Book Image

Building Distributed Applications in Gin

By : Mohamed Labouardy
4 (1)
Book Image

Building Distributed Applications in Gin

4 (1)
By: Mohamed Labouardy

Overview of this book

Gin is a high-performance HTTP web framework used to build web applications and microservices in Go. This book is designed to teach you the ins and outs of the Gin framework with the help of practical examples. You’ll start by exploring the basics of the Gin framework, before progressing to build a real-world RESTful API. Along the way, you’ll learn how to write custom middleware and understand the routing mechanism, as well as how to bind user data and validate incoming HTTP requests. The book also demonstrates how to store and retrieve data at scale with a NoSQL database such as MongoDB, and how to implement a caching layer with Redis. Next, you’ll understand how to secure and test your API endpoints with authentication protocols such as OAuth 2 and JWT. Later chapters will guide you through rendering HTML templates on the server-side and building a frontend application with the React web framework to consume API responses. Finally, you’ll deploy your application on Amazon Web Services (AWS) and learn how to automate the deployment process with a continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) pipeline. By the end of this Gin book, you will be able to design, build, and deploy a production-ready distributed application from scratch using the Gin framework.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Section 1: Inside the Gin Framework
3
Section 2: Distributed Microservices
9
Section 3: Beyond the Basics

Deploying on Amazon ECS

In the previous section, we learned how to deploy an EC2 instance and configure it to run our Gin application on it. In this section, we will learn how to get the same results without managing an EC2 instance. AWS proposes two container orchestration services: ECS and EKS.

In this section, you will learn about ECS, which is a fully managed container orchestration service. Before deploying our application to ECS, we need to store the application Docker images in a remote repository. That's where an Elastic Container Registry (ECR) repository comes into play.

Storing images in a private repository

ECR is a widely used private Docker registry. To store images in a private repository, you need to create a repository in ECR first. To achieve that, follow these steps:

  1. Jump to the ECR dashboard from the AWS Management Console, click on the Create repository button, and choose mlabouardy/recipes-api as a name for your Gin RESTful API repository...