author of wtf peoject or add it to handler which I doubt is a good idea as it's not in business logic of handler and makes unit testing harder
-
Request Validations in Go REST API
I use https://github.com/go-playground/validator, but honestly, I am not a fan. I just haven’t found anything better.
-
Tools besides Go for a newbie
IDE: use whatever make you productive. I personally use vscode. VCS: git, as golang communities use github heavily as base for many libraries. AFAIK Linter: use staticcheck for linting as it looks like mostly used linting tool in go, supported by many also. In Vscode it will be recommended once you install go plugin. Libraries/Framework: actually the standard libraries already included many things you need, decent enough for your day-to-day development cycles(e.g. `net/http`). But here are things for extra: - Struct fields validator: validator - Http server lib: chi router , httprouter , fasthttp (for non standard http implementations, but fast) - Web Framework: echo , gin , fiber , beego , etc - Http client lib: most already covered by stdlib(net/http), so you rarely need extra lib for this, but if you really need some are: resty - CLI: cobra - Config: godotenv , viper - DB Drivers: sqlx , postgre , sqlite , mysql - nosql: redis , mongodb , elasticsearch - ORM: gorm , entgo , sqlc(codegen) - JS Transpiler: gopherjs - GUI: fyne - grpc: grpc - logging: zerolog - test: testify , gomock , dockertest - and many others you can find here
What are some alternatives?
rpcx - Best microservices framework in Go, like alibaba Dubbo, but with more features, Scale easily. Try it. Test it. If you feel it's better, use it! 𝐉𝐚𝐯𝐚有𝐝𝐮𝐛𝐛𝐨, 𝐆𝐨𝐥𝐚𝐧𝐠有𝐫𝐩𝐜𝐱! build for cloud!
ozzo-validation - An idiomatic Go (golang) validation package. Supports configurable and extensible validation rules (validators) using normal language constructs instead of error-prone struct tags.
go-zero - A cloud-native Go microservices framework with cli tool for productivity.
govalidator - [Go] Package of validators and sanitizers for strings, numerics, slices and structs
go-micro - A Go microservices framework
viper - Go configuration with fangs
Echo - High performance, minimalist Go web framework
uuid - Go package for UUIDs based on RFC 4122 and DCE 1.1: Authentication and Security Services.
KrakenD - Ultra performant API Gateway with middlewares. A project hosted at The Linux Foundation
fiber-swagger - fiber middleware to automatically generate RESTful API documentation with Swagger 2.0.
hprose - Hprose is a cross-language RPC. This project is Hprose for Golang.