I fork the project from kit and plan to maintain it in the future. The kit tool is a great job, and deeply used in our team. Some features and bugs have been done and fixed, such as supporting go module,replacing some old dependencies and so on. I am very glad to receive recommend about it.
This project is a more advanced version of gk.
The goal of the gokit cli is to be a tool that you can use while you develop your microservices with gokit
.
While gk
did help you create your basic folder structure it was not really able to be used further on in your project.
This is what GoKit Cli
is aiming to change.
Go
is a requirement to be able to test your services
gokit is needed.
- Installation
- Usage
- Create a new service
- Generate the service
- Generate the client library
- Generate new middlewares
- Enable docker integration
Before you install please read prerequisites
git clone https://github.com/GrantZheng/kit.git
cd kit
go install
go get github.com/GrantZheng/kit
, which could generate kit binary refers to the original repo code. Some methods have been discussed here,but I haven't found a better way to solve this problem.
kit help
Also read this medium story
The kit tool use modules to manage dependencies by default, please make sure your go version >= 1.3, or GO111MODULE is set on. If you want to specify the module name, you should use the --module flag, otherwise, the module name in the go.mod file will be set as your project name.
kit new service --help
kit new service hello
kit n s hello # using aliases
or
kit new service hello --module github.com/{group name}/hello
kit n s hello -m github.com/{group name}/hello # using aliases
This will generate the initial folder structure, the go.mod file and the service interface
service-name/pkg/service/service.go
package service
// HelloService describes the service.
type HelloService interface {
// Add your methods here
// e.x: Foo(ctx context.Context,s string)(rs string, err error)
}
When you are generating the service and the client library, the module name in the go.mod file could be autodetected.
kit g s hello
kit g s hello --dmw # to create the default middleware
kit g s hello -t grpc # specify the transport (default is http)
This command will do these things:
- Create the service boilerplate:
hello/pkg/service/service.go
- Create the service middleware:
hello/pkg/service/middleware.go
- Create the endpoint:
hello/pkg/endpoint/endpoint.go
andhello/pkg/endpoint/endpoint_gen.go
- If using
--dmw
create the endpoint middleware:hello/pkg/endpoint/middleware.go
- Create the transport files e.x
http
:service-name/pkg/http/handler.go
- Create the service main file 💥
hello/cmd/service/service.go
hello/cmd/service/service_gen.go
hello/cmd/main.go
_gen
will be regenerated when you add endpoints to your service and
you rerun kit g s hello
You can run the service by running:
go run hello/cmd/main.go
kit g c hello
This will generate the client library ✨ http/client/http/http.go
that you can than use to call the service methods, you can use it like this:
package main
import (
"context"
"fmt"
client "hello/client/http"
"github.com/go-kit/kit/transport/http"
)
func main() {
svc, err := client.New("http://localhost:8081", map[string][]http.ClientOption{})
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
r, err := svc.Foo(context.Background(), "hello")
if err != nil {
fmt.Println("Error:", err)
return
}
fmt.Println("Result:", r)
}
kit g m hi -s hello
kit g m hi -s hello -e # if you want to add endpoint middleware
The only thing left to do is add your middleware logic and wire the middleware with your service/endpoint.
kit g d
This will add the individual service docker files and one docker-compose.yml
file that will allow you to start
your services.
To start your services just run
docker-compose up
After you run docker-compose up
your services will start up and any change you make to your code will automatically
rebuild and restart your service (only the service that is changed)