Book Image

Hands-On High Performance with Go

By : Bob Strecansky
Book Image

Hands-On High Performance with Go

By: Bob Strecansky

Overview of this book

Go is an easy-to-write language that is popular among developers thanks to its features such as concurrency, portability, and ability to reduce complexity. This Golang book will teach you how to construct idiomatic Go code that is reusable and highly performant. Starting with an introduction to performance concepts, you’ll understand the ideology behind Go’s performance. You’ll then learn how to effectively implement Go data structures and algorithms along with exploring data manipulation and organization to write programs for scalable software. This book covers channels and goroutines for parallelism and concurrency to write high-performance code for distributed systems. As you advance, you’ll learn how to manage memory effectively. You’ll explore the compute unified device architecture (CUDA) application programming interface (API), use containers to build Go code, and work with the Go build cache for quicker compilation. You’ll also get to grips with profiling and tracing Go code for detecting bottlenecks in your system. Finally, you’ll evaluate clusters and job queues for performance optimization and monitor the application for performance regression. By the end of this Go programming book, you’ll be able to improve existing code and fulfill customer requirements by writing efficient programs.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Learning about Performance in Go
7
Section 2: Applying Performance Concepts in Go
13
Section 3: Deploying, Monitoring, and Iterating on Go Programs with Performance in Mind

HTML templating

We can also use HTML templating, akin to how we performed text tempting, in order to generate dynamic results for HTML pages in Go. In order to do this, we need to initialize our package, import the proper dependencies, and set up a data structure to hold the values that we are planning to use in our HTML templates, like so:

package main

import (
"html/template"
"net/http"
)

type UserFields struct {
Name string
URL string
Email string
}

Next, we create the userResponse HTML template:

var userResponse = ` 
<html>
<head></head>
<body>
<h1>Hello {{.Name}}</h1>
<p>You visited {{.URL}}</p>
<p>Hope you're enjoying this book!</p>
<p>We have your email recorded as {{.Email}}</p>
</body>
</html>
`

Then, we create an HTTP request handler:

func rootHandler(w http...