golang-performance

por samber

Patrones y metodología de optimización de rendimiento en Golang: si hay un cuello de botella X, entonces aplica Y. Cubre reducción de asignaciones, eficiencia de CPU, diseño de memoria, ajuste de GC, pooling, caching y optimización de rutas críticas. Úsalo cuando el perfilado o los benchmarks hayan identificado un cuello de botella y necesites el patrón de optimización adecuado para solucionarlo. También úsalo al realizar una revisión de código de rendimiento para sugerir mejoras o benchmarks que ayuden a identificar ganancias rápidas de rendimiento. No es para metodología de medición (→...

npx skills add https://github.com/samber/cc-skills-golang --skill golang-performance

Persona: You are a Go performance engineer. You never optimize without profiling first — measure, hypothesize, change one thing, re-measure.

Thinking mode: Use ultrathink for performance optimization. Shallow analysis misidentifies bottlenecks — deep reasoning ensures the right optimization is applied to the right problem.

Modes:

  • Review mode (architecture) — broad scan of a package or service for structural anti-patterns (missing connection pools, unbounded goroutines, wrong data structures). Use up to 3 parallel sub-agents split by concern: (1) allocation and memory layout, (2) I/O and concurrency, (3) algorithmic complexity and caching.
  • Review mode (hot path) — focused analysis of a single function or tight loop identified by the caller. Work sequentially; one sub-agent is sufficient.
  • Optimize mode — a bottleneck has been identified by profiling. Follow the iterative cycle (define metric → baseline → diagnose → improve → compare) sequentially — one change at a time is the discipline.

Dependencies:

  • benchstat: go install golang.org/x/perf/cmd/benchstat@latest

Go Performance Optimization

Core Philosophy

  1. Profile before optimizing — intuition about bottlenecks is wrong ~80% of the time. Use pprof to find actual hot spots (→ See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-troubleshooting skill)
  2. Allocation reduction yields the biggest ROI — Go's GC is fast but not free. Reducing allocations per request often matters more than micro-optimizing CPU
  3. Document optimizations — add code comments explaining why a pattern is faster, with benchmark numbers when available. Future readers need context to avoid reverting an "unnecessary" optimization

Rule Out External Bottlenecks First

Before optimizing Go code, verify the bottleneck is in your process — if 90% of latency is a slow DB query or API call, reducing allocations won't help.

Diagnose: 1- fgprof — captures on-CPU and off-CPU (I/O wait) time; if off-CPU dominates, the bottleneck is external 2- go tool pprof (goroutine profile) — many goroutines blocked in net.(*conn).Read or database/sql = external wait 3- Distributed tracing (OpenTelemetry) — span breakdown shows which upstream is slow

When external: optimize that component instead — query tuning, caching, connection pools, circuit breakers (→ See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-database skill, Caching Patterns).

Iterative Optimization Methodology

The cycle: Define Goals → Benchmark → Diagnose → Improve → Benchmark

  1. Define your metric — latency, throughput, memory, or CPU? Without a target, optimizations are random
  2. Write an atomic benchmark — isolate one function per benchmark to avoid result contamination (→ See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-benchmark skill)
  3. Measure baselinego test -bench=BenchmarkMyFunc -benchmem -count=6 ./pkg/... | tee /tmp/report-1.txt
  4. Diagnose — use the Diagnose lines in each deep-dive section to pick the right tool
  5. Improve — apply ONE optimization at a time with an explanatory comment
  6. Comparebenchstat /tmp/report-1.txt /tmp/report-2.txt to confirm statistical significance
  7. Commit — paste the benchstat output in the commit body so reviewers and future readers see the exact improvement; follow the perf(scope): summary commit type
  8. Repeat — increment report number, tackle next bottleneck

Refer to library documentation for known patterns before inventing custom solutions. Keep all /tmp/report-*.txt files as an audit trail.

Decision Tree: Where Is Time Spent?

BottleneckSignal (from pprof)Action
Too many allocationsalloc_objects high in heap profileMemory optimization
CPU-bound hot loopfunction dominates CPU profileCPU optimization
GC pauses / OOMhigh GC%, container limitsRuntime tuning
Network / I/O latencygoroutines blocked on I/OI/O & networking
Repeated expensive worksame computation/fetch multiple timesCaching patterns
Wrong algorithmO(n²) where O(n) existsAlgorithmic complexity
Lock contentionmutex/block profile hot→ See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-concurrency skill
Slow queriesDB time dominates traces→ See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-database skill

Common Mistakes

MistakeFix
Optimizing without profilingProfile with pprof first — intuition is wrong ~80% of the time
Default http.Client without TransportMaxIdleConnsPerHost defaults to 2; set to match your concurrency level
Logging in hot loopsLog calls prevent inlining and allocate even when the level is disabled. Use slog.LogAttrs
panic/recover as control flowpanic allocates a stack trace and unwinds the stack; use error returns
unsafe without benchmark proofOnly justified when profiling shows >10% improvement in a verified hot path
No GC tuning in containersSet GOMEMLIMIT to 80-90% of container memory to prevent OOM kills
reflect.DeepEqual in production50-200x slower than typed comparison; use slices.Equal, maps.Equal, bytes.Equal

Deep Dives

  • Memory Optimization — allocation patterns, backing array leaks, sync.Pool, struct alignment
  • CPU Optimization — inlining, cache locality, false sharing, ILP, reflection avoidance
  • I/O & Networking — HTTP transport config, streaming, JSON performance, cgo, batch operations
  • Runtime Tuning — GOGC, GOMEMLIMIT, GC diagnostics, GOMAXPROCS, PGO
  • Caching Patterns — algorithmic complexity, compiled patterns, singleflight, work avoidance
  • Production Observability — Prometheus metrics, PromQL queries, continuous profiling, alerting rules

CI Regression Detection

Automate benchmark comparison in CI to catch regressions before they reach production. → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-benchmark skill for benchdiff and cob setup.

Cross-References

  • → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-benchmark skill for benchmarking methodology, benchstat, and b.Loop() (Go 1.24+)
  • → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-troubleshooting skill for pprof workflow, escape analysis diagnostics, and performance debugging
  • → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-data-structures skill for slice/map preallocation and strings.Builder
  • → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-concurrency skill for worker pools, sync.Pool API, goroutine lifecycle, and lock contention
  • → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-safety skill for defer in loops, slice backing array aliasing
  • → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-database skill for connection pool tuning and batch processing
  • → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-observability skill for continuous profiling in production

Más skills de samber

golang-code-style
samber
Golang code style conventions — line length and breaking, variable declarations, control flow clarity, when comments help vs hurt. Use when writing or reviewing Go code, asking about style or clarity, or establishing project coding standards. Not for naming conventions (→ See `samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-naming` skill), linter configuration (→ See `samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-lint` skill), or doc comments (→ See `samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-documentation` skill).
developmentcode-review
golang-testing
samber
Production-ready Golang tests — table-driven tests, testify suites and mocks, parallel tests, fuzzing, fixtures, goroutine leak detection with goleak, snapshot testing, code coverage, integration tests, idiomatic test naming. Use when writing or reviewing Go tests, choosing a testing approach, setting up Go test CI, or debugging flaky/slow tests. For testify-specific APIs see `samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-stretchr-testify`; for measurement methodology see...
developmenttestingcode-review
golang-design-patterns
samber
Patrones de diseño idiomáticos en Golang: opciones funcionales, constructores, flujo y cascada de errores, gestión y ciclo de vida de recursos, apagado elegante, resiliencia, arquitectura, inyección de dependencias, manejo de datos, streaming y más. Aplicar al elegir explícitamente entre patrones arquitectónicos, implementar opciones funcionales, diseñar APIs de constructores, configurar un apagado elegante, aplicar patrones de resiliencia o preguntar qué patrón idiomático de Go se ajusta a un problema específico.
developmentdesigncode-review
golang-error-handling
samber
Idiomatic Golang error handling — creation, wrapping with %w, errors.Is/As, errors.Join, custom error types, sentinel errors, panic/recover, the single handling rule, structured logging with slog, HTTP request logging middleware, and samber/oops for production errors. Built to make logs usable at scale with log aggregation 3rd-party tools. Apply when creating, wrapping, inspecting, or logging errors in Go code. For samber/oops specifics → See `samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-samber-oops`...
developmentcode-review
golang-security
samber
Prácticas recomendadas de seguridad y prevención de vulnerabilidades para Golang. Abarca inyección (SQL, comandos, XSS), criptografía, seguridad del sistema de archivos, seguridad de red, cookies, gestión de secretos, seguridad de memoria y registro. Aplicar al escribir, revisar o auditar código Go por seguridad, o al trabajar en cualquier código riesgoso que involucre criptografía, E/S, gestión de secretos, manejo de entrada de usuario o autenticación. Incluye configuración de herramientas de seguridad.
securitycode-reviewdevelopment
golang-database
samber
Guía completa para el acceso a bases de datos en Go: consultas parametrizadas, escaneo de estructuras, columnas anulables, transacciones, niveles de aislamiento, SELECT FOR UPDATE, pool de conexiones, procesamiento por lotes, propagación de contexto y herramientas de migración. Úsela al escribir, revisar o depurar código Golang que interactúe con PostgreSQL, MariaDB, MySQL o SQLite; para pruebas de bases de datos; o para preguntas sobre database/sql, sqlx o pgx. NO genera esquemas de bases de datos ni SQL de migración.
developmentdatabase
golang-lint
samber
Mejores prácticas de linting y configuración de golangci-lint para proyectos Golang: ejecutar linters, configurar .golangci.yml, suprimir advertencias con directivas nolint, interpretar la salida de lint y seleccionar linters. Úselo al configurar golangci-lint, preguntar sobre advertencias de lint o supresiones nolint, configurar herramientas de calidad de código o elegir linters. También úselo cuando el usuario mencione golangci-lint, go vet, staticcheck o revive.
developmentcode-reviewtesting
golang-troubleshooting
samber
Troubleshoot Golang programs systematically - find and fix the root cause. Use when encountering bugs, crashes, deadlocks, or unexpected behavior in Go code. Covers debugging methodology, common Go pitfalls, test-driven debugging, pprof setup and capture, Delve debugger, race detection, GODEBUG tracing, and production debugging. Start here for any 'something is wrong' situation. Not for interpreting profiles or benchmarking (→ See `samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-benchmark` skill) or applying...
developmenttesting