watermill
go-kit
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watermill | go-kit | |
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23 | 32 | |
6,729 | 26,102 | |
2.2% | 0.5% | |
6.5 | 3.4 | |
5 days ago | 12 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.
watermill
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Microservices communication
I’ve successfully worked on projects using an asynchronous event-driven way of connecting services. I really like the decoupling of business logic and the events triggering it. I highly recommend https://github.com/ThreeDotsLabs/watermill to be more flexible when it comes to choosing the actual technology driving the async patter. It might be NATS today but requirements might change and you need to change. Watermill prepares you for this.
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Public chatroom websocket project in Go
Highly recommend https://watermill.io lib for building async apps (using among others pub/sub patterns). It greatly decouples your code from the underlying technology and gives you the freedom to choose depending on the environment (e.g dev, prod). For dev or small scale purposes, it supports pub/sub purely based on go channels.
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How did you solve the problem of transactions between different databases and services?
Look at this library: https://github.com/ThreeDotsLabs/watermill
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Examples of using task scheduler with Go?
Watermill is a good pubsub abstraction. You can start with native go channels and grow into a cloud pubsub or Kafka/Pulsar if you need to.
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Small EDA/Micro service Project
These conditions have led me to discover two packages watermill.io and go-kit. Both of these seem to do what I want and I am thinking of implementing the project using watermill and go Chanels and deploying to a server or some sort.
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Event Observer Pattern in Go
github.com/ThreeDotsLabs/watermill package provides a framework for building event-driven applications. It allows easy communication between independent components by decoupling the sender and the receiver.
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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
- How to handle events: an interactive example of consumer groups
- I’m looking for a suggestion for a queuing library
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Looking for a mature distributed task queuer/scheduler in go
Checkout https://watermill.io/
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?
eventhorizon - Event Sourcing for Go!
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.
Benthos - Fancy stream processing made operationally mundane
Echo - High performance, minimalist Go web framework
pulse - ☁EventBus on Portable Pub/Sub Components☄
Fiber - ⚡️ Express inspired web framework written in Go
wild-workouts-go-ddd-example - Go DDD example application. Complete project to show how to apply DDD, Clean Architecture, and CQRS by practical refactoring.
kratos - Your ultimate Go microservices framework for the cloud-native era.
go-rabbitmq - A wrapper of streadway/amqp that provides reconnection logic and sane defaults
GoSwagger - Swagger 2.0 implementation for go
NATS - Golang client for NATS, the cloud native messaging system.
go-micro - A Go microservices framework