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Full-Stack Web Development with Go

You're reading from   Full-Stack Web Development with Go Build your web applications quickly using the Go programming language and Vue.js

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803234199
Length 302 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Nick Glynn Nick Glynn
Author Profile Icon Nick Glynn
Nick Glynn
Nanik Tolaram Nanik Tolaram
Author Profile Icon Nanik Tolaram
Nanik Tolaram
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Building a Golang Backend
2. Chapter 1: Building the Database and Model FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Application Logging 4. Chapter 3: Application Metrics and Tracing 5. Part 2:Serving Web Content
6. Chapter 4: Serving and Embedding HTML Content 7. Chapter 5: Securing the Backend and Middleware 8. Chapter 6: Moving to API-First 9. Part 3:Single-Page Apps with Vue and Go
10. Chapter 7: Frontend Frameworks 11. Chapter 8: Frontend Libraries 12. Chapter 9: Tailwind, Middleware, and CORS 13. Chapter 10: Session Management 14. Part 4:Release and Deployment
15. Chapter 11: Feature Flags 16. Chapter 12: Building Continuous Integration 17. Chapter 13: Dockerizing an Application 18. Chapter 14: Cloud Deployment 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Session management and JWTs

We looked at session management using cookies previously in Chapter 6, Moving to API-First, using the Gorilla Mux middleware. In our app, we created an in-memory cookie store via the functionality provided by Gorilla sessions: https://github.com/gorilla/sessions.

We previously implemented our middleware to validate that our user was approved by encoding two values – a user ID we looked up from the database and a userAuthenticated Boolean value. This worked well for our use case, but our implementation meant that every call to our API backend required a round trip to the database to check that the user ID was still present, before letting the call continue.

Figure 10.1: An illustration of login and save API workflows using a session cookie

Figure 10.1: An illustration of login and save API workflows using a session cookie

This approach is fine and the Gorilla sessions library provides a number of alternative backends to speed things up, such as using Redis and SQLite, but we’re going to look...

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