cmd/go
Author(s): Michael Matloob
Last updated: 2021-04-22
Discussion at https://golang.org/issue/45713.
This proposal describes a new workspace mode in the go
command for editing multiple modules. The presence of a go.work
file in the working directory or a containing directory will put the go
command into workspace mode. The go.work
file specifies a set of local modules that comprise a workspace. When invoked in workspace mode, the go
command will always select these modules and a consistent set of dependencies.
These terms are used often in this document. The Go Modules Reference and its Glossary provide more detail.
go
command is invoked. This module is used as the starting point when running MVS. This proposal proposes allowing multiple main modules.go
command determines which modules and packages it's building and how dependencies are resolved. For example the -mod=readonly
mode uses the versions of the modules listed in the go.mod
file and fails if it would need to add in a new module dependency, and the -mod=vendor
mode uses the modules in the vendor
directory.Users often want to make changes across multiple modules: for instance, to introduce a new interface in a package in one module along with a usage of that interface in another module. Normally, the go
command recognizes a single “main” module the user can edit. Other modules are read-only and are loaded from the module cache. The replace
directive is the exception: it allows users to replace the resolved version of a module with a working version on disk. But working with the replace directive can often be awkward: each module developer might have working versions at different locations on disk, so having the directive in a file that needs to be distributed with the module isn't a good fit for all use cases.
gopls
offers users a convenient way to make changes across modules without needing to manipulate replacements. When multiple modules are opened in a gopls
workspace, it synthesizes a single go.mod file, called a supermodule that pulls in each of the modules being worked on. The supermodule results in a single build list allowing the tooling to surface changes made in a dependency module to a dependent module. But this means that gopls
is building with a different set of versions than an invocation of the go
command from the command line, potentially producing different results. Users would have a better experience if they could create a configuration that could be used by gopls
as well as their direct invocations of cmd/go
and other tools. See the Multi-project gopls workspaces document and proposal issues #37720 and #32394.
This proposal specifically tries to improve the experience in the go
command (and the tools using it) for working in multi-module workspaces. That means the following are out of scope:
This proposal does not address the problem of tagging and releasing new versions of modules so that new versions of dependent modules depend on new versions of the dependency modules. But these sorts of features don't belong in the go
command. Even so, the workspace file can be useful for a future tool or feature that solves the tagging and releasing problem: the workspace would help the tool know the set of modules the user is working on, and together with the module dependency graph, the tool would be able to determine versions for the new modules.
It would be useful for module developers to build and test their modules with the same build list seen by users of their modules. Unfortunately, there are many such build lists because those build lists depend on the set of modules the user‘s module requires, and the user needs to know what those modules are. So this proposal doesn’t try to solve that problem. But this proposal can make it easier to switch between multiple configurations, which opens the door for other tools for testing modules in different configurations.
-workfile
flagThe new -workfile
flag will be accepted by module-aware build commands and most go mod
subcommands. The following is a table of which commands can operate in workspace mode and which can operate in module mode. Commands that can operate in workspace mode will accept -workfile
and follow the workspace resolution steps below.
go mod download
, go mod graph
, go mod verify
and go mod why
all have meanings based on the build list, so they will all work in workspace mode according to the build list. go mod edit
, go mod init
go mod tidy
and go mod vendor
only make sense in a single module context, so they will ignore the workspace. go get
could make sense in workspace mode but not in all contexts, so it will also ignore the workspace.
Subcommand | Module | Workspace |
---|---|---|
mod init | o | |
mod initwork | o | |
mod download | o | o |
mod graph | o | o |
mod verify | o | o |
mod why | o | o |
mod edit | o | |
mod tidy | o | |
mod vendor | o | |
get | o | |
install | o | |
list | o | o |
build | o | o |
test | o | o |
If -workfile
is set to off
, workspace mode will be disabled. If it is auto
(the default), workspace mode will be enabled if a file named go.work
is found in the current directory (or any of its parent directories), and disabled otherwise. If -workfile
names a path to an existing file that ends in .work
, workspace mode will be enabled. Any other value is an error.
If workspace mode is on, -mod=readonly
must be specified either implicitly or explicitly. Otherwise, the go
command will return an error. If -mod
is not explicitly set and go.work
file is found, -mod=readonly
is set. (That is, it takes precedence over the existence of a vendor/module.txt which would normally imply -mod=vendor
.)
If workspace mode is on, the go.work
file (either named by -workfile
or the nearest one found when -workfile
is auto
) will be parsed to determine the three parameters for workspace mode: a Go version, a list of directories, and a list of replacements.
If workspace mode is on, the selected workspace file will show up in the go env
variable GOWORK
. When not in workspace mode, GOWORK
will be off
.
go.work
fileThe following is an example of a valid go.work
file:
go 1.17 use ( ./baz // foo.org/bar/baz ./tools // golang.org/x/tools ) replace golang.org/x/net => example.com/fork/net v1.4.5
The go.work
file will have a similar syntax as the go.mod
file. Restrictions in go.mod
lexical elements still apply to the go.work
file
The go.work
file has three directives: the go
directive, the use
directive, and the replace
directive.
go
DirectiveThe go.work
file requires a go
directive. The go
directive accepts a version just as it does in a go.mod
file. The go
directive is used to allow adding new semantics to the go.work
files without breaking previous users. It does not override go versions in individual modules.
Example:
go 1.17
use
directiveThe use
directive takes an absolute or relative path to a use containing a go.mod
file as an argument. The syntax of the path is the same as directory replacements in replace
directives. The path must be to a module directory containing a go.mod
file. The go.work
file must contain at least one use
directive. The go
command may optionally edit the comments on the use
directive when doing any operation in workspace mode to add the module path from the directory's go.mod
file.
Note that the use
directive has no restriction on where the directory is located: module directories listed in go.work
file can be located outside the directory the go.work
file itself is in.
Example:
use ( ./tools // golang.org/x/tools ./mod // golang.org/x/mod )
Each directory listed (in this example ./tools
and ./mod
) refers to a single module: the module specified by the go.mod
file in that directory. It does not refer to any other modules specified by go.mod
files in subdirectories of that directory.
The modules specified by use
directives in the go.work
file are the workspace modules. The workspace modules will collectively be the main modules when doing a build in workspace mode. These modules are always selected by MVS with the version ""
, and their replace
and exclude
directives are applied.
replace
directiveThe replace
directive has the same syntax and semantics as the replace directive in a go.mod
file.
Example:
replace ( golang.org/x/tools => ../tools golang.org/x/mod v0.4.1 => example.com/mymod v0.5 )
The replace
directives in the go.work
are applied in addition to and with higher precedence than replaces
in the workspace modules. A replace
directive in the go.work
file overrides replace directives in workspace modules applying to the same module or module version. If two or more workspace modules replace the same module or module version with different module versions or directories, and there is not an overriding replace
in the go.work
file, the go
command will report an error. The go
command will report errors for replacements of workspace modules that don't refer to the same directory as the workspace module. If any of those exist in a workspace module replacing another workspace module, the user will have to explicitly replace that workspace module with its path on disk.
If workspace mode is on and the go.work
file has valid syntax, the Go version provided by the go.work
file is used to control the exact behavior of workspace mode. For the first version of Go supporting workspace mode and unless changes are made in following versions the following semantics apply:
When doing a build operation under workspace mode the go
command will try to find a go.mod
file. If a go.mod
file is found, its containing directory must be declared with a use
directive in the go.work
file. Because the build list is determined by the workspace rather than a go.mod
file, outside of a module, the go
command will proceed as normal to build any non-relative package paths or patterns. Outside of a module, a package composed of .go
files listed on the command line resolves its imports according to the workspace, and the package‘s imports will be resolved according to the workspace’s build list.
The all
pattern in workspace mode resolves to the union of all
for over the set of workspace modules. all
is the set of packages needed to build and test packages in the workspace modules.
To construct the build list, each of the workspace modules are main modules and are selected by MVS and their replace
and exclude
directives will be applied. replace
directives in the go.work
file override the replaces
in the workspace modules. Similar to a single main module in module mode, each of the main modules will have version ""
, but MVS will traverse other versions of the main modules that are depended on by transitive module dependencies. For the purposes of lazy loading, we load the explicit dependencies of each workspace module when doing the deepening scan.
Module vendor directories are ignored in workspace mode because of the requirement of -mod=readonly
.
go.work
filesA new go work
command will be added with the following subcommands go work init
, go work use
, and go work edit
.
go work init
will take as arguments a (potentially empty) list of directories it will use to write out a go.work
file in the working directory with a go
statement and a use
directive listing each of the directories. go work init
will take an optional -o
flag to specify a different output file path, which can be used to create workspace files for other configurations.
go work use
will take as arguments a set of arguments to use in the go.work file. If the -r
flag is added, recursive subdirectories of the listed directories will also be listed in use directives. Use directives with directories that don't exist, but that match the arguments to go work use
will be removed from the go.work
file.
go work edit
will work similarly to go mod edit
and take the following flags:
-fmt
will reformat the go.work
file-go=version
will set the file's go
directive to version
-use=path
and -dropuse=path
will add and drop a use directive for the given path-replace
and -dropreplace
will work exactly as they do for go mod edit
go work sync
pushes the module versions of dependency modules back into the go.mod files of the dependency modules. It does this by calculating the build list in the workspace, and then upgrading the dependencies of the workspace's modules to the versions in the workspace buildlist. Because of MVS the versions in the workspace must be at least the same as the versions in each component module.
This proposal addresses these workflows among others:
One common workflow is when a user wants to add a feature in an upstream module and make use of the feature in their own module. Currently, they might open the two modules in their editor through gopls, which will create a supermodule requiring and replacing both of the modules, and creating a single build list used for both of the modules. The editor tooling and builds done through the editor will use that build list, but the user will not have access to the ‘supermodule’ outside their editor: go command invocations run in their terminal outside the editor will use a different build list. The user can change their go.mod to add a replace, which will be reflected in both the editor and their go command invocations, but this is a change they will need to remember to revert before submitting.
When these changes are done often, for example because a project's code base is split among several modules, a user might want to have a consistent configuration used to join the modules together. In that case the user will want to configure their editor and the go
command to always use a single build list when working in those modules. One way to do this is to work in a top level module that transitively requires the others, if it exists, and replace the dependencies. But they then need to remember to not check in the replace and always need to run their go commands from that designated module.
As an example, the gopls
code base in golang.org/x/tools/internal/lsp
might want to add a new function to golang.org/x/mod/modfile
package and start using it. If the user has the golang.org/x/mod
and golang.org/x/tools
repos in the same directory they might run:
go mod initwork ./mod ./tools
which will produce this file:
go 1.17 use ( ./mod // golang.org/x/mod ./tools // golang.org/x/tools )
Then they could work on the new function in golang.org/x/mod/modfile
and its usage in golang.org/x/tools/internal/lsp
and when run from any directory in the workspace the go
command would present a consistent build list. When they were satisfied with their change, they could release a new version of golang.org/x/mod
, update golang.org/x/tools
's go.mod
to require the new version of golang.org/x/mod
, and then turn off workspace mode with -workfile=off
to make sure the change behaves as expected.
A further variant of the above is a module that depends on another module in the same repository. In this case checking in go.mod files that require and replace each other is not as much of a problem, but especially as the number of modules grows keeping them in sync becomes more difficult. If a user wants to keep the same build list as they move between directories so that they can continue to test against the same configuration, they will need to make sure all the modules replace each other, which is error prone. It would be far more convenient to have a single configuration linking all the modules together. Of course, this use case has the additional problem of updating the requirements on the replaced modules in the repository. This is a case of the problem of updating version requirements on released modules which is out of scope for this proposal.
Our goal is that when there are several tightly coupled modules in the same repository, users would choose to create go.work
files defining the workspace using the modules in those repositories instead of adding replaces
in the go.mod
files. Perhaps the creation of the file can be automated by an external tool that scans for all the go.mod
files recursively contained in a directory. These go.work
files should not be checked into the repositories so that they don‘t override the workspaces users explicitly define. Checking in go.work
files could also lead to CI/CD systems not testing the actual set of version requirements on a module and that version requirements among the repository’s modules are properly incremented to use changes in the modules. And of course, if a repository contains only a single module, or unrelated modules, there's not much utility to adding a go.work
file because each user may have a different directory structure on their computer outside of that repository.
As a simple example the gopls
binary is in the module golang.org/x/tools/gopls
which depends on other packages in the golang.org/x/tools
module. Currently, building and testing the top-level gopls
code is done by entering the directory of the golang.org/x/tools/gopls
module which replaces its usage of the golang.org/tools/module
:
module golang.org/x/tools/gopls go 1.12 require ( ... golang.org/x/tools v0.1.0 ... ) replace golang.org/x/tools => ../
This replace
can be removed and replaced with a go.work
file that includes both modules in the directory above the checkout of the golang.org/x/tools
// golang.org/x/tools/go.work go 1.17 use ( ./tools ./tools/gopls )
This allows any of the tests in either module to be run from anywhere in the repo. Of course, to release the modules, the golang.org/x/tools
module needs to be tagged and released, and then the golang.org/x/gopls
module needs to require that new release.
Users might want to easily be able to test their modules with different configurations of dependencies. For instance, they might want to test their module using the development versions of the dependencies, using the build list determined using the module as a single main module, and using a build list with alternate versions of dependencies that are commonly used. By making a workspace with the development versions of the dependencies and another adding the alternative versions of the dependencies with replaces, it's easy to switch between the three configurations.
Users who want to test using a subset of the workspace modules can also easily comment out some of the use directives in their workspace file instead of making separate workspace files with the appropriate subset of workspace modules, if that works better for their workflows.
gopls
With this change, users will be able to configure gopls
to use go.work
files describing their workspace. gopls
can pass the workspace to the go
command in its invocations if it's running a version of Go that supports workspaces, or can easily rewrite the workspace file into a supermodule for earlier versions. The semantics of workspace mode are not quite the same as for a supermodule in general (for instance ...
and all
have different meanings) but are the same or close enough for the cases that matter.
GOPATH
-like setupWhile this proposal does not aim to completely recreate all GOPATH
workflows, it can be used to create a setup that shares some aspects of the GOPATH
setup: A user who is working with a set of modules in GOPATH
, but in GOPATH
mode so that all dependencies are resolved from the GOPATH
tree can add a go.work
file to the base of a GOPATH
directory that lists all the modules in that GOPATH
(and even those in other GOPATH
directories, if their path has multiple elements). Then all their dependencies that are under that GOPATH
directory will continue to be resolved from those locations.
Of course there are caveats to this workflow: GOPATH
packages that are not contained in a module can't be added to the workspace, and the go.work
file needs to be manually maintained to add modules instead of walking a directory tree like GOPATH
mode does. And opting into workspace mode piecemeal by adding modules one by one can be frustrating because the modules outside of the new workspace will require -modfile
to be set to off
or another go.work
file that includes it. But even with these differences, used this way, go.work
can recreate some of the convenience of GOPATH
while still providing the benefits of modules.
workfile
flagOne alternative that was considered for disabling module mode would be to have module mode be an option for the -mod
flag. -mod=work
would be the default and users could set any other value to turn off workspace mode. This removes the redundant knob that exists in this proposal where workspace mode is set independently of the -mod
flag, but only -mod=readonly
is allowed. The reason this alternative was adopted for this proposal is that it could be unintuitive and hard for users to remember to set -mod=readonly
to turn workspace mode off. Users might think to set -mod=mod
to turn workspace mode off even though they don't intend to modify their go.mod
file.
This also avoids conflicting defaults: the existence of a go.work
file implies workspace mode, but the existence of vendor/module.txt
implies -mod=vendor
. Separating the configurations makes it clear that the go.work
file takes precedence.
But regardless of the above, it‘s useful to have a way to specify the path to a different go.work
file similar to the -modfile
flag for the same reasons that -modfile
exists. Given that -workfile
exists it’s natural to add a -workfile=off
option to turn off workspace mode.
go.work
fileThe configuration of multi-module workspaces is put in a file rather than being passed through an environment variable or flag because there are multiple parameters for configuration that would be difficult to put into a single flag or environment variable and unwieldy to put into multiple.
The go
command locates go.work
files the same way it locates go.mod
files to make it easy for users already familiar with modules to learn the rules for whether their current directory is in a workspace and which one.
go.work
files allow users to operate in directories outside of any modules but still use the workspace build list. This makes it easy for users to have a GOPATH
-like user experience by placing a go.work
file in their home directory linking their modules together.
Like the go.mod
file, we want the format of the configuration for multi-module workspaces to be machine writable and human-readable. Though there are other popular configuration formats such as yaml and json, they can often be confusing or annoying to write. The format used by the go.mod
file is already familar to Go programmers, and is easy for both humans and computers to read and write.
Modules are listed by the directory containing the module‘s go.mod
file rather than listing the paths to the go.mod
files themselves to avoid the redundant basename in every path. Alternatively, if the go.mod
files were listed directly it would be more clear that directories aren’t being searched for all modules contained under them but rather refer to a single module. Modules are required to be listed explicitly instead of allowing for patterns that match all modules under a directory because those entries would require slow directory walks each time the go
command would need to load a workspace. Because a module's path is not always clear from its directory name, we will allow the go command add comments on the use
directive with the module path.
Requiring the directories listed in the go.work
file to have go.mod
files means that projects without go.mod
files can‘t be added to a workspace even though they can be required as implicit modules in go.mod
files. To support these we would have to add to the go.work
file some way of associating the directories with go.mod
files. But these projects are already getting more rare and the missing go.mod
can be worked around by adding a temporary go.mod
file to the project’s directory.
The naming of the go
and replace
directives is straightforward: they are the same as in go.mod
. The use
directive is called use
because it causes the go.work file to use a directory as a main module. Using module
to list the module directories could be confusing because there is already a module directive in go.mod
that has a different meaning. On the other hand, names like modvers
and moddir
are awkward.
go.work
files should not be checked into version control repos containing modules so that the go.work
file in a module does not end up overriding the configuration a user created themselves outside of the module. The go.work
documentation should contain clear warnings about this.
A single build list is constructed from the set of workspace modules to give developers consistent results wherever they are in their workspace. Further, the single build list allows tooling to present a consistent view of the workspace, so that editor operations and information doesn't change in surprising ways when moving between files.
replace
directives are respected when building the build list because many modules already have many replace
s in them that are necessary to properly build them. Not respecting them would break users unnecessarily. replace
directives exist in the workspace file to allow for resolving conflicts between replace
s in workspace modules. Because all workspace modules exist as co-equals in the workspace, there is no clear and intuitive way to resolve replace
conflicts without explicit input from the user. One alternative is to add special syntax for overriding replaces to make the overriding behavior more explicit, and an additional option is to add an option to add syntax to nullify replaces without overriding them.
Working in modules not listed in the workspace file is disallowed to avoid what could become a common source of confusion: if the go
command stayed in workspace mode, it's possible that a command line query could resolve to a different version of the module the directory contains. Users could be confused about a go build
or go list
command completing successfully but not respecting changes made in the current module. On the other hand, a user could be confused about the go command implicitly ignoring the workspace if they intended the current module to be in the workspace. It is better to make the situation clear to the user to allow them either to add the current module to the workspace or explicitly turn workspace mode off according to their preference.
Module vendoring is ignored in workspace mode because it is not clear which modules' vendor directories should be respected if there are multiple workpace modules with vendor directories containing the same dependencies. Worse, if module A vendors example.com/foo/pkg@A and module B vendors example.com/foo/sub/pkg@v0.2.0, then a workspace that combines A and B would select example.com/foo v0.2.0 in the overall build list, but would not have any vendored copy of example.com/foo/pkg for that version. As the modules spec says, “Vendoring may be used to allow interoperation with older versions of Go, or to ensure that all files used for a build are stored in a single file tree.”. Because developers in workspace mode are necessarily not using an older version of Go, and the build list used by the workspace is different than that used in the module, vendoring is not as useful for workspaces as it is for individual modules.
go.work.sum
filesThe go
command will use the collective set of go.sum
files that exist across the workspace modules to verify dependency modules, but there are cases where the go.sum
files in the workspace modules collectively do not contain all sums needed to verify the build: The simpler case is if the workspace go.mod files themselves are incomplete, the go
command will add missing sums to the workspace‘s go.work.sum
file rather than to the module’s go.sum
. But even if all workspace go.sum
files are complete, they may still not contain all necessary sums:
If the workspace includes modules
X
andY
, andX
imports a package fromexample.com/foo@v1.0.0
, andY
has a transitive requirement onexample.com/foo@v1.1.0
(but does not import any packages from it), thenX/go.sum
will contain a checksum only forv1.0.0/go.sum
andv1.0.0
, andY
will contain a checksum only forv1.1.0/go.sum
. No individual module will have a checksum for the source code forv1.1.0
, because no module in isolation actually uses that source code.
go.work
filesThe go work init
and go work edit
subcommands are being added for the same reasons that the go go mod init
and go mod edit
commands exist: they make it more convenient to create and edit go.work
files. The names are awkward, but it's not clear that it would be worth making the commands named go work init
and go work edit
if go work
would only have two subcommands.
go.mod
filesgo work sync
allows users to eliminate divergence between the build list used when developing and the build lists users will see when working within the individual modules separately.
Tools based on the go command, either directly through go list
or via golang.org/x/tools/go/packages
will work without changes with workspaces.
This change does not affect the Go language or its core libraries. But we would like to maintain the semantics of a go.work
file across versions of Go to avoid causing unnecessary churn and surprise for users.
This is why all valid go.work
files provide a Go version. Newer versions of Go will continue to respect the workspace semantics of the version of Go listed in the go.work
file. This will make it possible (if necessary) to make changes in the of workspace files in future versions of Go for users who create new workspaces or explicitly increase the Go version of their go.work
file.
The implementation for this would all be in the go
command. It would need to be able to read go.work
files, which we could easily implement reusing parts of the go.mod
parser. We would need to add the new -workfile flag
to the Go command and modify the go
command to look for the go.work
file to determine if it's in workspace mode. The most substantial part of the implementation would be to modify the module loader to be able to accept multiple main modules rather than a single main module, and run MVS with the multiple main modules when it is in workspace mode.
To avoid issues with the release cycle, if the implementation is not finished before a release, the behavior to look for a go.work
file and to turn on workspace mode can be guarded behind a GOEXPERIMENT
. Without the experiment turned on it will be possible to work on the implementation even if it can‘t be completed in time because it will never be active in the release. We could also set the -workfile
flag’s default to off
in the first version and change it to its automatic behavior later.
Issue #32394 is about gopls
' support for multi-module workspaces. gopls
currently allows users to provide a “workspace root” which is a directory it searches for go.mod
files to build a supermodule from. Alternatively, users can create a gopls.mod
file in their workspace root that gopls
will use as its supermodule. This proposal creates a concept of a workspace that is similar to that gopls
that is understood by the go
command so that users can have a consistent configuration across their editor and direct invocations of the go
command.
Issue #44347 proposes adding a GOTINKER
mode to the go
command. Under the proposal, if GOTINKER
is set to a directory, the go
command will resolve import paths and dependencies in modules by looking first in a GOPATH
-structured tree under the GOTINKER
directory before looking at the module cache. This would allow users who want to have a GOPATH
like workflow to build a GOPATH
at GOTINKER
, but still resolve most of their dependencies (those not in the GOTINKER
tree) using the standard module resolution system. It also provides for a multi-module workflow for users who put their modules under GOTINKER
and work in those modules.
This proposal also tries to provide some aspects of the GOPATH
workflow and to help with multi-module workflows. A user could put the modules that they would put under GOTINKER
in that proposal into their go.work
files to get a similar experience to the one they'd get under the GOTINKER
proposal. A major difference between the proposals is that in GOTINKER
modules would be found by their paths under the GOTINKER
tree instead of being explicitly listed in the go.work
file. But both proposals provide for a set of replaced module directories that take precedence over the module versions that would normally be resolved by MVS, when working in any of those modules.
The issue of maintaining user-specific replaces in go.mod
files was brought up in #26640. It proposes an alternative go.mod.local
file so that local changes to the go.mod file could be made adding replaces without needing to risk local changes being committed in go.mod
itself. The go.work
file provides users a place to put many of the local changes that would be put in the proposed go.mod.local
file.
Issue #39005 proposes to add a mechanism to specify configurations for builds, such as build tags. This issue is similar in that it is a proposal for additional configuration outside the go.mod
file. This proposal does not advocate for adding this type of information to go.work
and is focused on making changes across multiple modules.
replace
sWe might want to add a mechanism to ignore all replaces of a module or module version.
For example one module in the workspace could have replace example.com/foo => example.com/foo v0.3.4
because v0.4.0 would be selected otherwise and they think it's broken. Another module in the workspace could have require example.com/foo v0.5.0
which fixes the incompatibilities and also adds some features that are necessary.
In that case, the user might just want to knock the replacements away, but they might not want to remove the existing replacements for policy reasons (or because the replacement is actually in a separate repo).
go.work
files from being checked in to repositoriesgo.work
files that checked into repositories would cause confusion for Go users because they change the build configuration without the user explicitly opting in. Because of this they should be strongly discouraged. Though it's not clear that the Go tool should enforce this, other tools that vet repositories and releases should output warnings or errors for repositories containing go.work
files. There may also be other mechanisms not yet considered in this document to discourage checked-in go.work
files.
GOWORK
environment variable instead of -workfile
GOWORK
can‘t be set by users because we don’t want there to be ambiguity about how to enter workspace mode, but an alternative could be to use an environment variable instead of the -workfile
flag to change the location of the workspace file. Note that with the proposal as is, -workfile
may be set in GOFLAGS
, and that may be persisted with go env -w
. Developers won't need to type it out every time.
If this proposal is accepted, before it is released the documentation should specify a set of patterns and anti-patterns and how to achieve certain workflows using workspaces. For instance, it should mention that single-module repositories should rarely contain go.work
files.
As mentioned above, this proposal does not try to solve the problem of versioning and releasing modules so that new versions of dependent modules depend on new versions of the dependency modules. A tool built in the future can use the current workspace as well as the set of dependencies in the module graph to automate this work.
While modules have a single file listing all their root dependencies, the set of workspaces' root dependencies is split among many files, and the same is true of the set of replaces. It may be helpful to add a command to list the effective set of root dependencies and replaces and which go.mod file each of them comes from.
Perhaps there could be a command named go mod workstatus
that gives an overview of the status of the modules in the workspace.