Book Image

Go Cookbook

By : Aaron Torres
Book Image

Go Cookbook

By: Aaron Torres

Overview of this book

Go (a.k.a. Golang) is a statically-typed programming language first developed at Google. It is derived from C with additional features such as garbage collection, type safety, dynamic-typing capabilities, additional built-in types, and a large standard library. This book takes off where basic tutorials on the language leave off. You can immediately put into practice some of the more advanced concepts and libraries offered by the language while avoiding some of the common mistakes for new Go developers. The book covers basic type and error handling. It explores applications that interact with users, such as websites, command-line tools, or via the file system. It demonstrates how to handle advanced topics such as parallelism, distributed systems, and performance tuning. Lastly, it finishes with reactive and serverless programming in Go.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Catching and handling signals

Signals are a useful way for the user or the OS to kill your running application. Sometimes, it makes sense to handle these signals in a more graceful way than the default behavior. Go provides a mechanism to catch and handle signals. In this recipe, we'll explore the handling of signals through the use of a signal handling the Go routine.

Getting ready

Refer to the Getting ready section's steps in the Using command-line flags recipe.

How to do it...

These steps cover writing and running your application:

  1. From your terminal/console...