quic-go is an implementation of the QUIC protocol (RFC 9000, RFC 9001, RFC 9002) in Go, including the Unreliable Datagram Extension (RFC 9221) and Datagram Packetization Layer Path MTU Discovery (DPLPMTUD, RFC 8899). It has support for HTTP/3 (RFC 9114), including QPACK (RFC 9204).
In addition to the RFCs listed above, it currently implements the IETF QUIC draft-29. Support for draft-29 will eventually be dropped, as it is phased out of the ecosystem.
We currently support Go 1.18.x and Go 1.19.x.
Running tests:
go test ./...
Take a look at this echo example.
See the example server. Starting a QUIC server is very similar to the standard lib http in go:
http.Handle("/", http.FileServer(http.Dir(wwwDir)))
http3.ListenAndServeQUIC("localhost:4242", "/path/to/cert/chain.pem", "/path/to/privkey.pem", nil)
See the example client. Use a http3.RoundTripper
as a Transport
in a http.Client
.
http.Client{
Transport: &http3.RoundTripper{},
}
Project | Description | Stars |
---|---|---|
algernon | Small self-contained pure-Go web server with Lua, Markdown, HTTP/2, QUIC, Redis and PostgreSQL support | |
caddy | Fast, multi-platform web server with automatic HTTPS | |
go-ipfs | IPFS implementation in go | |
syncthing | Open Source Continuous File Synchronization | |
traefik | The Cloud Native Application Proxy | |
v2ray-core | A platform for building proxies to bypass network restrictions | |
cloudflared | A tunneling daemon that proxies traffic from the Cloudflare network to your origins | |
OONI Probe | The Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI) aims to empower decentralized efforts in documenting Internet censorship around the world. | |
YoMo | Streaming Serverless Framework for Geo-distributed System |
We are always happy to welcome new contributors! We have a number of self-contained issues that are suitable for first-time contributors, they are tagged with help wanted. If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out by opening an issue or leaving a comment.