sessions
sqlc
sessions | sqlc | |
---|---|---|
6 | 170 | |
2,466 | 11,012 | |
- | 3.9% | |
1.9 | 9.6 | |
over 1 year ago | 5 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
sessions
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Authentication system using Golang and Sveltekit - Login and Logout
Although there are pretty good session managers in the Go ecosystem such as alexedwards/scs, golangcollege/session and gorilla/sessions, we won't use any but using this great guide, we'll write our own. This is to keep our project's dependence on external packages at the barest minimum.
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Standard library, Fiber, Iris, Gin, ... where does one even begin with writing production web apps in Go?
Templates: Go's template/html will work perfectly fine for you. Sessions: https://github.com/gorilla/sessions
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Simple web app, how to do auth?
gorilla/sessions to manage user sessions.
- Confused about Github Auth in golang
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How do you pass a value to a redirect?
If you want to persist some form of context between requests you can store it in session data via a cookie that can be pulled/leveraged in the second handler, ex: https://github.com/gorilla/sessions. If you try to implement it yourself consider security aspects like that a user could modify if unsigned, etc. You can also store data server side and just issue a token in a cookie corresponding to a server side session. Hope that helps.
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Golang API Authentication using JWT Tokens
Good ol’ sessions. An example being https://github.com/gorilla/sessions
sqlc
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Show HN: Riza – Safely run untrusted code from your app
Hi HN, I’m Kyle and together with Andrew (https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=stanleydrew) we’ve been working on Riza (https://riza.io), a project to make WASM sandboxing more approachable. We’re excited to share a developer preview of our code interpreter API with HN.
There’s a bit of a backstory here. A few months ago, an old coworker reached out asking how to execute untrusted code generated by an LLM. Based on our experience building a plugin system for sqlc (https://sqlc.dev), we thought a sandboxed WASM runtime would be a good fit. A bit of hacking later, we got everything wired up to solve his issue. Now the API is ready for other developers to try out.
The Riza Code Interpreter API is an HTTP interface to various dynamic language interpreters, each running inside a WASM sandbox without access to the outside world (for now). We modeled the API to align with a POSIX shell-style interface.
We made a playground so you can try it out without signing up: https://riza.io
The API documentation lives here: https://docs.riza.io
There are many limitations at the moment, but we expect to rapidly expand capabilities so that programs can e.g. access the network and filesystem. Our roadmap has more details: https://docs.riza.io/reference/roadmap
If you need to execute LLM-generated code we’d love to have you try the API and let us know if you run into any issues. You can email us directly at [email protected].
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Give Up Sooner
"Is there a way to get sqlc to use pointers for nullable columns instead of the sql.Null types?"
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Show HN: Sqlbind a Python library to compose raw SQL
I came across this yesterday for golang: https://sqlc.dev which is somewhat like what you want, maybe.
Not sure it allows you to parameterize table names but the basic idea is codegen from sql queries so you are working with go code (autocompletion etc).
- API completa em Golang - Parte 7
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ORMs are nice but they are the wrong abstraction
Agreed, but tools like https://sqlc.dev, which I mention in the article, are a good trade-off that allows you to have verified, testable, SQL in your code.
- API completa em Golang - Parte 6
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Go ORMs Compared
sqlc is not strictly a conventional ORM. It offers a unique approach by generating Go code from SQL queries. This allows developers to write SQL, which sqlc then converts into type-safe Go code, reducing the boilerplate significantly. It ensures that your queries are syntactically correct and type-safe. sqlc is ideal for those who prefer writing SQL and are looking for an efficient way to integrate it into a Go application.
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Type-safe Data Access in Go using Prisma and sqlc
I was browsing awesome-go for ideas on how to setup my data access layer when I stumbled on sqlc. It seemed like a great option. Code generation is a strategy often used in the Go ecosystem and making my queries safe at compile time was an idea I really liked. Knex was great, but it required of me that I test thoroughly my queries at runtime and that I sanitize my query results to ensure type safety within my application.
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Level UP your RDBMS Productivity in GO
Now, we are going to generate the code. For this purpose, we are going to use sqlc.
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What 3rd-party libraries do you use often/all the time?
https://github.com/sqlc-dev/sqlc — for use with //go:generate
What are some alternatives?
mux - A powerful HTTP router and URL matcher for building Go web servers with 🦍
sqlx - general purpose extensions to golang's database/sql
jeff - 🍍Jeff provides the simplest way to manage web sessions in Go.
GORM - The fantastic ORM library for Golang, aims to be developer friendly
wstest - go websocket client for unit testing of a websocket handler
SQLBoiler - Generate a Go ORM tailored to your database schema.
schema - Package gorilla/schema fills a struct with form values.
ent - An entity framework for Go
handlers - A collection of useful middleware for Go HTTP services & web applications 🛃
jet - Type safe SQL builder with code generation and automatic query result data mapping
authboss - The boss of http auth.
pgx - PostgreSQL driver and toolkit for Go