Book Image

Full-Stack Web Development with Go

By : Nanik Tolaram, Nick Glynn
Book Image

Full-Stack Web Development with Go

By: Nanik Tolaram, Nick Glynn

Overview of this book

Go is a modern programming language with capabilities to enable high-performance app development. With its growing web framework ecosystem, Go is a preferred choice for building complete web apps. This practical guide will enable you to take your Go skills to the next level building full stack apps. This book walks you through creating and developing a complete modern web service from auth, middleware, server-side rendering, databases, and modern frontend frameworks and Go-powered APIs. You’ll start by structuring the app and important aspects such as networking, before integrating all the different parts together to build a complete web product. Next, you’ll learn how to build and ship a complete product by starting with the fundamental building blocks of creating a Go backend. You’ll apply best practices for cookies, APIs, and security, and level up your skills with the fastest growing frontend framework, Vue. Once your full stack application is ready, you’ll understand how to push the app to production and be prepared to serve customers and share it with the world. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned how to build and ship secure, scalable, and complete products and how to combine Golang with existing products using best practices.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Part 1: Building a Golang Backend
5
Part 2:Serving Web Content
9
Part 3:Single-Page Apps with Vue and Go
14
Part 4:Release and Deployment

Terraform examples

In the following sections, we will look at different ways we can use Terraform, such as pulling images from GitHub and running them locally, or building and publishing Docker images.

Note

Make sure every time you run Terraform examples that create AWS resources to remember to destroy the resources using the terraform destroy command.

All resources created in AWS incur charges, and by destroying them, you will ensure there will be no surprise charges.

Pulling from GitHub Packages

The example code for this section can be found inside the chapter14/github folder. The following snippet is from pullfromgithub.tf:

#script to pull chapter12 image and run it locally
#it also store the image locally
terraform {
 required_providers {
   docker = {
     source  = "kreuzwerker/docker"
     version = "~> 2.13.0"
   }
 }
}
data "docker_registry_image...