The Go status bar appears in the lower left of the extension window. Clicking the Go status bar brings up a menu that provides easy access to see and update important information about your Go project. This includes information about the Go environment, the current Go version, the gopls
trace, and about the current module.
The Go Locate Configured Go Tools
command will display the configured GOPATH, GOROOT, tool locations and the results of go env
in the output window.
You can view the current Go version by looking at the status bar item in the bottom left corner of VS Code. Clicking this button and selecting Choose Go Environment
will present you with a menu from which you can select any version of Go that exists in your $HOME/sdk directory or on https://golang.org/dl. This command is also available through the command pallette using Go: Choose Go Environment
.
Previously, the go.goroot
and go.alternateTools
settings controlled the Go version used by VS Code Go. If you have configured these settings, they are no longer needed and should be deleted.
The “Clear Selection” option resets your Go version to the one found first in either go.alternateTools
, go.goroot
or your PATH.
After selecting any Go version that has not yet been installed (such as Go 1.14.6 in the screenshot above), the binary will be automatically installed in $HOME/sdk and put to use in your environment.
Once the download completes, VS Code Go will make use of this new Go version.
gopls
is the official Go language server developed by the Go team. It was developed in response to the release of Go modules, and it is the recommended approach when working with Go modules in VS Code.
When gopls
is enabled, :zap: is displayed next to the Go version in the status bar and the gopls
version is displayed in the menu.
Selecting Open 'gopls' trace
will open the trace of the gopls
server in the output window. Please include this trace when filing an issue related to the extension and gopls
is enabled.
When modules are enabled for the file you have open, you can navigate to the go.mod
file for the project using the menu. If you do not see the Open go.mod
item, then the extension does not think the file you have open belongs to a module.
More information about using Go modules is available on the Go blog.
The view displays the go environment variables (go env
) that are applied to the file open in the editor. You can customize the list by “Go: Edit Workspace” command (pencil icon), and update modifiable environment variables through this view.
It displays required tools and their location/version info, too.