suture
go-formatter
suture | go-formatter | |
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14 | 108 | |
1,272 | 121,148 | |
- | - | |
5.7 | 9.1 | |
about 2 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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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.
suture
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Could I get a code review?
This one is highly specialized, but I'm a huge fan of Suture for managing long lived goroutines.
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[gopulse/pulse] the Golang framework designed to ensure your web services stay alive.
In English, your phrasing doesn't come off as a play on words/a reference to the name, so much as it describes a feature of the library. The expectation is, with the description you've given it, the library would handle some form of resilience in service management. I half expected the library to be similar to Suture.
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Ergo: Erlang/OTP Implemented in Golang
It does not give you a way to reliably track arbitrary goroutines that "this" goroutine (for whatever that may be) wants to track, the way an Erlang process can just "link" to anything it is capable of naming the PID for.
However, you can construct a reliable mechanism where one goroutine can start another and know whether or not the one it started has failed by using the available primitives, as I did in https://github.com/thejerf/suture . It's an easier problem since there's no cluster and no network that can get in the way. I've also done the exercise for the network case: https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/thejerf/reign#Address.OnCloseN... but that only functions within the network defined by that library because, again, it just isn't arbitrarily possible.
(I suppose it's relevant to some of my other comments to point out that I've also implemented basically Erlang-style concurrency in Go, with network, but as a relatively idiomatic translation rather than a blind one.)
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Is there an equivalent to Elixir / GenServer in Go? Trying to create the same request / response pattern with better performance but not sure where to start.
If you also want Supervisor-like behavior, take a look at suture.
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Start an already running service: no error, error, or panic?
For context, I've been working with similar interfaces for many years through suture.
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Erlang vs Golang
I wrote suture for idiomatically-ported supervisor trees (that is, the ways they differ are deliberately chosen, not accidents), and reign for Go-native cluster-like support. I use suture in almost everything I write. Reign is used on production services but I don't generally use it because I think modern stacks have better options with modern message busses, but it can be useful for porting.
- Erlang-ish supervisor trees for Go
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How “let it fail” leads to simpler code
I think the distinction between expected and unexpected errors can easily fall through the cracks and writing code in a way that an unexpected error doesn’t break everything is quite powerful.
Golang makes it easy to ignore errors that can be ignored and defer/recover provide a way to implement a way to “let it fail”
There’s even an implementation of supervisor trees for Go [0] :)
[0] https://github.com/thejerf/suture
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Golang vs Elixir protoactor supervision
(If you'd like something lighter weight, suture is a supervisor library without a whole lot of other stuff. If you want that other stuff, by all means, go to town.)
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The method to manage multiple services in a process.
This is the primary reason almost every program I write ends up using suture. The restarting is nice when it works, but Go code is often reasonably robust. (Not 100%, but reasonably.) But it's a nice organization principle.
go-formatter
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Why Go is great choice for Software engineering.
A curated list of awesome Go frameworks, libraries and software - Awesome Go / Golang (awesome-go.com)
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Golang Web: GET Method
Awesome Go projects and frmaeworks
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How I do technology watch
Go: https://github.com/avelino/awesome-go
- Go
- Essential Command Line Tools for Developers
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I created a search engine that helps you compare and determine quality, trends, and popularity in GO packages
✨ Includes all packages from Awesome Go ✨ (some entries did not exist anymore)
- A curated list of Go frameworks, libraries and software
- Awesome Go Frameworks, Libraries and Software
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Golang: Channels
Awesome Go projects and frmaeworks
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Goravel, Web framework inspired from Laravel in Golang
AFAIK, no. There are some helper frameworks [1], but none of them is dominant. Two possible reasons: it's quite easy to write a (web) service with the library functions (it even includes a gzip stream), and it's practically impossible to write an ORM framework like you have in Java and Python, so the Go frameworks I've seen are basically a bunch of helper functions.
[1] https://github.com/avelino/awesome-go#web-frameworks
What are some alternatives?
rustig - A tool to detect code paths leading to Rust's panic handler
gobeam/Stringy - Convert string to camel case, snake case, kebab case / slugify, custom delimiter, pad string, tease string and many other functionalities with help of by Stringy package.
protoactor-go - Proto Actor - Ultra fast distributed actors for Go, C# and Java/Kotlin
go-shortid - Super short, fully unique, non-sequential and URL friendly Ids
bastion - Highly-available Distributed Fault-tolerant Runtime
numa - NUMA is a utility library, which is written in go. It help us to write some NUMA-AWARED code.
Rust-for-Linux - Adding support for the Rust language to the Linux kernel.
stateless - Go library for creating finite state machines
reign - Rewrite Erlang In Go Nicely - a library for mimicking Erlang's mailboxes and clustering
morse - Morse Code Library in Go
ergo - An actor-based Framework with network transparency for creating event-driven architecture in Golang. Inspired by Erlang. Zero dependencies.
bexp - Go implementation of Brace Expansion mechanism to generate arbitrary strings.