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Hands-On RESTful Web Services with Go

Hands-On RESTful Web Services with Go

By : Yellavula
1.8 (4)
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Hands-On RESTful Web Services with Go

Hands-On RESTful Web Services with Go

1.8 (4)
By: 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)
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Introducing JWT and OAuth2

The modern REST API implements token-based authentication. Here, tokens can be any strings generated by the server, which allows the client to access resources by producing a token. The token is computed in such a way that only the client and the server know how to encode/decode the token.

The previous example relates to session-based authentication. This has a limitation of managing sessions by saving them in the program memory, or Redis/SQLite3. JWT takes a different approach and creates tokens that can be passed around for authentication.

Whenever a Client passes the authentication details to the Server, the server generates a token and passes it back to the Client. The client saves that in some kind of storage, such as AWS Secrets Manager, a database, or local storage (in the case of a browser). The Client uses that token to ask for resources from...

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