CORS
go-kit
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CORS
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CORS Nightmare, please HELP
And, you could find some cors knowledge on https://github.com/rs/cors
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Handling CORS in Nginx as a reverse proxy
We have REST services that need to be used with the browser, We configured these HTTP Golang services to handle CORS using cors package.
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Confusion around setting headers and statusOK
Give it a try to this library https://github.com/rs/cors and put the middleware in your router.
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help about CORS
I'm learning Go, so I made a pretty simple rest api, now I want to use it in a React frontent, I decided to use the github.com/rs/cors library, using the default configuration of this library everything works fine, but when I add "AllowedOrigins":
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[Go][Windows] Try WebView2 and CORS
rs/cors - GitHub
- No header is working in my rest api.What could be the fix.Heres the github link.
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Best CORS library for small web apps (rs/cors vs go-chi/cors)
Now, for CORS I am currently using the rs/cors package, but noticed that it has the whole gin-gonic/gin library as a dependency. I found gin-chi/cors which has no dependency at all but seems to do the same thing.
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Why to use the net http package for building web app
The only thing missing is a more dynamic router, and this is where we have the usefulness of being able to pick a small, focused library for it (e.g. gorilla/mux). The base package is also highly interoperable with middleware (e.g. rs/cors for managing CORS headers), so in most cases it is easier to just pick out the features you want and compose them on top of net/http (or write them yourself), rather than find a framework that does it all.
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Golang with React Admin Issue
Hello, I am new to go and I have created a mux server using gorm. I am using the cors go library to enable cors. I have added a vue/nuxt frontend and all my routes are working fine. However, I have been trying to integrate react-admin and I am getting cors issues only on PUT requests. Could someone help me figure out what the issue is. Thanks.
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I had a Go, CORS and Single Page App Ordeal So You Don’t Have To | Integration Junction
It might be a function of the fact that the project had a hand crafted main rather than using the generated one, but when I hit this for adding CORS to a go-swagger project we used a handler generated by rs/cors as middleware - it (and a bunch of other middleware) wrapped the generated server's handler as go-swagger uses one root handler.
go-kit
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PHP to Golang
https://github.com/go-kit/kit
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GoLang — Simplifying Complexity “The Beginning”
. Web backend (with various frameworks available) . Web Assembly (one of them is vugu framework) . Microservices (some frameworks: Go Micro, Go Kit, Gizmo, Kite) . Fragments services (Term mentioned by @jeffotoni in a microservices discussion group) . Lambdas (FaaS example) . Client Server . Terminal applications (using the tview lib) . IoT (some frameworks) . Bots (some here) . Client Applications using Web technology . Desktop using Qt+QML, Native Win Lib (example Qt, Qt widgets, Qml) . Network Applications . Protocol applications . REST Applications . SOAP Applications . GraphQL Applications . RPC Applications . TCP Applications . gRPC Applications . WebSocket Applications . GopherJS (compiles Go to JavaScript)
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go-kit VS Don - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 15 Mar 2023
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Microservices: GoLang in a Spring Cloud architecture
To implement service discovery in our GoLang microservice we will use GoKit, a toolkit for microservices that provides support to auth, log, service discovery, tracing and more. For this starter code the mod already installed, you can skip this step
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What's the best dependency injection framework / methodology for Golang for the enterprise?
My company uses go-kit
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Best up-to-date Golang book
For reference my company Go projects are built with (go-kit)[https://gokit.io/] design patterns.
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FRAMEWORKS IN GOLANG.
5. kit. The kit framework is a programming toolkit for building robust, reliable, and maintainable microservices in Golang. It is a collection of packages and best practices that offer businesses of all sizes a thorough, reliable, and trustworthy way to create microservices. Go is a fantastic general-purpose language, but microservices need some specialized assistance. As a result, the kit framework offers infrastructure integration, system observability, and Remote Procedure Call (RPC) safety. Golang is a first-class language for creating microservices in any organization thanks to its composition of numerous closely related packages that together form an opinionated framework for building substantial Service-Oriented Architectures (SOAs).It was created with interoperability in mind, and developers are free to select the platforms, databases, components, and architectural styles that best suit their needs. The disadvantage of using go-kit is that it has a high overhead for adding API to the service because of how heavily it relies on interfaces. Documentation Link: https://github.com/go-kit/kit
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GitHub - gookit/ini: 📝 Go INI config management. support multi file load, data override merge. parse ENV variable, parse variable reference. Dotenv file parse and loader.
At first I was confused but this GitHub user/org is completely different from the massively popular go-kit/kit https://github.com/go-kit/kit
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Go Micro: a standard library for distributed systems development
https://github.com/go-kit/kit#related-projects
go-micro seems like it does a bit too much, like service discovery and balancing within the framework when that's likely better handled by an Envoy/Istio.
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Real World Micro Services
I think the more interesting aspect of this is the framework being used: https://github.com/micro/micro
I haven't dug into it at all yet, but at a glance it looks like it's aiming to do something similar to what Go kit (https://gokit.io/) or Finagle (https://twitter.github.io/finagle/) does, where it gives you a nice abstraction for defining your "service" and then handles all the supplementary aspects (service discovery, serialization, retry/circuit breaker logic, rate limiting, hooks for logging, tracing, and metrics, etc) so you don't have to build those from scratch every time.
I don't know if any of those other frameworks could really be considered very "successful" outside the original organizations they were built for (it seems like the industry has bet more on service meshes and API gateway products), but I'd probably be more inclined to start with one of them than making a new framework.
What are some alternatives?
fasthttprouter - A high performance fasthttp request router that scales well
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.
oapi-codegen - Generate Go client and server boilerplate from OpenAPI 3 specifications
Echo - High performance, minimalist Go web framework
gqlgen - go generate based graphql server library
Fiber - ⚡️ Express inspired web framework written in Go
Revel - A high productivity, full-stack web framework for the Go language.
kratos - Your ultimate Go microservices framework for the cloud-native era.
GoSwagger - Swagger 2.0 implementation for go
Electrum JSON RPC Client - Golang JSON RPC client to talk with Electrum server
go-micro - A Go microservices framework