Book Image

Go Systems Programming

Book Image

Go Systems Programming

Overview of this book

Go is the new systems programming language for Linux and Unix systems. It is also the language in which some of the most prominent cloud-level systems have been written, such as Docker. Where C programmers used to rule, Go programmers are in demand to write highly optimized systems programming code. Created by some of the original designers of C and Unix, Go expands the systems programmers toolkit and adds a mature, clear programming language. Traditional system applications become easier to write since pointers are not relevant and garbage collection has taken away the most problematic area for low-level systems code: memory management. This book opens up the world of high-performance Unix system applications to the beginning Go programmer. It does not get stuck on single systems or even system types, but tries to expand the original teachings from Unix system level programming to all types of servers, the cloud, and the web.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Analysing software

There are times that a program fails for some unknown reason or does not perform well, and you want to find out why without having to rewrite your code and add a plethora of debugging statements. So, this section will talk about strace(1) and dtrace(1) , which allow you to see what is going on behind the scenes when you execute a program on a Unix machine. Although both tools can work with the go run command, you will get less unrelated output if you first create an executable file using go build and use this file. This mainly occurs because go run makes temporary files before actually running your Go code, and you want to debug the actual program, not the compiler used to build the program.

Remember that although dtrace(1) is more powerful than strace(1) and has its own programming language, strace(1) is more versatile for watching the system calls a program...