Book Image

Go Programming Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Aaron Torres
Book Image

Go Programming Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Aaron Torres

Overview of this book

Go (or Golang) is a statically typed programming language developed at Google. Known for its vast standard library, it also provides features such as garbage collection, type safety, dynamic-typing capabilities, and additional built-in types. This book will serve as a reference while implementing Go features to build your own applications. This Go cookbook helps you put into practice the advanced concepts and libraries that Golang offers. The recipes in the book follow best practices such as documentation, testing, and vendoring with Go modules, as well as performing clean abstractions using interfaces. You'll learn how code works and the common pitfalls to watch out for. The book covers basic type and error handling, and then moves on to explore applications, such as websites, command-line tools, and filesystems, that interact with users. You'll even get to grips with parallelism, distributed systems, and performance tuning. By the end of the book, you'll be able to use open source code and concepts in Go programming to build enterprise-class applications without any hassle.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Using atomic operations and mutex

In a language such as Go, where you can build in asynchronous operations and parallelism, it becomes important to consider things such as thread safety. For example, it is dangerous to access a map from multiple Goroutines simultaneously. Go provides a number of helpers in the sync and sync/atomic packages to make sure that certain events occur only once, or that Goroutines can serialize on an operation.

This recipe will demonstrate the use of these packages to safely modify a map with various Goroutines and to keep a global ordinal value that can be safely accessed by numerous Goroutines. It will also showcase the Once.Do method, which can be used to ensure that something is only done by a Go application once, such as reading a configuration file or initializing a variable.

How to do it...

These steps cover writing and running your application:

  1. From your Terminal or console application,createa new directory...