A curated list of awesome Fiber middlewares, boilerplates, recipes, articles, and tools for the Go web framework.
Awesome Fiber is a curated directory of resources for the Fiber web framework in Go. It collects middlewares, boilerplates, example projects, articles, and tools to help developers build web applications faster. The project solves the problem of discovering high-quality, community-vetted extensions and learning materials for Fiber.
Go developers using or evaluating the Fiber framework who need production-ready components, project templates, or educational content. It's particularly valuable for backend engineers building REST APIs and web services.
Developers choose Awesome Fiber because it provides a single, trusted source for discovering vetted Fiber ecosystem resources, saving hours of searching GitHub and documentation. Its curated approach ensures quality and relevance compared to unorganized search results.
✨ A curated list of awesome Fiber middlewares, boilerplates, recipes, articles and tools.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Categorizes over 50 middlewares for authentication, security, logging, and more, including core, external, and third-party options, making it easy to find production-ready components.
Offers recipes, tutorials, articles, and videos with real-world examples, such as building REST APIs with PostgreSQL and JWT, accelerating the learning curve.
Links to benchmarks like TechEmpower and go-web-framework-benchmark, providing data-driven comparisons to other frameworks for informed decisions.
Aggregates vetted contributions from the Fiber ecosystem, ensuring a wide range of tools and best practices are discoverable in one place.
Third-party resources and middlewares may have inconsistent maintenance or documentation, as the list relies on community submissions without strict validation.
Serves only as a directory; developers must manually test and integrate each resource, which can add overhead compared to bundled solutions.
Community-maintained lists risk including deprecated or broken links over time, requiring users to verify resource compatibility independently.