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Go: Design Patterns for Real-World Projects

You're reading from   Go: Design Patterns for Real-World Projects Build production-ready solutions in Go using cutting-edge technology and techniques

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Product type Course
Published in Jun 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788390552
Length 1091 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (3):
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Mario Castro Contreras Mario Castro Contreras
Author Profile Icon Mario Castro Contreras
Mario Castro Contreras
Mat Ryer Mat Ryer
Author Profile Icon Mat Ryer
Mat Ryer
Vladimir Vivien Vladimir Vivien
Author Profile Icon Vladimir Vivien
Vladimir Vivien
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Toc

Table of Contents (38) Chapters Close

Go: Design Patterns for Real-World Projects
Credits
Preface
Bibliography
1. A First Step in Go FREE CHAPTER 2. Go Language Essentials 3. Go Control Flow 4. Data Types 5. Functions in Go 6. Go Packages and Programs 7. Composite Types 8. Methods, Interfaces, and Objects 9. Concurrency 10. Data IO in Go 11. Writing Networked Services 12. Code Testing 13. Ready... Steady... Go! 14. Creational Patterns - Singleton, Builder, Factory, Prototype, and Abstract Factory Design Patterns 15. Structural Patterns - Composite, Adapter, and Bridge Design Patterns 16. Structural Patterns - Proxy, Facade, Decorator, and Flyweight Design Patterns 17. Behavioral Patterns - Strategy, Chain of Responsibility, and Command Design Patterns 18. Behavioral Patterns - Template, Memento, and Interpreter Design Patterns 19. Behavioral Patterns - Visitor, State, Mediator, and Observer Design Patterns 20. Introduction to Gos Concurrency 21. Concurrency Patterns - Barrier, Future, and Pipeline Design Patterns 22. Concurrency Patterns - Workers Pool and Publish/Subscriber Design Patterns 23. Chat Application with Web Sockets 24. Adding User Accounts 25. Three Ways to Implement Profile Pictures 26. Command-Line Tools to Find Domain Names 27. Building Distributed Systems and Working with Flexible Data 28. Exposing Data and Functionality through a RESTful Data Web Service API 29. Random Recommendations Web Service 30. Filesystem Backup 31. Building a Q&A Application for Google App Engine 32. Micro-services in Go with the Go kit Framework 33. Deploying Go Applications Using Docker 1. Good Practices for a Stable Go Environment

Avatars from the OAuth2 server


It turns out that most auth servers already have images for their users, and they make them available through the protected user resource that we already used in order to get our user's names. To use this avatar picture, we need to get the URL from the provider, store it in the cookie for our user, and send it through a web socket so that every client can render the picture alongside the corresponding message.

Getting the avatar URL

The schema for user or profile resources is not part of the OAuth2 spec, which means that each provider is responsible for deciding how to represent that data. Indeed, providers do things differently; for example, the avatar URL in a GitHub user resource is stored in a field called avatar_url, whereas in Google, the same field is called picture. Facebook goes even further by nesting the avatar URL value in a url field inside an object called picture. Luckily, Gomniauth abstracts this for us; its GetUser call on a provider standardizes...

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