Comment by pspeter3 9 hours ago What makes Golang a great fit in your opinion? 5 comments pspeter3 Reply zakirullin 9 hours ago Server setup before the rewrite:docker + php-fpm + php7 + larvel + nginx + redis + cron + worker + certbotServer after the rewrite to Golang:server, a 15MB no-dependencies binary that has everything. LinuxAmbulance 9 hours ago That is a pretty strong argument for Go! backscratches 5 hours ago This is the reason I like go and rust so much lioeters 9 hours ago That's brilliant. Can't beat the convenience of a single-file executable! zakirullin 9 hours ago Since I plan to use it for the rest of my life, I need the code and infrastructure to be radically simple and easy to maintain.Like, I should be able to open it even after a few years, and do some fixes or add some features.Go's ecosystem seems to share this mindset.
zakirullin 9 hours ago Server setup before the rewrite:docker + php-fpm + php7 + larvel + nginx + redis + cron + worker + certbotServer after the rewrite to Golang:server, a 15MB no-dependencies binary that has everything. LinuxAmbulance 9 hours ago That is a pretty strong argument for Go! backscratches 5 hours ago This is the reason I like go and rust so much lioeters 9 hours ago That's brilliant. Can't beat the convenience of a single-file executable!
LinuxAmbulance 9 hours ago That is a pretty strong argument for Go! backscratches 5 hours ago This is the reason I like go and rust so much
zakirullin 9 hours ago Since I plan to use it for the rest of my life, I need the code and infrastructure to be radically simple and easy to maintain.Like, I should be able to open it even after a few years, and do some fixes or add some features.Go's ecosystem seems to share this mindset.
Server setup before the rewrite:
docker + php-fpm + php7 + larvel + nginx + redis + cron + worker + certbot
Server after the rewrite to Golang:
server, a 15MB no-dependencies binary that has everything.
That is a pretty strong argument for Go!
This is the reason I like go and rust so much
That's brilliant. Can't beat the convenience of a single-file executable!
Since I plan to use it for the rest of my life, I need the code and infrastructure to be radically simple and easy to maintain.
Like, I should be able to open it even after a few years, and do some fixes or add some features.
Go's ecosystem seems to share this mindset.