Book Image

Go Web Development Cookbook

By : Arpit Aggarwal
Book Image

Go Web Development Cookbook

By: Arpit Aggarwal

Overview of this book

Go is an open source programming language that is designed to scale and support concurrency at the language level. This gives you the liberty to write large concurrent web applications with ease. From creating web application to deploying them on Amazon Cloud Services, this book will be your one-stop guide to learn web development in Go. The Go Web Development Cookbook teaches you how to create REST services, write microservices, and deploy Go Docker containers. Whether you are new to programming or a professional developer, this book will help get you up to speed with web development in Go. We will focus on writing modular code in Go; in-depth informative examples build the base, one step at a time. You will learn how to create a server, work with static files, SQL, NoSQL databases, and Beego. You will also learn how to create and secure REST services, and create and deploy Go web application and Go Docker containers on Amazon Cloud Services. By the end of the book, you will be able to apply the skills you've gained in Go to create and explore web applications in any domain.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Introduction

With organizations moving towards DevOps, Docker has started to gain popularity as well. Docker allows for packaging an application with all of its dependencies into a standardized unit for software development. And if that unit runs on your local machine, we can guarantee that it will run exactly the same way, anywhere from QA, to staging, and to production environments. With the knowledge of the concepts covered in this chapter, we will be able to write Docker images and deploy Docker containers with ease.

In this chapter, we will learn how to create a Docker image and Docker containers to deploy a simple Go web application, following which we will be looking at how we can save the container to an image and push it to the Docker registry, along with some basic concepts of Docker networking.

As we are going to work with Docker, I assume it's installed and running...