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)
Web Clients and APIs

Working with APIs and writing web clients can be a tricky business. Different APIs have different types of authorization, authentication, and protocol. We'll explore the http.Client structure object, work with OAuth2 clients and long-term token storage, and finish off with GRPC and an additional REST interface.

By the end of this chapter, you should have an idea of how to interface with third-party or in-house APIs and have some patterns for common operations, such as async requests to APIs.

In this chapter, we will cover the following recipes:

  • Initializing, storing, and passing http.Client structures
  • Writing a client for a REST API
  • Executing parallel and async client requests
  • Making use of OAuth2 clients
  • Implementing an OAuth2 token storage interface
  • Wrapping a client in added functionality and function composition
  • ...