Book Image

Hands-On Software Architecture with Golang

By : Jyotiswarup Raiturkar
Book Image

Hands-On Software Architecture with Golang

By: Jyotiswarup Raiturkar

Overview of this book

Building software requires careful planning and architectural considerations; Golang was developed with a fresh perspective on building next-generation applications on the cloud with distributed and concurrent computing concerns. Hands-On Software Architecture with Golang starts with a brief introduction to architectural elements, Go, and a case study to demonstrate architectural principles. You'll then move on to look at code-level aspects such as modularity, class design, and constructs specific to Golang and implementation of design patterns. As you make your way through the chapters, you'll explore the core objectives of architecture such as effectively managing complexity, scalability, and reliability of software systems. You'll also work through creating distributed systems and their communication before moving on to modeling and scaling of data. In the concluding chapters, you'll learn to deploy architectures and plan the migration of applications from other languages. By the end of this book, you will have gained insight into various design and architectural patterns, which will enable you to create robust, scalable architecture using Golang.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Packaging Code

When Mihai Budiu interviewed Brian Kernighan in 2000 (http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~mihaib/kernighan-interview/index.html), Brian Kernighan was asked the following question:

"Can you tell us about the worst features of C, from your point of view?"

He responded with the following:

"I think that the real problem with C is that it doesn't give you enough mechanisms for structuring really big programs, for creating firewalls within programs so you can keep the various pieces apart. It's not that you can't do all of these things, that you can't simulate object-oriented programming or other methodology you want in C. You can simulate it, but the compiler, the language itself, isn't giving you any help."

Developers should be warned when they feel that code is being pushed into arbitrary places. This generally implies that the code...