Nunu is an application scaffold based on Golang. Its name comes from a game character in League of Legends, a little boy riding on the shoulder of a yeti. Like Nunu, this project also stands on the shoulders of giants. It is a composition of various popular libraries from the Golang ecosystem, which can help you quickly build efficient and reliable applications.
- Gin: https://github.com/gin-gonic/gin
- Gorm: https://github.com/go-gorm/gorm
- Wire: https://github.com/google/wire
- Viper: https://github.com/spf13/viper
- Zap: https://github.com/uber-go/zap
- Golang-jwt: https://github.com/golang-jwt/jwt
- Go-redis: https://github.com/go-redis/redis
- Testify: https://github.com/stretchr/testify
- Sonyflake: https://github.com/sony/sonyflake
- gocron: https://github.com/go-co-op/gocron
- More...
- Low Learning Curve and Customization: Nunu encapsulates popular libraries that Gophers are familiar with. You can easily customize the application to meet specific requirements.
- High Performance and Scalability: Nunu aims to be high-performance and scalable. It utilizes the latest technologies and best practices to ensure your application can handle high traffic and large data volumes.
- Security and Reliability: Nunu uses stable and reliable third-party libraries to ensure the security and reliability of your application.
- Modularity and Extensibility: Nunu is designed to be modular and extensible. You can easily add new features and functionalities by using third-party libraries or writing your own modules.
- Comprehensive Documentation and Test Coverage: Nunu has comprehensive documentation and test coverage. It provides detailed documentation and examples to help you get started quickly. It also includes a test suite to ensure your application works as expected.
.
├── cmd
│ └── server
│ ├── main.go
│ ├── wire.go
│ └── wire_gen.go
├── config
│ ├── local.yml
│ └── prod.yml
├── internal
│ ├── handler
│ │ ├── handler.go
│ │ └── user.go
│ ├── middleware
│ │ └── cors.go
│ ├── model
│ │ └── user.go
│ ├── repository
│ │ ├── repository.go
│ │ └── user.go
│ ├── server
│ │ └── http.go
│ └── service
│ ├── service.go
│ └── user.go
├── pkg
├── LICENSE
├── README.md
├── README_zh.md
├── go.mod
└── go.sum
This is a classic directory structure for a Golang project, which includes the following directories:
-
cmd: Contains the entry points of the application, including the main function and dependency injection code.
- server: The main entry point of the application, including the main function and dependency injection code.
- main.go: The main function used to start the application.
- wire.go: The dependency injection code generated using Wire.
- wire_gen.go: The dependency injection code generated using Wire.
- server: The main entry point of the application, including the main function and dependency injection code.
-
config: Contains the configuration files of the application.
- local.yml: The configuration file for the local environment.
- prod.yml: The configuration file for the production environment.
-
internal: Contains the internal code of the application.
- handler: Contains the handlers for handling HTTP requests.
- handler.go: The common handler for handling HTTP requests.
- user.go: The handler for handling user-related HTTP requests.
- middleware: Contains the middleware code.
- cors.go: The CORS (Cross-Origin Resource Sharing) middleware.
- model: Contains the data model code.
- user.go: The user data model.
- repository: Contains the data access code.
- repository.go: The common interface for data access.
- user.go: The implementation of the user data access interface.
- server: Contains the server code.
- http.go: The implementation of the HTTP server.
- service: Contains the business logic code.
- service.go: The common interface for business logic.
- user.go: The implementation of the user business logic.
- handler: Contains the handlers for handling HTTP requests.
-
pkg: Contains the public packages of the application.
-
storage: Contains the storage files of the application.
-
go.mod: The Go module file.
-
go.sum: The dependency versions file for the Go module.
To use Nunu, you need to have the following software installed on your system:
- Golang 1.16 or higher
- Git
You can install Nunu using the following command:
go install github.com/go-nunu/nunu@latest
You can create a new Golang project using the following command:
nunu new projectName
By default, it will pull from the GitHub repository, but you can also use a mirror repository for faster access:
// Use the basic template
nunu new projectName -r https://gitee.com/go-nunu/nunu-layout-basic.git
// Use the advanced template
nunu new projectName -r https://gitee.com/go-nunu/nunu-layout-advanced.git
This command will create a directory named projectName
and generate an elegant Golang project structure within it.
You can create handlers, services, repositories, and models for your project using the following commands:
nunu create handler user
nunu create service user
nunu create repository user
nunu create model user
or
nunu create all user
These commands will create components named UserHandler
, UserService
, UserDao
, and UserModel
respectively and place them in the correct directories.
You can quickly start your project using the following command:
nunu run
This command will start your Golang project and support hot-reloading of files.
You can quickly compile wire.go
using the following command:
nunu wire
This command will compile your wire.go
file and generate the required dependencies.
If you find any issues or have any improvement suggestions, please feel free to raise an issue or submit a pull request. Your contributions are highly appreciated!
Nunu is released under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for more information.