Browse free open source Go Build Tools and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source Go Build Tools by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

  • Passwordless Authentication and Passwordless Security Icon
    Passwordless Authentication and Passwordless Security

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  • 1
    Hyperledger Fabric

    Hyperledger Fabric

    Distributed ledger framework for developing solutions and applications

    Hyperledger Fabric is an enterprise-grade permissioned distributed ledger framework for developing solutions and applications. Its modular and versatile design satisfies a broad range of industry use cases. It offers a unique approach to consensus that enables performance at scale while preserving privacy. High-performance, secure, permissioned blockchain network. Code written in Go, chaincode (smart contracts) in Go, Javascript, or Java, SDKs in Node.js, Java, Go, REST and Python. Hyperledger is a collaborative effort created to advance blockchain technology by identifying and addressing important features for a cross-industry open standard for distributed ledger technologies(DLTs) that will transform the way business transactions are conducted globally. Hyperledger consists of several projects. Hyperledger Fabric is being built in a pluggable modular framework.
    Downloads: 11 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    Concourse

    Concourse

    Concourse is a container-based continuous thing-doer written in Go

    Built on the simple mechanics of resources, tasks, and jobs, Concourse presents a general approach to automation that makes it great for CI/CD. Concourse is designed to be expressive, versatile, and safe, remaining intuitive as the complexity of your project grows. A Concourse pipeline is like a distributed, continuous Makefile. Each job has a build plan declaring the job's input resources and what to run with them when they change. Your pipeline is then visualized in the web UI, taking only one click to get from a failed job to seeing why it failed. The visualization provides a "gut check" feedback loop: if it looks wrong, it probably is wrong. Jobs can depend on other jobs by configuring passed constraints. The resulting chain of jobs and resources is a dependency graph that continuously pushes your project forward, from source code to production.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 3
    Operator SDK

    Operator SDK

    SDK for building Kubernetes applications. Provides high level APIs

    The Operator SDK makes it easier to build Kubernetes native applications, a process that can require deep, application-specific operational knowledge. The Operator SDK provides the tools to build, test, and package Operators. Initially, the SDK facilitates the marriage of an application’s business logic (for example, how to scale, upgrade, or backup) with the Kubernetes API to execute those operations. Over time, the SDK can allow engineers to make applications smarter and have the user experience of cloud services. Leading practices and code patterns that are shared across Operators are included in the SDK to help prevent reinventing the wheel.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 4
    Turborepo

    Turborepo

    High-performance build system for JavaScript & TypeScript Codebases

    Turborepo is a high-performance build system for JavaScript and TypeScript codebases. Turborepo reimagines build system techniques used by Facebook and Google to remove maintenance burden and overhead. Building once is painful enough, Turborepo will remember what you've built and skip the stuff that's already been computed. Turborepo looks at the contents of your files, not timestamps to figure out what needs to be built. Share a remote build cache with your teammates and CI/CD for even faster builds. Speed up PaaS deploys by generating a subset of your monorepo with only what's needed to build a specific target. Turborepo won’t interfere with your runtime code or touch your sourcemaps. Execute builds using every core at maximum parallelism without wasting idle CPUs. Define the relationships between your tasks and then let Turborepo optimize what to build and when.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Comprehensive Cybersecurity to Safeguard Your Organization | SOCRadar Icon
    Comprehensive Cybersecurity to Safeguard Your Organization | SOCRadar

    See what hackers already know about your organization – and stop them from getting in.

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  • 5
    dapr

    dapr

    Dapr is portable, event-driven, runtime for building distributed apps

    Dapr is a portable, serverless, event-driven runtime that makes it easy for developers to build resilient, stateless, and stateful microservices that run on the cloud and edge and embrace the diversity of languages and developer frameworks. Dapr codifies the best practices for building microservice applications into open, independent, building blocks that enable you to build portable applications with the language and framework of your choice. Each building block is independent and you can use one, some, or all of them in your application.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 6
    deej

    deej

    Set app volumes with real sliders! Arduino project to build hardware

    deej is an open-source hardware volume mixer for Windows and Linux PCs. It lets you use real-life sliders (like a DJ!) to seamlessly control the volumes of different apps (such as your music player, the game you're playing and your voice chat session) without having to stop what you're doing. Control your microphone's input level. Lightweight desktop client, consuming around 10MB of memory. Runs from your system tray. Helpful notifications to let you know if something isn't working. The sliders are connected to 5 (or as many as you like) analog pins on an Arduino Nano/Uno board. They're powered from the board's 5V output (see schematic). The board connects via a USB cable to the PC. The code running on the Arduino board is a C program constantly writing current slider values over its serial interface. The PC runs a lightweight Go client in the background. This client reads the serial stream and adjusts app volumes according to the given configuration file.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 7
    AWS Copilot CLI

    AWS Copilot CLI

    The AWS Copilot CLI is a tool for developers to build, release apps

    AWS Copilot is an open-source command-line interface that makes it easy for developers to build, release, and operate production-ready containerized applications on AWS App Runner, Amazon ECS, and AWS Fargate. Run a single command to quickly get started with a containerized application using best practices on AWS from a Dockerfile. Instead of modeling individual resources, Copilot provides common cloud architectures, request-driven web service, load-balanced web service, backend service, worker service, and scheduled job. The necessary infrastructure is generated from the chosen pattern. Focus your time on writing business logic instead of connecting AWS resources. No need to worry about gluing Copilot commands in a script to create an automated release process. Copilot provides commands to create multiple deployment environments in separate AWS accounts and regions, as well as creating an AWS CodePipeline pipeline to build your container images.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 8
    Comcast

    Comcast

    Simulating bad network connections so you can build better systems

    Testing distributed systems under hard failures like network partitions and instance termination is critical, but it's also important we test them under less catastrophic conditions because this is what they most often experience. Comcast is a tool designed to simulate common network problems like latency, bandwidth restrictions, and dropped/reordered/corrupted packets. It works by wrapping up some system tools in a portable(ish) way. On BSD-derived systems such as OSX, we use tools like ipfw and pfctl to inject failure. On Linux, we use iptables and tc. Comcast is merely a thin wrapper around these controls. Windows support may be possible with wipfw or even the native network stack, but this has not yet been implemented in Comcast and may be at a later date. On Linux, Comcast supports several options: device, latency, target/default bandwidth, packet loss, protocol, and port number.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 9
    Drone

    Drone

    Drone is a Container-Native, Continuous Delivery Platform

    Drone is a self-service Continuous Integration platform for busy development teams. Pipelines are configured with a simple, easy‑to‑read file that you commit to your git repository. Each Pipeline step is executed inside an isolated Docker container that is automatically downloaded at runtime. Drone integrates seamlessly with multiple source code management systems, including GitHub, GitHubEnterprise, Bitbucket, and GitLab. Drone natively supports multiple operating systems and architectures, including Linux x64, ARM, ARM64, and Windows x64. Drone works with any language, database, or service that runs inside a Docker container. Choose from thousands of public Docker images or provide your own. Drone uses containers to drop pre‑configured steps into your pipeline. Choose from hundreds of existing plugins, or create your own. Drone makes advanced customization easy. Implement custom access controls, approval workflows, secret management, yaml syntax extensions, and more.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Our Free Plans just got better! | Auth0 by Okta Icon
    Our Free Plans just got better! | Auth0 by Okta

    With up to 25k MAUs and unlimited Okta connections, our Free Plan lets you focus on what you do best—building great apps.

    You asked, we delivered! Auth0 is excited to expand our Free and Paid plans to include more options so you can focus on building, deploying, and scaling applications without having to worry about your security. Auth0 now, thank yourself later.
    Try free now
  • 10
    Habitus

    Habitus

    A build flow tool for Docker

    Habitus adds workflows to the Docker build. This means you can create a chain of builds to generate your final Docker image based on a workflow. This is particularly useful if your code is in compiled languages like Java or Go or if you need to use secrets like SSH keys during the build. Habitus is a standalone build flow tool for Docker. It’s a command line tool that builds Docker images based on their Dockerfile and a build.yml.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 11
    Micro Cloud

    Micro Cloud

    A distributed OS built for the Cloud

    Micro addresses the key requirements for building services in the cloud. It leverages the microservices architecture pattern and provides a set of services which act as the building blocks of a platform. Micro deals with the complexity of distributed systems and provides simpler programmable abstractions to build on. Micro is the all encompassing end to end platform experience from source to running and beyond built with a developer first focus. Micro’s goal is to abstract away the complexity of building services for the Cloud. The cloud itself has gone through a huge boom through managed Compute and infrastructure services from the likes of AWS and others. It’s taken what was an operational burden and turned it into a suite of fully managed on demand services which can be used via APIs. Micro is built as a microservices architecture and abstracts away the complexity of the underlying infrastructure.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 12
    Origin

    Origin

    Community Distribution of Kubernetes

    Origin, also known as OKD is the community distribution of Kubernetes that has been optimized for continuous application development and multi-tenant deployment. It adds developer and operations-centred tools to Kubernetes to speed up application development and simplify deployment, scaling, as well as long-term lifecycle maintenance. It also makes it easier to launch Kubernetes on any cloud or bare metal and run and update clusters, while providing all the necessary tools for creating successful containerized applications.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 13
    RadonDB

    RadonDB

    RadonDB is an open source, cloud-native MySQL database

    RadonDB is a cloud-native database based on MySQL, and architected in fully distributed cluster that enable unlimited scalability (scale-out), capacity and performance. It supported distributed transaction that ensure high data consistency, and leveraged MySQL as storage engine for trusted data reliability. RadonDB is compatible with MySQL protocol, and sup-porting automatic table sharding as well as batch of automation feature for simplifying the maintenance and operation workflow. RadonDB is a new generation of distributed relational database (MyNewSQL) based on MySQL. It was designed to create the open-source database our developers would want to use: one that has features such as financial high availability, large-capacity database, automatic plane split table, scalable and strong consistency, this guide sets out to detail the inner workings of the radon process as a means of explanation.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 14
    Yay

    Yay

    An AUR Helper written in Go

    Yay uses an hash cache for development packages. Normally it is updated at the end of the package install with the message Found git repo. If you transition between aur helpers and did not install the devel package using yay at some point, it is possible it never got added to the cache. yay -Y --gendb will fix the current version of every devel package and start checking from there. Yay resolves all dependencies ahead of time. You are free to edit the PKGBUILD in any way, but any problems you cause are your own and should not be reported unless they can be reproduced with the original PKGBUILD. Yay uses git diff to display diffs, which by default tells less not to page if the output can fit into one terminal length. This behavior can be overridden by exporting your own flags (export LESS=SRX). Use yay -Y --devel --save to make development package updates permanently enabled (yay and yay -Syu will then always check dev packages).
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 15
    buildah

    buildah

    A tool that facilitates building OCI images

    Buildah and Podman are two complementary open-source projects that are available on most Linux platforms and both projects reside at GitHub.com with Buildah here and Podman here. Both, Buildah and Podman are command line tools that work on Open Container Initiative (OCI) images and containers. The two projects differentiate in their specialization. Buildah specializes in building OCI images. Buildah's commands replicate all of the commands that are found in a Dockerfile. This allows building images with and without Dockerfiles while not requiring any root privileges. Buildah’s ultimate goal is to provide a lower-level coreutils interface to build images. The flexibility of building images without Dockerfiles allows for the integration of other scripting languages into the build process. Buildah follows a simple fork-exec model and does not run as a daemon but it is based on a comprehensive API in golang, which can be vendored into other tools.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 16
    esbuild

    esbuild

    An extremely fast JavaScript bundler and minifier

    Our current build tools for the web are 10-100x slower than they could be. The main goal of the esbuild bundler project is to bring about a new era of build tool performance, and create an easy-to-use modern bundler along the way. The major features are: extreme speed without needing a cache, ES6 and CommonJS modules, tree shaking of ES6 modules, an API for JavaScript and Go, TypeScript and JSX syntax, source maps, minification, and plugins.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 17
    go-app

    go-app

    A package to build progressive web apps with Go programming

    Go-app is a package for building progressive web apps (PWA) with the Go programming language (Golang) and WebAssembly (Wasm). Shaping a UI is done by using a declarative syntax that creates and composes HTML elements only by using the Go programing language. Served with Go standard HTTP model, apps created with go-app are SEO friendly, installable, and support offline mode. Go-app uses a declarative syntax so you can write reusable component-based UI elements just by using the Go programming language. Serving an app built with go-app is done by using the Go standard HTTP model.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 18
    go-restful

    go-restful

    Package for building REST-style Web Services using Go

    package for building REST-style Web Services using Google Go. REST asks developers to use HTTP methods explicitly and in a way that's consistent with the protocol definition. This basic REST design principle establishes a one-to-one mapping between create, read, update, and delete (CRUD) operations and HTTP methods. Customizable encoding using EntityReaderWriter registration. Filters for intercepting the request-response flow on Service or Route level. Request-scoped variables using attributes. Route errors produce HTTP 404/405/406/415 errors, customizable using ServiceErrorHandler(...). Request API for reading structs from JSON/XML and accessing parameters (path, query, header). Customizable gzip/deflate readers and writers using CompressorProvider registration. There are several hooks to customize the behavior of the go-restful package.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 19
    gorilla/mux

    gorilla/mux

    HTTP router and URL matcher for building Go web servers

    Package gorilla/mux implements a request router and dispatcher for matching incoming requests to their respective handler. The name mux stands for "HTTP request multiplexer". Like the standard http.ServeMux, mux.Router matches incoming requests against a list of registered routes and calls a handler for the route that matches the URL or other conditions. The main features are that it implements the http.Handler interface so it is compatible with the standard http.ServeMux, requests can be matched based on URL host, path, path prefix, schemes, header and query values, HTTP methods or using custom matchers, URL hosts, paths and query values can have variables with an optional regular expression. Also, registered URLs can be built, or "reversed", which helps maintaining references to resources, Routes can be used as subrouters: nested routes are only tested if the parent route matches. And many more features.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 20
    ko

    ko

    Build and deploy Go applications on Kubernetes

    ko is a simple, fast container image builder for Go applications. It's ideal for use cases where your image contains a single Go application without any/many dependencies on the OS base image (e.g., no cgo, no OS package dependencies). ko builds images by effectively executing go build on your local machine, and as such doesn't require docker to be installed. This can make it a good fit for lightweight CI/CD use cases. ko also includes support for simple YAML templating which makes it a powerful tool for Kubernetes applications. ko depends on the authentication configured in your Docker config. If you can push an image with docker push, you are already authenticated for ko. Since ko doesn't require docker, ko login also provides a surface for logging in to a container image registry with a username and password, similar to docker login. Additionally, if auth is not configured in the Docker config, ko includes built-in support for authenticating container registries.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
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