waggy
mux
waggy | mux | |
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8 | 86 | |
38 | 17,948 | |
- | - | |
3.0 | 2.6 | |
about 1 year ago | over 1 year ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
waggy
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what's your recommended router? chi, mux, something else?
Chi for work, my own router for personal projects
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Waggy hits v0.8.0 with support for custom middleware, listening and serving on a specific host and port address, and more!!
And in that time, I’ve gotten the router I’ve been working on, Waggy, up to a new version of v0.8.0!! Along with some minor bug fixes, some refactoring, and restructuring changes, there is now full support for custom middleware and listening and serving on a specific host:port address.
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What mux/router to use now a days?
For work, we’ve switched to Chi. For personal projects, I use a router I’ve been built and have been working on myself
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Gorilla Web Toolkit is now in archive only mode
I have a library that I’ve been working on for a different environment (WASM specifically), but I can be used as a regular HTTP router and provides access to URL path params. Check it out here
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Waggy v0.3 Released!!
Waggy v0.3 is out now!! Along with some minor bug fixes, v0.3 comes with two major improvements, being the ability to configure loggers for WaggyRouters and WaggyHandlers alike, as well as a convenience wrapper for serving files as responses. One other big unplanned, but welcome improvement is the ability to use Waggy in conjunction with Fermyon’s Spin Go SDK for writing WAGI microservices that can also make outgoing HTTP calls.
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Waggy v2 Release
Waggy has released v2!!
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The best Go framework: no framework? (Three Dots Tech)
With the rising popularity of WASM, I’d probably use something like wazero coupled with the library I just wrote and released, waggy for writing the individual handlers for each route, though.
- Waggy: A dead simple library for writing WAGI API Handlers in Go
mux
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From Homemade HTTP Router to New ServeMux
This is not a disproval, but gorilla/mux has comparatively poor benchmark results among popular (many stars) third-party HTTP routers. , used by many users.
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How AuDHD traits have helped me get good at devrel
This attention to detail also can mean that for key abstractions in a tool or framework, what concretely goes on doesn't go unexplained. For example, when I was learning Go for web development, my first stumbling block was understanding how interfaces worked, particularly http.Handler, which is key to doing web development with Go's powerful net/http package and the fits-like-a-glove package built on top of it, the Gorilla Mux router. My way of finding out how that worked, and seeing the elegance of that interface, was pretty unorthodox - I figured out how Handlers worked by looking directly at Go's source code (which also is a demonstration of Go's readability, if you're interested in joining the Gophers!). And coming out of that was my very first tech talk at in 2015, on learning Gorilla from its Node.js counterpart, Express.js!
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Microservices Authentication and Authorization Using API Gateway
In this ApiGateway implementation, we've employed the Gorilla Mux router for enhanced route handling. Let's break down the key components:
- The Gorilla web toolkit project is being revived, all repos are unarchived now
- The Gorilla web toolkit project is being revived, all repos are out of archive mode.
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How to build an API using Go
Now that we have set up the Go environment, we can start building our API. The first step is to choose a framework. There are several popular frameworks for building APIs in Go, such as Gorilla mux, Echo, and Gin. For this article, we'll use Gorilla mux.
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go-mir - a toolkit to develop RESTful API backend service like develop service of gRPC
Mir is a toolkit to develop RESTful API backend service like develop service of gRPC. It adapt some HTTP framework sush as Gin, Chi, Hertz, Echo, Iris, Fiber, Macaron, Mux, httprouter。
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I've just started learning Golang, and I'm struggling to choose a framework.
My personal favorite tools: - https://github.com/go-kit/ for building services (although it's not necessary a great tool for prototyping) - https://github.com/gorilla/mux router (although it's been recently deprecated, so I'm looking for a similar, maintained library) - https://entgo.io/ ORM - https://watermill.io/ for messaging
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mux VS Don - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 15 Mar 2023
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Using Redis Caching and the Redis CLI to Improve API Performance
We will be using Gorilla Mux to create the APIs locally. Gorilla Mux implements a request router and dispatcher to match the incoming requests.
What are some alternatives?
gorilla-mux - A fork of gorilla/mux, the powerful HTTP router and URL matcher for building Go web servers with 🦍
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.
httprouter - A high performance HTTP request router that scales well
Fiber - ⚡️ Express inspired web framework written in Go
jwtauth - JWT authentication middleware for Go HTTP services
Echo - High performance, minimalist Go web framework
otelchi - OpenTelemetry instrumentation for go-chi/chi
chi - lightweight, idiomatic and composable router for building Go HTTP services
spin - Spin is the open source developer tool for building and running serverless applications powered by WebAssembly.
restruct - RESTruct is a rest router written in Go to automatically create routes based on your structs.
fasthttp - Fast HTTP package for Go. Tuned for high performance. Zero memory allocations in hot paths. Up to 10x faster than net/http