Book Image

Building RESTful Web services with Go

By : Naren Yellavula
Book Image

Building RESTful Web services with Go

By: Naren Yellavula

Overview of this book

REST is an architectural style that tackles the challenges of building scalable web services and in today's connected world, APIs have taken a central role on the web. APIs provide the fabric through which systems interact, and REST has become synonymous with APIs. The depth, breadth, and ease of use of Go, makes it a breeze for developers to work with it to build robust Web APIs. This book takes you through the design of RESTful web services and leverages a framework like Gin to implement these services. The book starts with a brief introduction to REST API development and how it transformed the modern web. You will learn how to handle routing and authentication of web services along with working with middleware for internal service. The book explains how to use Go frameworks to build RESTful web services and work with MongoDB to create REST API. You will learn how to integrate Postgres SQL and JSON with a Go web service and build a client library in Go for consuming REST API. You will learn how to scale APIs using the microservice architecture and deploy the REST APIs using Nginx as a proxy server. Finally you will learn how to metricize a REST API using an API Gateway. By the end of the book you will be proficient in building RESTful APIs in Go.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Summary


In this chapter, we started with the basics of an API gateway. An API gateway tries to do a few things; it acts as a proxy for our API. By being a proxy, it forwards requests to the multiple APIs from different domains. In that process of forwarding, a gateway can block requests, rate limit them, and also transform requests/responses.

Kong is a good open-source API gateway available for the Linux platform. It has many features such as authentication, logging, and rate limiting. We saw how to install Kong, a Kong database, and our REST service inside the Docker containers. We used Docker instead of host machine because containers can be destroyed and created at will. It gives less chance for screwing up our host system. After learning about the installation, we learned that Kong has two types of REST API. One is the admin API, and the other is the app API. The admin API is the one we use to add our API to the gateway. The app API is our application's API. We saw how to add an API to...