Book Image

Hands-On RESTful Web Services with Go - Second Edition

By : Naren Yellavula
Book Image

Hands-On RESTful Web Services with Go - Second Edition

By: Naren Yellavula

Overview of this book

Building RESTful web services can be tough as there are countless standards and ways to develop API. In modern architectures such as microservices, RESTful APIs are common in communication, making idiomatic and scalable API development crucial. This book covers basic through to advanced API development concepts and supporting tools. You’ll start with an introduction to REST API development before moving on to building the essential blocks for working with Go. You’ll explore routers, middleware, and available open source web development solutions in Go to create robust APIs, and understand the application and database layers to build RESTful web services. You’ll learn various data formats like protocol buffers and JSON, and understand how to serve them over HTTP and gRPC. After covering advanced topics such as asynchronous API design and GraphQL for building scalable web services, you’ll discover how microservices can benefit from REST. You’ll also explore packaging artifacts in the form of containers and understand how to set up an ideal deployment ecosystem for web services. Finally, you’ll cover the provisioning of infrastructure using infrastructure as code (IaC) and secure your REST API. By the end of the book, you’ll have intermediate knowledge of web service development and be able to apply the skills you’ve learned in a practical way.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Introducing Postman, a visual client for testing a REST API

Postman is a great UI client that allows Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux users to make HTTP API requests. You can download it from here: https://www.getpostman.com/product/api-client. Instead of making an API request with curl, let us use the Postman tool. We will pick the simpleAuth example from the previous section. See the following steps:

  1. Post-installation, open the Postman tool, then try a www.example.org URL in the Enter request URL input text. You can select the type of request from the dropdown (GET, POST, and so on). For each request, you can configure many settings such as Headers, POST body, and other details as a menu under URL. Play with the options and get comfortable with them.
Please go through the Postman documentation for more details. It comes with various options for replaying API queries. Take some...