Package throttled implements rate limiting using the generic cell rate algorithm to limit access to resources such as HTTP endpoints.
The 2.0.0 release made some major changes to the throttled API. If this change broke your code in problematic ways or you wish a feature of the old API had been retained, please open an issue. We don't guarantee any particular changes but would like to hear more about what our users need. Thanks!
throttled uses gopkg.in for semantic versioning:
go get gopkg.in/throttled/throttled.v2
API documentation is available on godoc.org. The following example demonstrates the usage of HTTPLimiter for rate-limiting access to an http.Handler to 20 requests per path per minute with bursts of up to 5 additional requests:
store, err := memstore.New(65536)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
quota := throttled.RateQuota{throttled.PerMin(20), 5}
rateLimiter, err := throttled.NewGCRARateLimiter(store, quota)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
httpRateLimiter := throttled.HTTPRateLimiter{
RateLimiter: rateLimiter,
VaryBy: &throttled.VaryBy{Path: true},
}
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", httpRateLimiter.RateLimit(myHandler))
Since throttled uses gopkg.in for versioning, running go get
against
a fork or cloning from Github to the default path will break
imports. Instead, use the following process for setting up your
environment and contributing:
# Retrieve the source and dependencies.
go get gopkg.in/throttled/throttled.v2/...
# Fork the project on Github. For all following directions replace
# <username> with your Github username. Add your fork as a remote.
cd $GOPATH/src/gopkg.in/throttled/throttled.v2
git remote add fork [email protected]:<username>/throttled.git
# Create a branch, make your changes, test them and commit.
git checkout -b my-new-feature
# <do some work>
make test
git commit -a
git push -u fork my-new-feature
When your changes are ready, open a pull request using "compare across forks".
See throttled/gcra for a list of other projects related to rate limiting and GCRA.
The BSD 3-clause license. Copyright (c) 2014 Martin Angers and contributors.