2025-10-20 18:28:35 +02:00

Endpoints

Method URL Pattern Handler Action
GET /v1/healthcheck healthCheckHandler Show application information
GET /v1/movies listMoviesHandler Show the details of all movies
POST /v1/movies createMoviesHandler Create a new movie
GET /v1/movies/:id showMovieHandler Show the details of a specific movie
PUT /v1/movies/:id editMovieHandler Edit the details of a specific movie
DELETE /v1/movies/:id deleteMovieHandler Delete a specific movie

Installation

Launch API

go run ./cmd/api

If you want, you can also verify that the command-line flags are working correctly by specifying alternative port and env values when starting the application.
When you do this, you should see the contents of the log message change accordingly. For example :

go run ./cmd/api -port=3030 -env=production
time=2025-10-10T11:08:00.000+02:00 level=INFO msg= "starting server" addr=:3030 env=production

Test endpoints

curl -i localhost:4000/v1/healthcheck
The -i flag in the command above instructs curl to display the HTTP response headers as well as the response body.

Result

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Mon, 05 Apr 2021 17:46:14 GMT
Content-Length: 58
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

status: available
environment: development
version: 1.0.0

API Versioning

There are two comon approaches to doing this :

  1. By prefixing all URLs with your API version, like /v1/healthcheck or /v2/healthcheck
  2. By using custom Accept and Content-Type headers on requests and responses to convey the API version, like Accept: application/vnd.greenlight-v1

From an HTTP semantics point of view, using headers to convey the API version is the 'purer' approach. But from a user-experience point of view, using a URL prefix is arguably better. It makes it possible for developers to see which version of the API is being used at a glance, and it also means that the API can still be explored using a regular web browser (which is harder if custom headers are required).

Additional Information

How different Go Types are encoded

The following table summarizes how different Go types are mapped to JSON data types during encoding :

Go type JSON type
bool JSON boolean
string JSON string
int*, uint*, float*, rune JSON number
array, slice JSON array
struct, map JSON object
nil pointers, interface values, slices, maps, etc JSON null
chan, func, complex* Not supported
time.Time RFC3339-format JSON string
[]byte Base64-encoded JSON string

The last two of these are special cases which deserve a bit more explanation :

  • Go time.Time values (which are actually a struct behind the scenes) will be encoded as a JSON string in RFC 3339 format like "2020-11-08T06:27:59+01:00", rather than as a JSON object.
  • A []byte slice will be encoded as a base64-encoded JSON string, rather than as a JSON array. So, for example, a byte slice of []byte{'h','e','l','l','o'} would appear as "aGVsbG8=" in the JSON output. The base64 encoding uses padding and the standard character set.

A few other important things to mention :

  • Encoding of nested objects is supported. So, for example, if you have a slice of structs in Go that will encode to an array of objects in JSON.
  • Channels, functions and complex number types cannot be encoded. If you try to do so, you'll get a json.UnsupportedTypeError error at runtime.
  • Any pointer values will encode as the value pointed to.

Enveloping responses

The data of the endpoint /v1/movies/123 is nested under the key "movie", rather than being the top-level JSON object itself.
Enveloping response data like this isn't strictly necessary, and whether you choose to do so is partly a matter of style and taste. But there are a few tangible benefits :

  1. Including a key name (like "movie") at the top-level of the JSON helps make the response more self-documenting. For any humans who see the response out of context, it is a bit easier to understand what the data relates to.
  2. It reduces the risk of errors on the client side, because it's harder to accidentally process one response thinking that it is something different. To get at the data, a client must explicitly reference it via the "movie" key.
  3. If we always envelope the data returned by our API, then we mitigate a security vulnerability in older browsers which can arise if you return a JSON array as a response.

Advanced JSON Customization

When Go is encoding a particular type to JSON, it looks to see if the type has a MarshalJSON() method implemented on it. If it has, then Go will call this method to determine how to encode it.

Strictly speaking, when Go is encoding a particular type to JSON it looks to see if the type satisfies the json.Marshaler interface, which looks like this :

type Marshaler interface { MarshalJSON() ([]byte, error) }

If the type does satisfy the interface, then Go will call its MarshalJSON() method and use the []byte slice that it returns as the encoded JSON value.

If the type doesn't have a MarshalJSON() method, then Go will fall back to trying to encode it to JSON based on its own internal set of rules.

So, if we want to customize how something is encoded, all we need to do is implement a MarshalJSON() method on it which returns a custom JSON representation of itself in a []byte slice.

An example is available here : internal/data/runtime.go

Performance

json.MarshalIndent() takes 65% longer to run and uses around 30% more memory than json.Marshal(), as well as making two more heap allocations. Those figures will change depending on what you're encoding, but they're fairly indicative of the performance impact.

For most applications this performance difference simply isn't something that you need to worry about. In real terms, we're talking about a few thousandths of a millisecond - and the improved readability of responses is probably worth this trade-off.
But if your API is operating in a very resource-constrained environment, or needs to manage extremely high levels of traffic, then this is worth being aware of, and you may prefer to stick with using json.Marshal() instead.

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Let's Go Further Project's Book
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