January is Batteries-Included Go Framework inspired by Django. Designed to ease things up for fast development.
- Robust routing
- Serve static files
- Easy access to multiple databases
- Complete user authentication
- Database migrations
- Session support
- Template engines
- Generate handlers
- Middleware support
- Form Validation
- CSRF protection
- Encryption
- Multiple Caching backends
When teams at my organization began transitioning from Python, Node.js, and PHP to Go, we encountered a new challenge: as each developer utilized different libraries, standards, and frameworks, interoperability between teams became increasingly problematic. The January Web Framework was conceived with a "batteries-included" approach, enabling teams to swiftly integrate into the Go ecosystem while adhering to consistent standards across the organization.
- Built in Support for TailwindCSS.
- Supports DaisyUI-Components and Theme.
- Added Starter-APP right into the January-CLI
- Build with January/January-recipes a repository of apps build with January framework
- Go January Docs: Documentation, coming soon!
January requires Go version 1.18
or higher to run. If you need to install or upgrade Go, visit the official Go download page.
To start setting up your project download the January-CLI tool from here January-CLI
Problem running January-CLI?
or,
Homebrew installation: coming soon!
Here is a basic example to create a simple web app with January-CLI:
./january-cli new github.com/your_username/your-repository_name
This command creates a new project directory named your-repository-name. After creating the project move the CLI to the project directory :
mv ./january-cli ./your-repository-name
and cd into the project directory:
cd your-repository-name/
The app comes bundled with a Makefile(currently only support macOS). Run the web app running:
make start
Building January...
January built!
Starting January...
January started!
INFO 2024/09/14 10:53:20 load session called
INFO 2024/09/14 10:53:20 Starting January server at http://127.0.0.1:9095/
INFO 2024/09/14 10:53:20 Quit the server with control+c
Visit http://localhost:9095 in your browser to the Home page. You can run the make stop
command to stop the web server.
make stop
Stopping January...
Stopped January!
your-repository-name/
│
├── data/
│ └── models.go
│
├── database/
│ └── docker-compsoe.yaml
│
├── handlers/
│ ├── handlers.go
│ └── handlerHelper.go
│
├── middleware/
│ └── middleware.go
│
├── migartions/
│
├── public/
│ ├── ico/
│ └── images/
│
├── views/
│ ├── layouts/
│ └── home.jet
│
├── .gitignore
├── Makefile
├── go.mod
├── init.january.go
├── januaryAppHelper.go
├── main.go
└── README.md
└── routes.go
Listed below are some of the common use-cases. If you want to see more code examples, please visit our Build With January repository
Create migration file using the january-cli. The following command will create two migration files: .up.sql and .down.sql in the
./january-cli make migration <migartion-name>
Run migrations with the january-cli. The following command will run the migration:
- Migrate Up: Run the latest up migration:
./january-cli migrate up
- Migrate Down: Run the latest down migration:
./january-cli migrate down
- Migrate Rest: Run all the down migrations and then run all the up migrations:
./january-cli migrate reset
Create a model with january-cli. The following command will create a model-name.go
file in the data directory:
./january-cli make model <model-name>
By default the Models are generate with Upper DAL to access the Database. After generating the modelname.go
it needs to me added to the Model struct in the data/models.go
.
var db *sql.DB
var upper db2.Session
type Models struct {
// any models inserted here (and in the new function)
// are easily accessible throughout the entire application
ModelNames ModelName // <---- your Model(s)
}
func New(databasePool *sql.DB) Models {
db = databasePool
switch os.Getenv("DATABASE_TYPE") {
case "mysql", "mariadb":
upper, _ = mysql.New(databasePool)
case "postgres", "postgresql":
upper, _ = postgresql.New(databasePool)
default:
// do nothing
}
return Models{
ModelNames: ModelName{},
}
}
Now, your models are ready to use. The Models come with pre-build CRUD methods:
// ModelName struct
type ModelName struct {
ID int `db:"id,omitempty"`
CreatedAt time.Time `db:"created_at"`
UpdatedAt time.Time `db:"updated_at"`
}
// Table returns the table name
func (t *ModelName) Table() string {
return "modelnames"
}
// GetAll gets all records from the database, using upper
func (t *ModelName) GetAll(condition up.Cond) ([]*ModelName, error) {
collection := upper.Collection(t.Table())
var all []*ModelName
res := collection.Find(condition)
err := res.All(&all)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return all, err
}
// Get gets one record from the database, by id, using upper
func (t *ModelName) Get(id int) (*ModelName, error) {
var one ModelName
collection := upper.Collection(t.Table())
res := collection.Find(up.Cond{"id": id})
err := res.One(&one)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &one, nil
}
// Update updates a record in the database, using upper
func (t *ModelName) Update(m ModelName) error {
m.UpdatedAt = time.Now()
collection := upper.Collection(t.Table())
res := collection.Find(m.ID)
err := res.Update(&m)
if err != nil {
return err
}
return nil
}
// Delete deletes a record from the database by id, using upper
func (t *ModelName) Delete(id int) error {
collection := upper.Collection(t.Table())
res := collection.Find(id)
err := res.Delete()
if err != nil {
return err
}
return nil
}
// Insert inserts a model into the database, using upper
func (t *ModelName) Insert(m ModelName) (int, error) {
m.CreatedAt = time.Now()
m.UpdatedAt = time.Now()
collection := upper.Collection(t.Table())
res, err := collection.Insert(m)
if err != nil {
return 0, err
}
id := getInsertID(res.ID())
return id, nil
}
// Builder is an example of using upper's sql builder
func (t *ModelName) Builder(id int) ([]*ModelName, error) {
collection := upper.Collection(t.Table())
var result []*ModelName
err := collection.Session().
SQL().
SelectFrom(t.Table()).
Where("id > ?", id).
OrderBy("id").
All(&result)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return result, nil
}
-
Connect to your Postgres database by supplying these values in the
.env
fileDATABASE_TYPE=postgres DATABASE_HOST=localhost DATABASE_PORT=5432 DATABASE_USER=postgres_use DATABASE_PASS=postgres_password DATABASE_NAME=postgres_db DATABASE_SSL_MODE=disable
-
Write your routes in the
routes.go
:func (a *application) routes() *chi.Mux { // GET a.get("/api/your-get-route", a.Handlers.GetHandler) // POST a.post("/api/your-post-route", a.Handlers.PostHandler) // PUT a.put("/api/your-put-route", a.Handlers.PutHandler) // PATCH a.patch("/api/your-patch-route", a.Handlers.PatchHandler) // DELETE a.delete("/api/your-delete-route", a.Handlers.DeleteHandler) }
-
Create a Handler and write your business login: Create a handler using the january-cli:
./january-cli make handler <your-handler-name>
The above command will create a handler named:
your-handler-name.go
in the handlers directory.func (h *Handlers) GetHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) { // Get path parameter pathParamVar := chi.URLParam(r, "pathParamVar") // Get query parameters queryParamVar := r.URL.Query().Get("queryParamVar") // Business Logic goes here: ... // declare return response struct var resp struct { Error bool `json:"error"` Message string `json:"message"` Value string `json:"value"` } resp.Error = false resp.Message = "Success" resp.Value = fromCache.(string) _ = h.App.WriteJson(w, http.StatusOk, resp) }
- I will be removing the Jet Templating support, the standard library support for templating is decent.
- MariaDB support
- Live-reloads
- Automatic Swagger Documentation
- File system support
- Support for Websockets, GraphQL and gRPC
Note: You may need to change permissions.
- Go to the Apple menu (🍎) in the top-left corner of your screen.
- Select "System Preferences" (or "System Settings" on newer macOS versions).
- Click on "Security & Privacy" (or just "Privacy & Security").
- In the "General" tab, look for a message near the bottom that says "january-cli was blocked from use because it is not from an identified developer" (if you don't see this message, try to open the app again).
- Click the "Open Anyway" button next to this message. You might need to click the lock icon and enter your password to make changes.
- A pop-up window will appear asking if you're sure you want to open the application. Click "Open" to run the app.
- The app should now open, and macOS will remember your choice, allowing you to open the app normally in the future.
Alternative Method: Using Terminal:
xattr -d com.apple.quarantine /path/to/downloaded/exectable/january-cli