1.8 KiB
1.8 KiB
Technical Decisions
2026-04-25: v0 Tech Stack & Architecture
Context: Project skeleton was created with only cobra CLI. We needed a concrete tech stack and package layout to begin implementation.
Decisions:
| Area | Choice | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| HTTP framework | Gin | Most widely adopted Go web framework, mature middleware ecosystem |
| ORM | GORM | SQLite-first dev, PostgreSQL option later; GORM abstracts dialect differences |
| Config management | Viper | YAML + env vars + CLI flags three-way merge, built for cobra integration |
| Database | SQLite (v0) → PostgreSQL (future) | SQLite zero setup for dev; repo interface isolates the switch |
| File storage | Local disk (v0) → S3 (future) | Backend interface (internal/storage) hides implementation |
| File identity | UUID | Distributed-friendly, no coordination needed; cost is negligible for file metadata |
| Token strategy | JWT, refresh token stored in DB | Enables server-side revocation (admin kick, logout-all-devices) |
| Pagination | OFFSET/LIMIT | Simple, sufficient for v0; migrate to cursor-based if needed |
| API response format | {code, message, data} |
Consistent envelope across all endpoints |
Architecture: Four-layer model — Handler (Gin) → Service (business logic) → Repository (GORM data access) + Storage (file I/O). Each layer depends only on interfaces of the layer below.
Consequences:
- Handler layer has no business logic; Service layer is reusable across REST API, WebDAV, and future Nextcloud API.
- Repository interfaces keep DB swappable; future PostgreSQL implementation only needs a new package.
- Refresh token in DB adds a
sessionstable and arepository.SessionRepositoryinterface. - UUID dependency:
github.com/google/uuidto be added. - Gin middleware chain: requestid → logger → cors → auth (route-group-scoped).