Go programming on a Raspberry Pi
Way to Go

© Lead Image © Nelli Valova, 123RF.com
We show you how to create a Go web app that controls Raspberry Pi I/O.
Go, or GoLang [1], is used widely for web development. Created by Google in 2009, Go is one of the fastest growing programming languages. One of its advantages is speed: Go compiles directly to native executable files in Windows, macOS, iOS, and Linux operating systems. However, Go can also be run in interpreted mode, like Python, while debugging. In this article, I create a Go web app that talks to the Raspberry Pi hardware.
Getting Started
To install Go on a Rasp Pi, enter:
$ sudo apt-get install golang
To test the install, you can check the Go version number:
$ go version go version go1.7.4 linux/arm
A simple "Hello World" Go program named hello.go
,
package main func main() { println("Hello World"); }
can be run in interpreted mode with:
$ go run hello.go Hello World
Running in interpreted mode is handy when you are doing a lot of debugging, but the compiled Go program runs considerably faster. To compile and run the hello.go example, enter:
$ go build hello.go $ ./hello Hello World
Now that the Rasp Pi has Go installed and working, the next step is to set up the Rasp Pi hardware.
Raspberry Pi Setup
Raspberry Pi connects to sensors and hardware through the general purpose input/output (GPIO) pins. For my test setup, I connected an LED to physical pin 7 (Figure 1) and a 330-ohm resistor to prevent damage to my Rasp Pi.

By default, all the Rasp Pi GPIO pins are set as inputs, but you can configure the mode of pin 7 to output
then set the output (light the LED), and read back the pin status – all with the gpio
command-line utility:
$ gpio mode 7 output # set pin 7 as an output $ gpio write 7 1 # 1=set, 0=reset $ gpio read 7 1
The gpio write 7 1
and gpio write 7 0
commands let you test the circuit and toggle the LED on and off.
Go and GPIO
A number of Go libraries and options can read and write to GPIO pins. For this example, I shell out (i.e., spawn programs through an intermediate shell ) to the gpio
command-line utility. For prototyping, I like this approach because I can test and verify the GPIO commands manually before writing any code.
Listing 1, writepin7.go
, uses the os/exec library to create the shell command variable testCmd
(line 10) that defines the gpio
command and its parameters. The shell command is executed by testCmd.Output()
(line 11). The gpio write
command has no output, but the gpio read
(defined in line 18) returns the state of the GPIO pin (line 24).
Listing 1
writepin7.go
To run the code in interpreted mode, enter:
$ go run writepin7.go GPIO Pin 7 value : 1
If the circuit is wired correctly, the light should be on.
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