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Test-Driven Development in Go

You're reading from   Test-Driven Development in Go A practical guide to writing idiomatic and efficient Go tests through real-world examples

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803247878
Length 342 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Adelina Simion Adelina Simion
Author Profile Icon Adelina Simion
Adelina Simion
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: The Big Picture
2. Chapter 1: Getting to Grips with Test-Driven Development FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Unit Testing Essentials 4. Chapter 3: Mocking and Assertion Frameworks 5. Chapter 4: Building Efficient Test Suites 6. Part 2: Integration and End-to-End Testing with TDD
7. Chapter 5: Performing Integration Testing 8. Chapter 6: End-to-End Testing the BookSwap Web Application 9. Chapter 7: Refactoring in Go 10. Chapter 8: Testing Microservice Architectures 11. Part 3: Advanced Testing Techniques
12. Chapter 9: Challenges of Testing Concurrent Code 13. Chapter 10: Testing Edge Cases 14. Chapter 11: Working with Generics 15. Assessments 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Chapter 9, Challenges of Testing Concurrent Code

  1. Concurrency refers to a program’s ability to execute more than one task, with interruptions and without any ordering guarantees. Parallelism refers to a program’s ability to execute more than one task, simultaneously and without interruptions. The OS (or even in silico implementations such as hyperthreading) may give the illusion of parallelism through pre-emptive multitasking. However, in order for parallelism to be truly simultaneous, multiple computational resources are required.
  2. Channels support three operations. The send operation writes information to the channel, while the receive operation reads information from the channel. The close operation signals to all receivers that no more values will be sent through it. Once closed, channels can never be reopened. For unbuffered channels, send and receive operations are synchronous and will only complete once both sender and receiver are available. On closed channels...
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