Goji alternatives and similar packages
Based on the "Web Frameworks" category.
Alternatively, view Goji alternatives based on common mentions on social networks and blogs.
-
Gin
Gin is a HTTP web framework written in Go (Golang). It features a Martini-like API with much better performance -- up to 40 times faster. If you need smashing performance, get yourself some Gin. -
Iris
The fastest HTTP/2 Go Web Framework. New, modern and easy to learn. Fast development with Code you control. Unbeatable cost-performance ratio :rocket: -
Gorilla WebSocket
DISCONTINUED. A fast, well-tested and widely used WebSocket implementation for Go. -
GoFrame
GoFrame is a modular, powerful, high-performance and enterprise-class application development framework of Golang. -
goa
๐ Goa: Elevate Go API development! ๐ Streamlined design, automatic code generation, and seamless HTTP/gRPC support. โจ -
Faygo
Faygo is a fast and concise Go Web framework that can be used to develop high-performance web app(especially API) with fewer codes. Just define a struct handler, faygo will automatically bind/verify the request parameters and generate the online API doc. -
Huma
A modern, simple, fast & flexible micro framework for building HTTP REST/RPC APIs in Go backed by OpenAPI 3 and JSON Schema.
InfluxDB - Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale
Do you think we are missing an alternative of Goji or a related project?
Popular Comparisons
README
Goji
Goji is a HTTP request multiplexer, similar to net/http.ServeMux
.
It compares incoming requests to a list of registered Patterns, and
dispatches to the http.Handler that corresponds to the first matching
Pattern. Goji also supports Middleware (composable shared
functionality applied to every request) and uses the standard
context
package to store request-scoped values.
Quick Start
package main
import (
"fmt"
"net/http"
"goji.io"
"goji.io/pat"
)
func hello(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
name := pat.Param(r, "name")
fmt.Fprintf(w, "Hello, %s!", name)
}
func main() {
mux := goji.NewMux()
mux.HandleFunc(pat.Get("/hello/:name"), hello)
http.ListenAndServe("localhost:8000", mux)
}
Please refer to Goji's GoDoc Documentation for a full API reference.
Stability
Goji's API was recently updated to use the new net/http
and context
integration, and is therefore some of its interfaces are in a state of flux. We
don't expect any further changes to the API, and expect to be able to announce
API stability soon. Goji is suitable for use in production.
Prior to Go 1.7, Goji promised API stability with a different API to the one
that is offered today. The author broke this promise, and does not take this
breach of trust lightly. While stability is obviously extremely important, the
author and community have decided to follow the broader Go community in
standardizing on the standard library copy of the context
package.
Users of the old API can find that familiar API on the net-context
branch. The
author promises to maintain both the net-context
branch and master
for the
forseeable future.
Community / Contributing
Goji maintains a mailing list, gojiberries, where you should feel welcome to ask questions about the project (no matter how simple!), to announce projects or libraries built on top of Goji, or to talk about Goji more generally. Goji's author (Carl Jackson) also loves to hear from users directly at his personal email address, which is available on his GitHub profile page.
Contributions to Goji are welcome, however please be advised that due to Goji's stability guarantees interface changes are unlikely to be accepted.
All interactions in the Goji community will be held to the high standard of the broader Go community's Code of Conduct.