000 a
999 _c33224
_d33224
008 240313b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9781718500884
082 _a005.133
_bWOO
100 _aWoodbeck, Adam
245 _aNetwork programming with Go: Code secure and reliable network services from scratch
260 _bNo Starch Press,
_c2021
_aSan Francisco :
300 _axxii, 363 p. ;
_bill.,
_c24cm.
365 _b49.99
_c$
_d86.30
504 _aInclude index.
520 _aGo combines the best parts of many other programming languages. It's fast, scalable, and designed for high-performance networking and multiprocessing-in other words, it's perfect for network programming. Network Programming with Go is for developers ready to start leveraging Go's ease of use for writing secure, readable, production-ready network code. Early chapters establish a foundation of networking and traffic-routing know-how upon which the rest of the book builds. You'll put that knowledge to use as author Adam Woodbeck guides you through writing programs that communicate using TCP, UDP, Unix sockets, and other features that ensure reliable data transmission. As you progress, you'll explore higher-level network protocols like HTTP and HTTP/2, then build applications that securely interact with servers, clients, and APIs over a network using TLS. In addition, Woodbeck shows you how to create a simple messaging protocol, develop tools for monitoring network traffic, craft a custom web server, and implement best practices for interacting with cloud providers using their SDKs. Along the way, you'll learn: " P basics for writing effective network programs, such as IPv4 and IPv6 multicasting, ports, and network address translation " ow to use handlers, middleware, and multiplexers to build capable HTTP-based applications with minimal code " he OSI and TCP/IP models for layered data architectures " ethods for reading data from/writing data to a network connection, like the type-length-value encoding scheme " ools for incorporating authentication and encryption into your applications using TLS, like mutual authentication " ow to serialize data for storage or transmission in Go-friendly formats like JSON, Gob, XML, and protocol buffers " ow to Leverage Go's code generation support to efficiently communicate with gRPC-based network services So get ready to take advantage of Go's built-in concurrency, rapid compiling, and rich standard library. Because when it comes to writing robust network programs, it's Go time.
650 _aHandbooks and manuals
650 _aComputer programming
650 _aNetwork Protocols
650 _aNetwork Security
942 _2ddc
_cBK