You may not need a web framework if you design a small application for yourself, but if you're going production then you definitely will need one, a good one.
And while you think that you have the necessary knowedge and experience, would you risk to code all of those features by yourself? Do you have the time to find a production-class external package to do the job? Are you sure that this will be aligned with the rest of your app?
These are the serious reasons that drive even the best of us to use frameworks, we don't want to code all those necessary features by ourselves if someone else already did the hard work.
Go is a rapidly growing open source programming language designed for building simple, fast, and reliable software. Take a look here to see which great companies use Go to power their services.
This repository has all the necessary information to help developers learn more about the best options that are out there to develop web applications with Go.
The repository contains the most detailed framework comparison that is out there, by comparing the the most known web frameworks from as many angles as possible: popularity, support and built'n features:
Beego: An open-source, high-performance web framework for the Go programming language.
Buffalo: Rapid Web Development w/ Go.
Echo: A high performance, minimalist Go web framework.
Gin: HTTP web framework written in Go (Golang). It features a Martini-like API with much better performance.
Iris: The fastest web framework for Go in The Universe. MVC fully featured. Embrace the future today
Revel: A high productivity, full-stack web framework for the Go language.
Sorted by the popularity (stars)
Name | Stars | Forks | Issues Open | Issues Closed | Birth Year | Latest Update | Author |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gin | 24,181 | 2,835 | 129 | 919 | 2014 | 2019-02-04 | @manucorporat |
Beego | 18,812 | 3,884 | 545 | 1,806 | 2012 | 2019-02-04 | @astaxie |
Iris | 13,565 | 1,406 | 19 | 621 | 2016 | 2019-01-16 | @kataras |
Echo | 12,861 | 1,141 | 14 | 779 | 2015 | 2019-02-07 | @vishr |
Revel | 10,723 | 1,302 | 58 | 806 | 2011 | 2018-10-30 | @revel |
Buffalo | 3,935 | 320 | 51 | 599 | 2014 | 2019-01-31 | @markbates |
Name | Examples | Reference | Real time support |
---|---|---|---|
Iris | 92 | https://github.com/kataras/iris/tree/master/_examples | rocket chat |
Beego | 49 | https://beego.me/docs | |
Echo | 20 | https://echo.labstack.com/cookbook/hello-world | |
Gin | 15 | https://github.com/gin-gonic/gin/tree/master/examples | gitter |
Revel | 6 | http://revel.github.io/examples/index.html | gitter |
Buffalo | 6 | https://gobuffalo.io/docs/installation | slack |
Great job by astaxie and kataras here, hopfully and the other frameworks will catch up with more examples, at least for me, if I switch to a new framework, that's the most resourceful place to quickly grasp as much information as possible. An example it's like 1000 words.
Sorted by the most to less featured
Name | Iris | Beego | Revel | Echo | Gin | Buffalo |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Router: Named Path Parameters & Wildcard* | - | |||||
Router: Regex* | - | |||||
Router: Grouping* | ❔ | ❔ | - | |||
Router: All the above Mixed Without Conflict* | ||||||
Router: Custom HTTP Errors* | ||||||
100% compatible with net/http* | ❔ | |||||
Middleware ecosystem* | ||||||
Sinatra-like API* | ||||||
Server: Automatic HTTPS* | ❔ | |||||
Server: Gracefully Shutdown* | ||||||
Server: Multi Listeners* | ||||||
Full HTTP/2* | ❔ | ❔ | standard | standard | ||
Subdomains* | secondary | secondary | secondary | secondary | secondary | |
Sessions* | secondary | |||||
Websockets* | ||||||
View (aka Templates) Embedded Into App* | ||||||
View Engine: STD* | ||||||
View Engine: Pug* | ||||||
View Engine: Django* | ||||||
View Engine: Handlebars* | ||||||
View Engine: Amber* | ||||||
Renderer: Markdown, JSON, JSONP, XML...* | ||||||
MVC* | - | generator | ||||
Caching* | ||||||
File Server* | ||||||
File Server: Embedded Into App* | ||||||
Response can be Modified Many times through lifecycle before sent* | ||||||
Gzip* | middleware | middleware | middleware | |||
Testing Framework* | ||||||
Typescript Transpiler* | ||||||
Online Editor* | ||||||
Logging System* | - | - | ||||
Maintenance & Auto-Updates* | ||||||
Performance | ★★★★★ | ★★★ | ★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★★★★ | ★★★ |
The most known "Web frameworks" in Go are not really frameworks, meaning that:
Echo, Gin and Buffalo are not really (fully featured) web frameworks
but the majority of Go community thinks that they are.
Therefore they think that they are comparable with Iris, Beego or Revel,
because of that we have the obligation to include them into this list as well.
All of the above frameworks, except Beego and Revel, can adapt any middleware
that was created for net/http, some of those can do this with ease and others
with some hacking [even the pain is a choice here].
When you can register a handler to a route with dynamic path.
Example Named Path Parameter:
"/user/{username}" matches to "/user/me", "/user/speedwheel" etc
The username
path parameter's value is the "/me"
and "speedwheel"
respectfully.
Example Wildcard:
"/user/{path *wildcard}" matches to
"/user/some/path/here",
"/user/this/is/a/dynamic/multi/level/path" etc
The path
path parameter's value is the "some/path/here"
and "this/is/a/dynamic/multi/level/path"
respectfully.
Iris supports a feature called
macros
as well, can be described as/user/{username:string}
or/user/{username:int min(1)}
.
When you can register a handler to a route with dynamic path with filters some that should be passed in order to execute the handler.
Example:
"/user/{id ^[0-9]$}" matches to "/user/42" but not to "/user/somestring"
The id
path parametert's value is 42
.
When you can register common logic or middleware/handlers to a specific group of routes that share the same path prefix.
Example:
myGroup := Group("/user", userAuthenticationMiddleware)
myGroup.Handle("GET", "/", userHandler)
myGroup.Handle("GET", "/profile", userProfileHandler)
myGroup.Handle("GET", "/signup", getUserSignupForm)
- /user
- /user/profile
- /user/signup
You can even create subgroups from a group:
myGroup.Group("/messages", optionalUserMessagesMiddleware)
myGroup.Handle("GET', "/{id}", getMessageByID)
- /user/messages/{id}
This is an advanced, but useful feature that many of us hope that is supported by a router or a web framework, currently only Iris supports this in the Go world.
It means that something like /{path *wildcard}
and /user/{username}
and /user/static
and /user/{path *wildcard}
can be registered in the same router which can correctly matches without conflict by static paths (/user/static
) or wildcard (/{path *wildcard}
).
When you can reigster a handler for an "error" status code. An error http status code is a >=400
status code, i.e NotFound 404
.
Example:
OnErrorCode(404, myNotFoundHandler)
Most of the web frameworks above support only 404
, 405
and 500
registration, but fully featured like Iris, Beego and Revel
supports any status code or even any error
code ( any error
is supported by Iris only).
Means that you have:
- the framework gives you a context with direct access to the
*http.Request
andhttp.ResponseWriter
. - a way to convert an
net/http
handler to a specific framework's type of Handler.
When you don't have to wrap each handlers with middleware by your own, but the framework gives you a full engine to define the flow, globally or per route or per group of routes, i.e Use(middleware)
, Done(middleware
) etc.
Register in runtime handlers to routes for specific HTTP Methods (and path parameters).
Example:
.Get or GET("/path", gethandler)
.Post or POST("/path", postHandler)
.Put or PUT("/path", putHandler) and etc.
When the framework's server supports registering and auto-renewing the SSL certifications to manage the SSL/TLS incoming connections (https). The most famous automatic https provider is the letsencrypt.
When pressing CTRL + C
to close your terminal application; the server will close itself gracefully, waiting for some connections to finish their job (with a specicified timeout) or fire a custom event to do cleanup (i.e database Close).
When tje framework's server supports registering custom net.Listener
or serve a web applications using more than one http server and address.
When the framework supports HTTP/2 with https and the server Push
feature with ease.
When you can register routes per x,y subdomains directly from your web application.
secondary
menas that this is not supported by the framework as a feature but you can still do it by starting multiple http servers, the downsides of this is that the main app and subdomain are not connected and is impossible to share logic between them by default.
When http sessions are supported and ready to use inside your specific handler(s).
- Some of the web frameworks supports back-end database to store the sessions so you can get persistence between server restarts.
- Buffalo uses the gorilla sessions, which are little bit slower than the rest of the implementations.
Example:
func setValue(context http_context){
s := Sessions.New(http_context)
s.Set("key", "my value")
}
func getValue(context http_context){
s := Sessions.New(http_context)
myValue := s.Get("key")
}
func logoutHandler(context http_context){
Sessions.Destroy(http_context)
}
Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol#HTTP_session
When the framework supports websocket communications protocol. The implementations are different.
You should search their examples to see what suits you. My co-worker who tried all of those told me that Iris implements the most featured webosocket connections with the easier API compared to the rest.
Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebSocket
Normally you have to transfer all of your template files side by side with your web application's executable file. Embedded Into App means that the framework supports integration with go-bindata so the final executable file contains the templates inside it, represented as []byte
.
When the framework supports template loading, custom and built'n template functions to save our lives on critical parts.
When framework supports loading templates via the standard html/template
parser.
When framework supports loading templates via a Pug
parser.
When framework supports loading templates via a Django
parser.
When framework supports loading templates via a Handlebars
parser.
When framework supports loading templates via an Amber
parser.
When the framework's context gives you an easy way to send/and customize a response of various content types of with ease.
Model–view–controller (MVC) is a software architectural pattern for implementing user interfaces on computers. It divides a given application into three interconnected parts. This is done to separate internal representations of information from the ways information is presented to, and accepted from, the user. The MVC design pattern decouples these major components allowing for efficient code reuse and parallel development.
- Iris supports the full MVC features, can be registered at runtime.
- Beego supports only method and models matching, can be registered at runtime.
- Revel supports methods, path and models matching, can be registered only via a generator (a different software that you have to run to build your web application).
Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model%E2%80%93view%E2%80%93controller
A web cache (or HTTP cache) is an information technology for the temporary storage (caching) of web documents, such as HTML pages and images, to reduce server lag. A web cache system documents passing through it; subsequent requests may be satisfied from if certain conditions are met.[1] A web cache system can refer either to an appliance, or to a computer program.
Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_cache
When you can register a (physical) directory to a route which will serve the files of this directory to the client automatically.
Normally you have to transfer all static files (like assets; css, javascript files...) along with the application's executable file. Frameworks that support this feature gives you the chance to embed all those data inside your application, represented as []byte
, their response time is also faster because server can serve them directly without looking up for the file in a physical location.
Currently only Iris supports this via built'n response writer in its http_context.
When framework supports this you can retrieve or reset or modify the written status code, body and headers before sent to the client (in net/http based web frameworks this is not possible by default because the body and status code cannot be retrieved or changed when written).
When you're inside a route's handler and you can change the response writer in order to send a response using the gzip compression, the framework should take care of the sent headers, it should reset the response write back to normal if any error occurs and also it should be able to check if gzip is supported by client.
gzip is a file format and a software application used for file compression and decompression
Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gzip
When you can test your HTTP using a specific framework library, that its work is to help you write better tests with ease.
Example (currently, only Iris supports that)
func TestAPI(t *testing.T) {
app := myIrisApp()
tt := httptest.New(t, app)
tt.GET("/admin").WithBasicAuth("name", "pass").Expect().
Status(httptest.StatusOK).Body().Equal("welcome")
}
myIrisApp
returns your imaginary web application,
it has got a GET handler for /admin
which is protected by basic authentication.
The above simple test checks if /admin
responded with Status OK
and authentication passed with specific username and password and its body is "welcome"
.
Typescript goal is to be a superset of ES6 that, in addition to all the new stuff that the standard is defining, will add a static type system. Typescript has also a transpiler that converts our Typescript code (i.e. ES6 + types) to ES5 or ES3 javascript code so we can use it in today browsers.
With the help of the online editor you can Quickly and Easy compile and run go code online.
Custom logging System thaty extend the native log package behavior by providing useful features like color coding, formatting, log levels separation, different logging backends, etc.
Inform users of your framework of "on the fly "updates in a non-intrusive way.
- Fork the project.
- Make your changes.
- Make a PR and describe it:
- If something is modified from the existing comparison, tell us the reason that made you to change that.
- If a feature is added, then add an issue link that describes the feature for the specific framework.
- Push the PR.
The MIT License.