Golang Build Flags:

To see the intermediate assembly instructions the compiler generates for your #=golang program use: go build -gcflags=”-S” @rakyll

Slides: http://go-talks.appspot.com/github.com/rakyll/talks/gcinspect/talk.slide#7

Automating Network Security in Go:

ACME: Automated Certificate Management Environment

Tools:

rsc.io/letsencrypt

golang.org/x/crypto/acme/autocert

github.com/dkumor/acmewrapper

github.com/xenolf/lego/acme

Slides: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B-OxZ0LoeTvGVDJXTThUT1Zwa2M/view

One Giant Computer:

Kelsey Hightower then came on stage and with 6/7 slides and an awesome kube federation demo using kargo was able to show how a developer could abstract the idea of caring about docker/kubernetes etc and just thinking of the world as a giant computer in which they want to run their application on.

Due to Golangs awesome ability to create a statically deployable binary, with one command he was able to package and ship his application across 4 clusters in different regions without even creating a docker file.

More..

There was also an awesome talk about “refactoring” I will look for more details and add it here.

*Most of the content here was grabbed from tweets / slide decks to summarize the events that unfolded at DotGoEU 2016 in Paris