Browse free open source Go Load Balancers and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source Go Load Balancers by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

  • Go from Code to Production URL in Seconds Icon
    Go from Code to Production URL in Seconds

    Cloud Run deploys apps in any language instantly. Scales to zero. Pay only when code runs.

    Skip the Kubernetes configs. Cloud Run handles HTTPS, scaling, and infrastructure automatically. Two million requests free per month.
    Try it free
  • Try Google Cloud Risk-Free With $300 in Credit Icon
    Try Google Cloud Risk-Free With $300 in Credit

    No hidden charges. No surprise bills. Cancel anytime.

    Use your credit across every product. Compute, storage, AI, analytics. When it runs out, 20+ products stay free. You only pay when you choose to.
    Start Free
  • 1
    CoreDNS

    CoreDNS

    CoreDNS is a DNS server that chains plugins

    CoreDNS is a DNS server/forwarder, written in Go, that chains plugins. Each plugin performs a (DNS) function. CoreDNS is a Cloud Native Computing Foundation graduated project. CoreDNS is a fast and flexible DNS server. The key word here is flexible: with CoreDNS you are able to do what you want with your DNS data by utilizing plugins. If some functionality is not provided out of the box you can add it by writing a plugin. CoreDNS can listen for DNS requests coming in over UDP/TCP (go'old DNS), TLS (RFC 7858), also called DoT, DNS over HTTP/2 - DoH - (RFC 8484) and gRPC (not a standard). Serve zone data from a file; both DNSSEC (NSEC only) and DNS are supported (file and auto). Retrieve zone data from primaries, i.e., act as a secondary server (AXFR only) (secondary). Sign zone data on-the-fly (dnssec). Load balancing of responses (loadbalance). Allow for zone transfers, i.e., act as a primary server (file + transfer). Automatically load zone files from disk (auto).
    Downloads: 4 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    ExternalDNS

    ExternalDNS

    Configure external DNS servers (AWS Route53, Google CloudDNS and other

    ExternalDNS synchronizes exposed Kubernetes Services and Ingresses with DNS providers. Inspired by Kubernetes DNS, Kubernetes' cluster-internal DNS server, ExternalDNS makes Kubernetes resources discoverable via public DNS servers. Like KubeDNS, it retrieves a list of resources (Services, Ingresses, etc.) from the Kubernetes API to determine the desired list of DNS records. Unlike KubeDNS, however, it's not a DNS server itself, but merely configures other DNS providers accordingly, e.g. AWS Route 53 or Google Cloud DNS. In a broader sense, ExternalDNS allows you to control DNS records dynamically via Kubernetes resources in a DNS provider-agnostic way. ExternalDNS' allows you to keep selected zones (via domain-filter) synchronized with Ingresses and Services of type=LoadBalancer in various cloud providers. ExternalDNS can become aware of the records it is managing therefore ExternalDNS can safely manage non-empty hosted zones.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next
MongoDB Logo MongoDB