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Hands-On RESTful Web Services with Go

You're reading from   Hands-On RESTful Web Services with Go Develop elegant RESTful APIs with Golang for microservices and the cloud

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838643577
Length 404 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Naren Yellavula Naren Yellavula
Author Profile Icon Naren Yellavula
Naren Yellavula
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with REST API Development 2. Handling Routing for our REST Services FREE CHAPTER 3. Working with Middleware and RPC 4. Simplifying RESTful Services with Popular Go Frameworks 5. Working with MongoDB and Go to Create a REST API 6. Working with Protocol Buffers and gRPC 7. Working with PostgreSQL, JSON, and Go 8. Building a REST API Client in Go 9. Asynchronous API Design 10. GraphQL and Go 11. Scaling our REST API Using Microservices 12. Containerizing REST Services for Deployment 13. Deploying REST Services on Amazon Web Services 14. Handling Authentication for our REST Services 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Fan-in/fan-out of services

Let's take a real-world example of an e-commerce website integrating itself with a third-party payment gateway. Here, the website uses an API from the payment gateway to pop up the payment screen and enters security credentials. At the same time, the website may call another API called analytics to record the attempt of payment. This process of forking a single request into multiple is called fan-out. In the real world, there can be many fan-out services involved in a single client request.

Another example is MapReduce. Map is a fan-in operation, while Reduce is a fan-out operation. A server can fan out a piece of information to the next set of services (API) and ignore the result or can wait until all the responses from those servers are returned. As shown in the following diagram, an incoming request is being multiplexed by the server into two...

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