handlers
Buffalo
handlers | Buffalo | |
---|---|---|
4 | 52 | |
1,509 | 8,032 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | 5 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | 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.
handlers
-
Go Gin vs Echo Thoughts/ Opinions
When you use a router that supports http.Handler you don't have to worry about maintaining special middleware for that library. There are so many well maintained middleware libraries for the http.Handler like https://github.com/gorilla/handlers
-
Noob here. Need recommendation for best REST API framework.
To add to this, gorilla also offers some middleware. And its super easy to import your own and wrap it.
-
Go is not an easy language
Study the generic reader/writer implementations in the io module. (On my system, those sources are in /usr/lib/go/src/io.) The io.Reader and io.Writer interfaces are very simple, but very powerful because of how they allow composition. A shell pipeline like `cat somefile.dat | base64 -d | gzip -d | jq .` can be quite directly translated into chained io.Readers and io.Writers.
Another example of this is how HTTP middlewares chain together, see for example all the middlewares in https://github.com/gorilla/handlers. All of these exhibit one particular quality of idiomatic Go code: a preference for composition over inheritance.
Another quality of idiomatic Go code is that concurrent algorithms prefer channels over locking mechanisms (unless the performance penalty of using channels is too severe). I don't have immediate examples coming to mind on this one though, since the use of channels and mutexes tends to be quite intertwined with the algorithm in question.
-
Securing a Go-Backed Scrappy Twitter API with Magic
gorilla/handlers
Buffalo
-
My Love Letter to Rails (and Ruby) – Or, Why RoR Isn't Dead Yet
You should probably stop because this is not a Go-way. And you wan't find anything with "batteries" other than https://github.com/gobuffalo/buffalo and https://github.com/beego/beego
Haven't see anyone actually using them in production though.
- A Go web development eco-system, designed to make your life easier
-
Goravel, Web framework inspired from Laravel in Golang
No default. There is Buffalo which is modeled after Rails, haven't used it in anger though.
https://gobuffalo.io
- What is the current ideal choice for server-side rendered web frameworks?
- Ask HN: Why is web development such a daunting task?
-
Looking to learn more of Go, does it require third party libraries like Spring/ASP.NET, etc?
In general, no. But if you do seek for one, I think https://gobuffalo.io is very good.
-
Buffalo VS Don - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 15 Mar 2023
-
Is there a framework out for go that rivals Laravel as far as out of the box features and tools?
There is https://gobuffalo.io/ and there is https://github.com/livebud/bud. Both are interesting approaches, but sadly, without real business interest from the community. See, 90% of what makes Laravel Laravel (or Rails Rails) is business adoption. And, as you will sadly find out, the business adoption for traditional Web applications is exactly zero. If you don't want to make the same mistake as I did, and spend 3 years of your life searching for it, do as the others advised - just use the tools and frameworks that have already been built to solve the problem you need.
-
Does Golang has any framework like Springboot?
If you like Ruby on Rails, there is Buffalo.
-
Building web-based SaaS with Go as a solo entrepreneur. What should I be aware of?
Buffalo is currently built on Gorilla which complicates building a business on it right now as Gorilla has shifted to public archive since it has no maintainer. https://github.com/gobuffalo/buffalo/issues/2360
What are some alternatives?
go-patterns - Curated list of Go design patterns, recipes and idioms
Gin - Gin is a HTTP web framework written in Go (Golang). It features a Martini-like API with much better performance -- up to 40 times faster. If you need smashing performance, get yourself some Gin.
chi - lightweight, idiomatic and composable router for building Go HTTP services
Beego - beego is an open-source, high-performance web framework for the Go programming language.
schema - Package gorilla/schema fills a struct with form values.
Echo - High performance, minimalist Go web framework
scrappy-twitter-api-server - Scrappy Twitter API is a Go-backend project that is secured by the Magic SDK. This Go server allows all users to READ tweets. However, to POST or DELETE tweets an access token is required. This access token can be generated via https://scrappy-twitter-api-client-xi.vercel.app/.
Revel - A high productivity, full-stack web framework for the Go language.
sessions - Package gorilla/sessions provides cookie and filesystem sessions and infrastructure for custom session backends.
Fiber - ⚡️ Express inspired web framework written in Go
ent - An entity framework for Go
Iris - The fastest HTTP/2 Go Web Framework. New, modern and easy to learn. Fast development with Code you control. Unbeatable cost-performance ratio :rocket: