versioninfo
godotenv
versioninfo | godotenv | |
---|---|---|
6 | 17 | |
236 | 7,660 | |
- | - | |
3.7 | 3.2 | |
10 months ago | 3 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.
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.
versioninfo
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Libraries you use most of your projects?
Oh, also https://github.com/carlmjohnson/versioninfo . Always need that.
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FreePad | A free self-hosted pad written in go
Don’t. It’s obsolete. Just use debug.ReadBuildInfo()
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Makefile and Dockerfile best practices
That’s obsolete. See https://github.com/carlmjohnson/versioninfo. Even if it weren’t, Make is an inappropriate tool. Because it is based on file modtimes, it can’t react to git hash changes. You just have rerun the steps every time, at which point Bash is a less awful language.
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How to embed version when `go install`-ing (since you cannot use go:generate or ldflags -X)
Go 1.18 updates the debug info to also include the git status of the build. See https://github.com/carlmjohnson/versioninfo
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Go 1.18 - debug/info - why not include the current git tag?
I use this trick in my versioninfo package. Obviously, it can't give you other tags, but most of the time the tag you want to know about is v1.2.3 anyway, and since tags are mutable but the Go sum DB is immutable, this is safer than just saying what tag was on disk at build time.
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Getting excited for Go 1.18's lesser known features
I subscribed to GH activity for the correspondence friendliness-enhancing library by the author:
https://github.com/carlmjohnson/versioninfo/
The primary motivation curiousity to learn if this becomes "the [best/default] way" folks reach for when leveraging BuildInfo to deliver explicit binary versioning.
godotenv
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Autenticação com Golang e AWS Cognito
Primeiro vamos carregar nossas envs com o pacote godotenv, depois iniciamos nosso cognito client, passando o COGNITO_CLIENT_ID, que pegamos anteriormente, depois iniciamos o gin e criamos um server, isso é o suficiente.
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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
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Reading Environment Variable from a .env file on a Server
In his code it is done using https://github.com/joho/godotenv
- Libraries you use most of your projects?
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Restful API with Golang practical approach
envconfig: Library for managing configuration data from environment variables (https://github.com/joho/godotenv)
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Is this clear why its useful?
There is already a more complete, safer and neatly written godotenv alternative. It may be taken as an educational inspiration for next attempts.
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I need some help setting up variables for the sake of my sanity
Chances are you are going to set them in you real server, and most likely you will going to use Linux for that. So for local development create a .env file with those in there. And at the start of you program, load them. You can use https://github.com/joho/godotenv Don’t share that file of course, and don’t put it in git.
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How can I "source" a bash script?
Maybe https://github.com/joho/godotenv can help
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passwords, secrets, keys - best practice
joho/godotenv
- I'm looking for a good alternativ to Viper
What are some alternatives?
assert - A simple assertion library using Go generics
viper - Go configuration with fangs
FreePad - FreePad is a simple Go project to help you juggle temporary notes that you might wanna pass from one device to another, or from a person to another with memorable and easy to communicate online "Pads".
gotenv - Load environment variables from `.env` or `io.Reader` in Go.
flagx - Extensions to the Go flag package
structs - Golang struct operations.
xferspdy - Xferspdy provides binary diff and patch library in golang. [Mentioned in Awesome Go, https://github.com/avelino/awesome-go]
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder
delve - Delve is a debugger for the Go programming language.
util - A collection of useful utility functions
excelize - Go language library for reading and writing Microsoft Excel™ (XLAM / XLSM / XLSX / XLTM / XLTX) spreadsheets
xlsx - Go library for reading and writing XLSX files.