This wiki page serves as a usage and troubleshooting guide.
Go has included support for versioned modules as proposed here since 1.11. The initial prototype vgo
was announced in February 2018. In July 2018, versioned modules landed in the main Go repository.
Since Go 1.14, module support is considered ready for production use, and all users are encouraged to migrate to modules from other dependency management systems. If you are unable to migrate due to a problem in the Go toolchain, please ensure that the problem has an open issue filed. (If the issue is not on the Go1.16 milestone, please comment on why it prevents you from migrating so it can be prioritized appropriately). You can also provide an experience report for more detailed feedback.
See the Go 1.16 release notes for details.
GO111MODULE=on
) is the default in all casesgo.mod
/ go.sum
by default (-mod=readonly
)go install pkg@version
is the recommended way to globally install packages / executablesretract
is available in go.mod
See the Go 1.15 release notes for details.
GOMODCACHE
environment variable. The default value of GOMODCACHE
is GOPATH[0]/pkg/mod
, the location of the module cache before this change.GODEBUG=modcacheunzipinplace=1
.See the Go 1.14 release notes for details.
go.mod file
specifies go 1.14
or higher, the go command now defaults to -mod=vendor
for operations that accept that flag.-mod=readonly
is now set by default when the go.mod file is read-only and no top-level vendor directory is present.-modcacherw
is a new flag that instructs the go command to leave newly-created directories in the module cache at their default permissions rather than making them read-only.-modfile=file
is a new flag that instructs the go command to read (and possibly write) an alternate go.mod
file instead of the one in the module root directory.GO111MODULE=on
), most module commands have more limited functionality if no go.mod
file is present.See the Go 1.13 release notes for details.
go
tool now defaults to downloading modules from the public Go module mirror at https://proxy.golang.org, and also defaults to validating downloaded modules (regardless of source) against the public Go checksum database at https://sum.golang.org.GOPRIVATE
setting (such as go env -w GOPRIVATE=*.corp.com,github.com/secret/repo
), or the more fine-grained variants GONOPROXY
or GONOSUMDB
that support less frequent use cases. See the documentation for more details.GO111MODULE=auto
enables module-mode if any go.mod is found, even inside GOPATH. (Prior to Go 1.13, GO111MODULE=auto
would never enable module-mode inside GOPATH).go get
arguments have changed:go get -u
(without any arguments) now only upgrades the direct and indirect dependencies of your current package, and no longer examines your entire module.go get -u ./...
from your module root upgrades all the direct and indirect dependencies of your module, and now excludes test dependencies.go get -u -t ./...
is similar, but also upgrades test dependencies.go get
no longer supports -m
(because it would have largely overlapped with go get -d
due to other changes; you can usually replace go get -m foo
with go get -d foo
).The “Quick Start” and “New Concepts” sections are particularly important for someone who is starting to work with modules. The “How to...” sections cover more details on mechanics. The largest quantity of content on this page is in the FAQs answering more specific questions; it can be worthwhile to at least skim the FAQ one-liners listed here.
import "./subdir"
?The details are covered in the remainder of this page, but here is a simple example of creating a module from scratch.
Create a directory outside of your GOPATH, and optionally initialize VCS:
$ mkdir -p /tmp/scratchpad/repo $ cd /tmp/scratchpad/repo $ git init -q $ git remote add origin https://github.com/my/repo
Initialize a new module:
$ go mod init github.com/my/repo go: creating new go.mod: module github.com/my/repo
Write your code:
$ cat <<EOF > hello.go package main import ( "fmt" "rsc.io/quote" ) func main() { fmt.Println(quote.Hello()) } EOF
Build and run:
$ go mod tidy go: finding module for package rsc.io/quote go: found rsc.io/quote in rsc.io/quote v1.5.2 $ go build -o hello $ ./hello Hello, world.
The go.mod
file was updated to include explicit versions for your dependencies, where v1.5.2
here is a semver tag:
$ cat go.mod module github.com/my/repo go 1.16 require rsc.io/quote v1.5.2
Prior to 1.16, no go get
or go mod tidy
was required prior to running go build -o hello
. Implicit modification of go.mod
and go.sum
files was disabled by default in 1.16.
Your typical day-to-day workflow can be:
.go
code as needed.go build
or go test
will automatically add new dependencies as needed to satisfy imports (updating go.mod
and downloading the new dependencies).go get foo@v1.2.3
, go get foo@master
(foo@default
with mercurial), go get foo@e3702bed2
, or by editing go.mod
directly.A brief tour of other common functionality you might use:
go list -m all
— View final versions that will be used in a build for all direct and indirect dependencies (details)go list -u -m all
— View available minor and patch upgrades for all direct and indirect dependencies (details)go get -u ./...
or go get -u=patch ./...
(from module root directory) — Update all direct and indirect dependencies to latest minor or patch upgrades (pre-releases are ignored) (details)go build ./...
or go test ./...
(from module root directory) — Build or test all packages in the module (details)go mod tidy
— Prune any no-longer-needed dependencies from go.mod
and add any dependencies needed for other combinations of OS, architecture, and build tags (details)replace
directive or gohack
— Use a fork, local copy or exact version of a dependency (details)go mod vendor
— Optional step to create a vendor
directory (details)After reading the next four sections on “New Concepts”, you will have enough information to get started with modules for most projects. It is also useful to review the Table of Contents above (including the FAQ one-liners there) to familiarize yourself with the list of more detailed topics.
These sections provide a high-level introduction to the main new concepts. For more details and rationale, please see this 40-minute introductory video by Russ Cox describing the philosophy behind the design, the official proposal document, or the more detailed initial vgo blog series.
A module is a collection of related Go packages that are versioned together as a single unit.
Modules record precise dependency requirements and create reproducible builds.
Most often, a version control repository contains exactly one module defined in the repository root. (Multiple modules are supported in a single repository, but typically that would result in more work on an on-going basis than a single module per repository).
Summarizing the relationship between repositories, modules, and packages:
Modules must be semantically versioned according to semver, usually in the form v(major).(minor).(patch)
, such as v0.1.0
, v1.2.3
, or v1.5.0-rc.1
. The leading v
is required. If using Git, tag released commits with their versions. Public and private module repositories and proxies are becoming available (see FAQ below).
A module is defined by a tree of Go source files with a go.mod
file in the tree's root directory. Module source code may be located outside of GOPATH. There are four directives: module
, require
, replace
, exclude
.
Here is an example go.mod
file defining the module github.com/my/thing
:
module github.com/my/thing require ( github.com/some/dependency v1.2.3 github.com/another/dependency/v4 v4.0.0 )
A module declares its identity in its go.mod
via the module
directive, which provides the module path. The import paths for all packages in a module share the module path as a common prefix. The module path and the relative path from the go.mod
to a package‘s directory together determine a package’s import path.
For example, if you are creating a module for a repository github.com/user/mymod
that will contain two packages with import paths github.com/user/mymod/foo
and github.com/user/mymod/bar
, then the first line in your go.mod
file typically would declare your module path as module github.com/user/mymod
, and the corresponding on-disk structure could be:
mymod |-- bar | `-- bar.go |-- foo | `-- foo.go `-- go.mod
In Go source code, packages are imported using the full path including the module path. For example, if in our example above, we declared the module identity in go.mod
as module github.com/user/mymod
, a consumer could do:
import "github.com/user/mymod/bar"
This imports package bar
from the module github.com/user/mymod
.
exclude
and replace
directives only operate on the current (“main”) module. exclude
and replace
directives in modules other than the main module are ignored when building the main module. The replace
and exclude
statements, therefore, allow the main module complete control over its own build, without also being subject to complete control by dependencies. (See FAQ below for a discussion of when to use a replace
directive).
If you add a new import to your source code that is not yet covered by a require
in go.mod
, most go commands like ‘go build’ and ‘go test’ will automatically look up the proper module and add the highest version of that new direct dependency to your module‘s go.mod
as a require
directive. For example, if your new import corresponds to dependency M whose latest tagged release version is v1.2.3
, your module’s go.mod
will end up with require M v1.2.3
, which indicates module M is a dependency with allowed version >= v1.2.3 (and < v2, given v2 is considered incompatible with v1).
The minimal version selection algorithm is used to select the versions of all modules used in a build. For each module in a build, the version selected by minimal version selection is always the semantically highest of the versions explicitly listed by a require
directive in the main module or one of its dependencies.
As an example, if your module depends on module A which has a require D v1.0.0
, and your module also depends on module B which has a require D v1.1.1
, then minimal version selection would choose v1.1.1
of D to include in the build (given it is the highest listed require
version). This selection of v1.1.1
remains consistent even if sometime later a v1.2.0
of D becomes available. This is an example of how the modules system provides 100% reproducible builds. When ready, the module author or user might choose to upgrade to the latest available version of D or choose an explicit version for D.
For a brief rationale and overview of the minimal version selection algorithm, see the “High Fidelity Builds” section of the official proposal, or see the more detailed vgo
blog series.
To see a list of the selected module versions (including indirect dependencies), use go list -m all
.
See also the “How to Upgrade and Downgrade Dependencies” section below and the “How are versions marked as incompatible?” FAQ below.
For many years, the official Go FAQ has included this advice on package versioning:
“Packages intended for public use should try to maintain backward compatibility as they evolve. The Go 1 compatibility guidelines are a good reference here: don't remove exported names, encourage tagged composite literals, and so on. If different functionality is required, add a new name instead of changing an old one. If a complete break is required, create a new package with a new import path.”
The last sentence is especially important — if you break compatibility, you should change the import path of your package. With Go 1.11 modules, that advice is formalized into the import compatibility rule:
“If an old package and a new package have the same import path, the new package must be backwards compatible with the old package.”
Recall semver requires a major version change when a v1 or higher package makes a backwards-incompatible change. The result of following both the import compatibility rule and semver is called Semantic Import Versioning, where the major version is included in the import path — this ensures the import path changes any time the major version increments due to a compatibility break.
As a result of Semantic Import Versioning, code opting in to Go modules must comply with these rules:
v1.2.3
)./vN
at the end of the module paths used in go.mod
files (e.g., module github.com/my/mod/v2
, require github.com/my/mod/v2 v2.0.1
) and in the package import path (e.g., import "github.com/my/mod/v2/mypkg"
). This includes the paths used in go get
commands (e.g., go get github.com/my/mod/v2@v2.0.1
. Note there is both a /v2
and a @v2.0.1
in that example. One way to think about it is that the module name now includes the /v2
, so include /v2
whenever you are using the module name).In general, packages with different import paths are different packages. For example, math/rand
is a different package than crypto/rand
. This is also true if different import paths are due to different major versions appearing in the import path. Thus example.com/my/mod/mypkg
is a different package than example.com/my/mod/v2/mypkg
, and both may be imported in a single build, which among other benefits helps with diamond dependency problems and also allows a v1 module to be implemented in terms of its v2 replacement or vice versa.
See the “Module compatibility and semantic versioning” section of the go
command documentation for more details on Semantic Import Versioning, and see https://semver.org for more about semantic versioning.
This section so far has been focused on code that has opted in to modules and imports other modules. However, putting major versions in import paths for v2+ modules could create incompatibilities with older versions of Go, or with code that has not yet opted in to modules. To help with this, there are three important transitional special cases or exceptions to the behavior and rules described above. These transitional exceptions will become less important over time as more packages opt in to modules.
Three Transitional Exceptions
gopkg.in
Existing code that uses import paths starting with gopkg.in
(such as gopkg.in/yaml.v1
and gopkg.in/yaml.v2
) can continue to use those forms for their module paths and import paths even after opting in to modules.
‘+incompatible’ when importing non-module v2+ packages
A module can import a v2+ package that has not opted in to modules itself. A non-module v2+ package that has a valid v2+ semver tag will be recorded with a +incompatible
suffix in the importing module's go.mod
file. The +incompatible
suffix indicates that even though the v2+ package has a valid v2+ semver tag such as v2.0.0
, the v2+ package has not actively opted in to modules and hence that v2+ package is assumed to have not been created with an understanding of the implications of Semantic Import Versioning and how to use major versions in import paths. Therefore, when operating in module mode, the go
tool will treat a non-module v2+ package as an (incompatible) extension of the v1 version series of the package and assume the package has no awareness of Semantic Import Versioning, and the +incompatible
suffix is an indication that the go
tool is doing so.
“Minimal module compatibility” when module mode is not enabled
To help with backwards-compatibility, Go versions 1.9.7+, 1.10.3+ and 1.11 have been updated to make it easier for code built with those releases to be able to properly consume v2+ modules without requiring modification of pre-existing code. This behavior is called “minimal module compatibility”, and it only takes effect when full module mode is disabled for the go
tool, such as if such as you have set GO111MODULE=off
in Go 1.11, or are using Go versions 1.9.7+ or 1.10.3+. When relying on this “minimal module compatibility” mechanism in Go 1.9.7+, 1.10.3+ and 1.11, a package that has not opted in to modules would not include the major version in the import path for any imported v2+ modules. In contrast, a package that has opted in to modules must include the major version in the import path to import any v2+ modules (in order to properly import the v2+ module when the go
tool is operating in full module mode with full awareness of Semantic Import Versioning).
For the exact mechanics required to release a v2+ module, please see the “Releasing Modules (v2 or Higher)” section below.
To use modules, two install options are:
master
branch.Once installed, you can then activate module support in one of two ways:
go
command in a directory outside of the $GOPATH/src
tree, with a valid go.mod
file in the current directory or any parent of it and the environment variable GO111MODULE
unset (or explicitly set to auto
).go
command with GO111MODULE=on
environment variable set.To create a go.mod
for an existing project:
Navigate to the root of the module's source tree outside of GOPATH:
$ cd <project path outside $GOPATH/src> # e.g., cd ~/projects/hello
Note that outside of GOPATH, you do not need to set GO111MODULE
to activate module mode.
Alternatively, if you want to work in your GOPATH:
$ export GO111MODULE=on # manually active module mode $ cd $GOPATH/src/<project path> # e.g., cd $GOPATH/src/you/hello
Create the initial module definition and write it to the go.mod
file:
$ go mod init
This step converts from any existing dep
Gopkg.lock
file or any of the other nine total supported dependency formats, adding require statements to match the existing configuration.
go mod init
will often be able to use auxiliary data (such as VCS meta-data) to automatically determine the appropriate module path, but if go mod init
states it can not automatically determine the module path, or if you need to otherwise override that path, you can supply the module path as an optional argument to go mod init
, for example:
$ go mod init github.com/my/repo
Note that if your dependencies include v2+ modules, or if you are initializing a v2+ module, then after running go mod init
you might also need to edit your go.mod
and .go
code to add /vN
to import paths and module paths as described in the “Semantic Import Versioning” section above. This applies even if go mod init
automatically converted your dependency information from dep
or other dependency managers. (Because of this, after running go mod init
, you typically should not run go mod tidy
until you have successfully run go build ./...
or similar, which is the sequence shown in this section).
Build the module. When executed from the root directory of a module, the ./...
pattern matches all the packages within the current module. go build
will automatically add missing or unconverted dependencies as needed to satisfy imports for this particular build invocation:
$ go build ./...
Test the module as configured to ensure that it works with the selected versions:
$ go test ./...
(Optional) Run the tests for your module plus the tests for all direct and indirect dependencies to check for incompatibilities:
$ go test all
Prior to tagging a release, see the “How to Prepare for a Release” section below.
For more information on all of these topics, the primary entry point to the official modules documentation is available on golang.org.
Day-to-day upgrading and downgrading of dependencies should be done using ‘go get’, which will automatically update the go.mod
file. Alternatively, you can edit go.mod
directly.
In addition, go commands like ‘go build’, ‘go test’, or even ‘go list’ will automatically add new dependencies as needed to satisfy imports (updating go.mod
and downloading the new dependencies).
To upgrade a dependency to the latest version:
go get example.com/package
To upgrade a dependency and all its dependencies to the latest version:
go get -u example.com/package
To view available minor and patch upgrades for all direct and indirect dependencies:
go list -u -m all
To view available minor and patch upgrades only for the direct dependencies, run:
go list -u -f '{{if (and (not (or .Main .Indirect)) .Update)}}{{.Path}}: {{.Version}} -> {{.Update.Version}}{{end}}' -m all 2> /dev/null
To upgrade to the latest version for all direct and indirect dependencies of the current module, the following can be run from the module root directory:
go get -u ./...
to use the latest minor or patch releases (and add -t
to also upgrade test dependencies)go get -u=patch ./...
to use the latest patch releases (and add -t
to also upgrade test dependencies)go get foo
updates to the latest version of foo
. go get foo
is equivalent to go get foo@latest
— in other words, @latest
is the default if no @
version is specified.
In this section, “latest” is the latest version with a semver tag, or the latest known commit if there are no semver tags. Prerelease tags are not selected as “latest” unless there are no other semver tags on the repository (details).
A common mistake is thinking go get -u foo
solely gets the latest version of foo
. In actuality, the -u
in go get -u foo
or go get -u foo@latest
means to also get the latest versions for all of the direct and indirect dependencies of foo
. A common starting point when upgrading foo
is instead to do go get foo
or go get foo@latest
without a -u
(and after things are working, consider go get -u=patch foo
, go get -u=patch
, go get -u foo
, or go get -u
).
To upgrade or downgrade to a more specific version, ‘go get’ allows version selection to be overridden by adding an @version suffix or “module query” to the package argument, such as go get foo@v1.6.2
, go get foo@e3702bed2
, or go get foo@'<v1.6.2'
.
Using a branch name such as go get foo@master
(foo@default
with mercurial) is one way to obtain the latest commit regardless of whether or not it has a semver tag.
In general, module queries that do not resolve to a semver tag will be recorded as pseudo-versions in the go.mod
file.
See the “Module-aware go get” and “Module queries” sections of the go
command documentation for more information on the topics here.
Modules are capable of consuming packages that have not yet opted into modules, including recording any available semver tags in go.mod
and using those semver tags to upgrade or downgrade. Modules can also consume packages that do not yet have any proper semver tags (in which case they will be recorded using pseudo-versions in go.mod
).
After upgrading or downgrading any dependencies, you may then want to run the tests again for all packages in your build (including direct and indirect dependencies) to check for incompatibilities:
$ go test all
Best practices for creating a release of a module are expected to emerge as part of the initial modules experiment. Many of these might end up being automated by a future ‘go release’ tool.
Some current suggested best practices to consider prior to tagging a release:
Run go mod tidy
to possibly prune any extraneous requirements (as described here) and also ensure your current go.mod reflects all possible build tags/OS/architecture combinations (as described here).
go build
and go test
will not remove dependencies from go.mod
that are no longer required and only update go.mod
based on the current build invocation's tags/OS/architecture.Run go test all
to test your module (including running the tests for your direct and indirect dependencies) as a way of validating that the currently selected package versions are compatible.
go test all
has been re-defined to be more useful: to include all the packages in the current module plus all the packages they depend on through a sequence of one or more imports while excluding packages that don't matter in the current module.Ensure your go.sum
file is committed along with your go.mod
file. See FAQ below for more details and rationale.
If you are releasing a v2 or higher module, please first review the discussion in the “Semantic Import Versioning” section above, which includes why major versions are included in the module path and import path for v2+ modules, as well as how Go versions 1.9.7+ and 1.10.3+ have been updated to simplify that transition.
Note that if you are adopting modules for the first time for a pre-existing repository or set of packages that have already been tagged v2.0.0
or higher before adopting modules, then the recommended best practice is to increment the major version when first adopting modules. For example, if you are the author of foo
, and the latest tag for the foo
repository is v2.2.2
, and foo
has not yet adopted modules, then the best practice would be to use v3.0.0
for the first release of foo
to adopt modules (and hence the first release of foo
to contain a go.mod
file). Incrementing the major version in this case provides greater clarity to consumers of foo
, allows for additional non-module patches or minor releases on the v2 series of foo
if needed, and provides a strong signal for a module-based consumer of foo
that different major versions result if you do import "foo"
and a corresponding require foo v2.2.2+incompatible
, vs. import "foo/v3"
and a corresponding require foo/v3 v3.0.0
. (Note that this advice regarding incrementing the major version when first adopting modules does not apply to pre-existing repos or packages whose latest versions are v0.x.x or v1.x.x).
There are two alternative mechanisms to release a v2 or higher module. Note that with both techniques, the new module release becomes available to consumers when the module author pushes the new tags. Using the example of creating a v3.0.0
release, the two options are:
Major branch: Update the go.mod
file to include a /v3
at the end of the module path in the module
directive (e.g., module github.com/my/module/v3
). Update import statements within the module to also use /v3
(e.g., import "github.com/my/module/v3/mypkg"
). Tag the release with v3.0.0
.
v3.*.*
commits for the module on a separate v3 branch.v3.0.0
on master, that is a viable option. (However, be aware that introducing an incompatible API change in master
can cause issues for non-modules users who issue a go get -u
given the go
tool is not aware of semver prior to Go 1.11 or when module mode is not enabled in Go 1.11+).dep
currently can have problems consuming a v2+ module created in this way. See for example dep#1962.Major subdirectory: Create a new v3
subdirectory (e.g., my/module/v3
) and place a new go.mod
file in that subdirectory. The module path must end with /v3
. Copy or move the code into the v3
subdirectory. Update import statements within the module to also use /v3
(e.g., import "github.com/my/module/v3/mypkg"
). Tag the release with v3.0.0
.
goforward
. Please see here for more details and rationale, along with a functioning initial version of goforward
.dep
should be able to consume a v2+ module created in this way.See https://research.swtch.com/vgo-module for a more in-depth discussion of these alternatives.
A new module version may be published by pushing a tag to the repository that contains the module source code. The tag is formed by concatenating two strings: a prefix and a version.
The version is the semantic import version for the release. It should be chosen by following the rules of semantic import versioning.
The prefix indicates where a module is defined within a repository. If the module is defined at the root of the repository, the prefix is empty, and the tag is just the version. However, in multi-module repositories, the prefix distinguishes versions for different modules. The prefix is the directory within the repository where the module is defined. If the repository follows the major subdirectory pattern described above, the prefix does not include the major version suffix.
For example, suppose we have a module example.com/repo/sub/v2
, and we want to publish version v2.1.6
. The repository root corresponds to example.com/repo
, and the module is defined in sub/v2/go.mod
within the repository. The prefix for this module is sub/
. The full tag for this release should be sub/v2.1.6
.
This section attempts to briefly enumerate the major decisions to be made when migrating to modules as well as list other migration-related topics. References are generally provided to other sections for more details.
This material is primarily based on best practices that have emerged from the community as part of the modules experiment; this is, therefore, a work-in-progress section that will improve as the community gains more experience.
Summary:
Migration topics:
go mod init
automatically translates the required information from dep, glide, govendor, godep, and 5 other pre-existing dependency managers into a go.mod
file that produces the equivalent build.module
directive in the converted go.mod
includes the appropriate /vN
(e.g., module foo/v3
)./vN
to the require
statements that go mod init
generates after translating from a prior dependency manager. See the “How to Define a Module” section above for more details.go mod init
will not edit your .go
code to add any required /vN
to import statements. See the “Semantic Import versioning” and “Releasing Modules (v2 or Higher)” sections above for the required steps, including some options around community tools to automate the conversion.go mod vendor
, as do Go 1.11 and 1.12+ when module mode is disabled. Therefore, vendoring is one way for a module to provide dependencies to older versions of Go that do not fully understand modules, as well as to consumers that have not enabled modules themselves. See the vendoring FAQ and the go
command documentation for more details.go get -u foo
. If you are publishing a module foo
, consider dropping the -u
in instructions for modules-based consumers.-u
asks the go
tool to upgrade all the direct and indirect dependencies of foo
.go get -u foo
later, but there are more benefits of “High Fidelity Builds” if -u
is not part of the initial install instructions. See “How to Upgrade and Downgrade Dependencies” for more details.go get -u foo
does still work, and can still be a valid choice for install instructions.go get foo
is not strictly needed for a module-based consumer.import "foo"
is sufficient. (Subsequent commands like go build
or go test
will automatically download foo
and update go.mod
as needed).vendor
directory by default.go
tool, vendor
is not strictly required when consuming a module (given the information contained in go.mod
and the cryptographic checksums in go.sum
), but some pre-existing install instructions assume the go
tool will use vendor
by default. See the vendoring FAQ for more details.go get foo/...
might have issues in some cases (see discussion in #27215).A module declares its identity in its go.mod
via the module
directive, such as module github.com/my/module
. All packages within the module must be imported by any module-aware consumer with import paths that match the module‘s declared module path (either exactly for a root package, or with the module path as a prefix of the import path). The go
command reports an unexpected module path
error if there is a mismatch between an import path vs. the corresponding module’s declared module path.
When adopting modules for a pre-existing set of packages, care should be taken to avoid breaking existing import paths used by existing consumers, unless you are incrementing your major version when adopting modules.
For example, if your pre-existing README has been telling consumers to use import "gopkg.in/foo.v1"
, and if you then adopt modules with a v1 release, your initial go.mod
should almost certainly read module gopkg.in/foo.v1
. If you wanted to move away from using gopkg.in
, that would be a breaking change for your current consumers. One approach would be to change to something like module github.com/repo/foo/v2
if you later move to v2.
Note that module paths and import paths are case-sensitive. Changing a module from github.com/Sirupsen/logrus
to github.com/sirupsen/logrus
, for example, is a breaking change for consumers, even if GitHub automatically forwards from one repository name to the new repository name.
After you have adopted modules, changing your module path in your go.mod
is a breaking change.
Overall, this is similar to the pre-modules enforcement of a canonical import path via “import path comments”, which are also sometimes called “import pragmas” or “import path enforcement”. As an example, the package go.uber.org/zap
is currently hosted at github.com/uber-go/zap
, but uses an import path comment next to the package declaration that triggers an error for any pre-modules consumer using the wrong github-based import path:
package zap // import "go.uber.org/zap"
Import path comments are obsoleted by the go.mod file's module statement.
v2.0.1
and have not yet adopted modules, then you would use v3.0.0
for the first release that adopts modules. See the “Releasing Modules (v2 or Higher)” section above for more details.foo
and foo/v3
might end up in a single build).foo
and package-level state for foo/v3
) as well as each major version will run its own init
function.go.mod
. Modules can consume packages that do not yet have any proper semver tags. See FAQ below for more details.+incompatible
suffix if the imported v2+ package has valid semver tags. See FAQ below for more details.Non-module code consuming v0 and v1 modules:
Non-module code consuming v2+ modules:
Go versions 1.9.7+, 1.10.3+ and 1.11 have been updated so that code built with those releases can properly consume v2+ modules without requiring modification of pre-existing code as described in the “Semantic Import versioning” and “Releasing Modules (v2 or Higher)” sections above.
Go versions prior to 1.9.7 and 1.10.3 can consume v2+ modules if the v2+ module was created following the “Major subdirectory” approach outlined in the “Releasing Modules (v2 or Higher)” section.
For authors of pre-existing v2+ packages considering opting in to modules, one way to summarize the alternative approaches is as a choice between three top-level strategies. Each choice then has follow-on decisions and variations (as outlined above). These alternative top-level strategies are:
Require clients to use Go versions 1.9.7+, 1.10.3+, or 1.11+.
The approach uses the “Major Branch” approach and relies on the “minimal module awareness” that was backported to 1.9.7 and 1.10.3. See the “Semantic Import versioning” and “Releasing Modules (v2 or Higher)” sections above for more details.
Allow clients to use even older Go versions like Go 1.8.
This approach uses the “Major Subdirectory” approach and involves creating a subdirectory such as /v2
or /v3
. See the “Semantic Import versioning” and “Releasing Modules (v2 or Higher)” sections above for more details.
Wait on opting into modules.
In this strategy, things continue to work with client code that has opted into modules as well as with client code that has not opted into modules. As time goes by, Go versions 1.9.7+, 1.10.3+, and 1.11+ will be out for an increasingly longer time period, and at some point in the future, it becomes more natural or client-friendly to require Go versions 1.9.7+/1.10.3+/1.11+, and at that point in time, you can implement strategy 1 above (requiring Go versions 1.9.7+, 1.10.3+, or 1.11+) or even strategy 2 above (though if you are ultimately going to go with strategy 2 above in order to support older Go versions like 1.8, then that is something you can do now).
go help modules
for more about modules. (This is the main entry point for modules topics via go help
)go help mod
for more about the go mod
command.go help module-get
for more about the behavior of go get
when in module-aware mode.go help goproxy
for more about the module proxy, including a pure file-based option via a file:///
URL.vgo
by Russ Cox (first posted February 20, 2018)vgo
blog series, along with some of the history and process behind the proposalAs part of the proposal, prototype, and beta processes, there have been over 400 issues created by the overall community. Please continue to supply feedback.
Here is a partial list of some of the larger changes and improvements, almost all of which were primarily based on feedback from the community:
go get -u=patch
to update all transitive dependencies to the latest available patch-level versions on the same minor version (discussion, documentation)go mod download
(#26610)The require
directive allows any module to declare that it should be built with version >= x.y.z of a dependency D (which may be specified due to incompatibilities with version < x.y.z of module D). Empirical data suggests this is the dominant form of constraints used in dep
and cargo
. In addition, the top-level module in the build can exclude
specific versions of dependencies or replace
other modules with different code. See the full proposal for more details and rationale.
One of the key goals of the versioned modules proposal is to add a common vocabulary and semantics around versions of Go code for both tools and developers. This lays a foundation for future capabilities to declare additional forms of incompatibilities, such as possibly:
vgo
blog seriesIn general, modules are opt-in for Go 1.11, so by design old behavior is preserved by default.
Summarizing when you get the old 1.10 status quo behavior vs. the new opt-in modules-based behavior:
go.mod
— defaults to modules behaviorauto
— default behavior aboveon
— force module support on regardless of directory locationoff
— force module support off regardless of directory locationgo get
fail with error cannot find main module
?This occurs when you have set GO111MODULE=on
, but are not inside of a file tree with a go.mod
when you run go get
.
The simplest solution is to leave GO111MODULE
unset (or equivalently explicitly set to GO111MODULE=auto
), which avoids this error.
Recall one of the primary reason modules exist is to record precise dependency information. This dependency information is written to your current go.mod
. If you are not inside of a file tree with a go.mod
but you have told the go get
command to operate in module mode by setting GO111MODULE=on
, then running go get
will result in the error cannot find main module
because there is no go.mod
available to record dependency information.
Solution alternatives include:
Leave GO111MODULE
unset (the default, or explicitly set GO111MODULE=auto
), which results in friendlier behavior. This will give you Go 1.10 behavior when you are outside of a module and hence will avoid go get
reporting cannot find main module
.
Leave GO111MODULE=on
, but as needed disable modules temporarily and enable Go 1.10 behavior during go get
, such as via GO111MODULE=off go get example.com/cmd
. This can be turned into a simple script or shell alias such as alias oldget='GO111MODULE=off go get'
Create a temporary go.mod
file that is then discarded. This has been automated by a simple shell script by @rogpeppe. This script allows version information to optionally be supplied via vgoget example.com/cmd[@version]
. (This can be a solution for avoiding the error cannot use path@version syntax in GOPATH mode
).
gobin
is a module-aware command to install and run main packages. By default, gobin
installs/runs main packages without first needing to manually create a module, but with the -m
flag it can be told to use an existing module to resolve dependencies. Please see the gobin
README and FAQ for details and additional use cases.
Create a go.mod
you use to track your globally installed tools, such as in ~/global-tools/go.mod
, and cd
to that directory prior to running go get
or go install
for any globally installed tools.
Create a go.mod
for each tool in separate directories, such as ~/tools/gorename/go.mod
and ~/tools/goimports/go.mod
, and cd
to that appropriate directory prior to running go get
or go install
for the tool.
This current limitation will be resolved. However, the primary issue is that modules are currently opt-in, and a full solution will likely wait until GO111MODULE=on becomes the default behavior. See #24250 for more discussion, including this comment:
This clearly must work eventually. The thing I‘m not sure about is exactly what this does as far as the version is concerned: does it create a temporary module root and go.mod, do the install, and then throw it away? Probably. But I’m not completely sure, and for now, I didn't want to confuse people by making vgo do things outside go.mod trees. Certainly, the eventual go command integration has to support this.
This FAQ has been discussing tracking globally installed tools.
If instead, you want to track the tools required by a specific module, see the next FAQ.
If you:
stringer
) while working on a module, andgo.mod
filethen one currently recommended approach is to add a tools.go
file to your module that includes import statements for the tools of interest (such as import _ "golang.org/x/tools/cmd/stringer"
), along with a //go:build tools
build constraint. The import statements allow the go
command to precisely record the version information for your tools in your module's go.mod
, while the //go:build tools
build constraint prevents your normal builds from actually importing your tools.
For a concrete example of how to do this, please see this “Go Modules by Example” walkthrough.
A discussion of the approach along with an earlier concrete example of how to do this is in this comment in #25922.
The brief rationale (also from #25922):
I think the tools.go file is, in fact, the best practice for tool dependencies, certainly for Go 1.11.
I like it because it does not introduce new mechanisms.
It simply reuses existing ones.
You can also (since go 1.16) use go install tool@version
, which will install a specific version, or (since go 1.17) go run tool@version
, which will run the tool without installing, as implemented in #42088 and #40276, which can eliminate the need for tools.go.
Support for modules is starting to land in editors and IDEs.
For example:
go.mod
has landed. Broader support tracked in #1906.The status of other tools such as goimports, guru, gorename and similar tools is being tracked in an umbrella issue #24661. Please see that umbrella issue for latest status.
Some tracking issues for particular tools include:
nsf/gocode
is recommending people migrate off of nsf/gocode
to mdempsky/gocode
.In general, even if your editor, IDE or other tools have not yet been made module aware, much of their functionality should work with modules if you are using modules inside GOPATH and do go mod vendor
(because then the proper dependencies should be picked up via GOPATH).
The full fix is to move programs that load packages off of go/build
and onto golang.org/x/tools/go/packages
, which understands how to locate packages in a module-aware manner. This will likely eventually become go/packages
.
The community is starting to build tooling on top of modules. For example:
replace
and multi-module workflows, including allowing you to easily modify one of your dependenciesgohack example.com/some/dependency
automatically clones the appropriate repository and adds the necessary replace
directives to your go.mod
gohack undo
go.mod
files and related import statements in go source codemgit -tag +0.0.1
)vendor/
folder, such as shell scripts, .cpp files, .proto files, etc.As described in the ‘go.mod’ concepts section above, replace
directives provide additional control in the top-level go.mod
for what is actually used to satisfy a dependency found in the Go source or go.mod files, while replace
directives in modules other than the main module are ignored when building the main module.
The replace
directive allows you to supply another import path that might be another module located in VCS (GitHub or elsewhere), or on your local filesystem with a relative or absolute file path. The new import path from the replace
directive is used without needing to update the import paths in the actual source code.
replace
allows the top-level module control over the exact version used for a dependency, such as:
replace example.com/some/dependency => example.com/some/dependency v1.2.3
replace
also allows the use of a forked dependency, such as:
replace example.com/some/dependency => example.com/some/dependency-fork v1.2.3
You can also reference branches, for example:
replace example.com/some/dependency => example.com/some/dependency-fork master
One sample use case is if you need to fix or investigate something in a dependency, you can have a local fork and add something like the following in your top-level go.mod
:
replace example.com/original/import/path => /your/forked/import/path
replace
also can be used to inform the go tooling of the relative or absolute on-disk location of modules in a multi-module project, such as:
replace example.com/project/foo => ../foo
Note: if the right-hand side of a replace
directive is a filesystem path, then the target must have a go.mod
file at that location. If the go.mod
file is not present, you can create one with go mod init
.
In general, you have the option of specifying a version to the left of the =>
in a replace directive, but typically it is less sensitive to change if you omit that (e.g., as done in all of the replace
examples above).
A require
directive is needed for each replace
directive of a direct dependency. When replacing a dependency from a filesystem path, the version of the corresponding require directive is essentially ignored; in this case, the pseudoversion v0.0.0
is a good choice to make this clear, e.g. require example.com/module v0.0.0
.
You can confirm you are getting your expected versions by running go list -m all
, which shows you the actual final versions that will be used in your build including taking into account replace
statements.
See the ‘go mod edit’ documentation for more details.
github.com/rogpeppe/gohack makes these types of workflows much easier, especially if your goal is to have mutable checkouts of dependencies of a module. See the repository or the immediately prior FAQ for an overview.
See the next FAQ for the details of using replace
to work entirely outside of VCS.
Yes. VCS is not required.
This is very simple if you have a single module you want to edit at a time outside of VCS (and you either have only one module in total, or if the other modules reside in VCS). In this case, you can place the file tree containing the single go.mod
in a convenient location. Your go build
, go test
and similar commands will work even if your single module is outside of VCS (without requiring any use of replace
in your go.mod
).
If you want to have multiple inter-related modules on your local disk that you want to edit at the same time, then replace
directives are one approach. Here is a sample go.mod
that uses a replace
with a relative path to point the hello
module at the on-disk location of the goodbye
module (without relying on any VCS):
module example.com/me/hello require ( example.com/me/goodbye v0.0.0 ) replace example.com/me/goodbye => ../goodbye
A small runnable example is shown in this thread.
The initial series of vgo
blog posts did propose dropping vendoring entirely, but feedback from the community resulted in retaining support for vendoring.
In brief, to use vendoring with modules:
go mod vendor
resets the main module‘s vendor directory to include all packages needed to build and test all of the module’s packages based on the state of the go.mod files and Go source code.go build
ignore the vendor directory when in module mode.-mod=vendor
flag (e.g., go build -mod=vendor
) instructs the go commands to use the main module‘s top-level vendor directory to satisfy dependencies. The go commands in this mode therefore ignore the dependency descriptions in go.mod and assume that the vendor directory holds the correct copies of dependencies. Note that only the main module’s top-level vendor directory is used; vendor directories in other locations are still ignored.GOFLAGS=-mod=vendor
environment variable.Older versions of Go such as 1.10 understand how to consume a vendor directory created by go mod vendor
, as do Go 1.11 and 1.12+ when module mode is disabled. Therefore, vendoring is one way for a module to provide dependencies to older versions of Go that do not fully understand modules, as well as to consumers that have not enabled modules themselves.
If you are considering using vendoring, it is worthwhile to read the “Modules and vendoring” and “Make vendored copy of dependencies” sections of the tip documentation.
Publicly hosted “always on” immutable module repositories and optional privately hosted proxies and repositories are becoming available.
For example:
Note that you are not required to run a proxy. Rather, the go tooling in 1.11 has added optional proxy support via GOPROXY to enable more enterprise use cases (such as greater control), and also to better handle situations such as “GitHub is down” or people deleting GitHub repositories.
By default, a command like go build
will reach out to the network as needed to satisfy imports.
Some teams will want to disallow the go tooling from touching the network at certain points, or will want greater control regarding when the go tooling updates go.mod
, how dependencies are obtained, and how vendoring is used.
The go tooling provides a fair amount of flexibility to adjust or disable these default behaviors, including via -mod=readonly
, -mod=vendor
, GOFLAGS
, GOPROXY=off
, GOPROXY=file:///filesystem/path
, go mod vendor
, and go mod download
.
The details on these options are spread throughout the official documentation. One community attempt at a consolidated overview of knobs related to these behaviors is here, which includes links to the official documentation for more information.
The simplest approach is likely just setting the environment variable GO111MODULE=on
, which should work with most CI systems.
However, it can be valuable to run tests in CI on Go 1.11 with modules enabled as well as disabled, given some of your users will not have yet opted in to modules themselves. Vendoring is also a topic to consider.
The following two blog posts cover these topics more concretely:
The go mod download
command (or equivalently, go mod download all
) downloads all modules in the build list (as reported by go list -m all
). Many of these modules aren't needed to build packages in the main module, since the full build list contains things like test dependencies and tool dependencies for other modules. Consequently, Docker images prepared with go mod download
may be larger than necessary.
Instead, consider using go list
. For example, go list ./...
will download the modules needed to build the packages ./...
(the set of packages in the main module, when run from the module root directory).
To download test dependencies as well, use go list -test ./...
.
By default, go list
will only consider dependencies needed for the current platform. You can set GOOS
and GOARCH
to make go list
consider another platform, for example, GOOS=linux GOARCH=amd64 go list ./...
. The -tags
flag may also be used to select packages with specific build tags.
This technique may be less necessary in the future when lazy module loading is implemented (see #36460), since the module pattern all
will include fewer modules.
The modules system records precise dependency requirements in your go.mod
. (For more details, see the go.mod concepts section above or the go.mod tip documentation).
go mod tidy
updates your current go.mod
to include the dependencies needed for tests in your module — if a test fails, we must know which dependencies were used in order to reproduce the failure.
go mod tidy
also ensures your current go.mod
reflects the dependency requirements for all possible combinations of OS, architecture, and build tags (as described here). In contrast, other commands like go build
and go test
only update go.mod
to provide the packages imported by the requested packages under the current GOOS
, GOARCH
, and build tags (which is one reason go mod tidy
might add requirements that were not added by go build
or similar).
If a dependency of your module does not itself have a go.mod
(e.g., because the dependency has not yet opted in to modules itself), or if its go.mod
file is missing one or more of its dependencies (e.g., because the module author did not run go mod tidy
), then the missing transitive dependencies will be added to your module's requirements, along with an // indirect
comment to indicate that the dependency is not from a direct import within your module.
Note that this also means that any missing test dependencies from your direct or indirect dependencies will also be recorded in your go.mod
. (An example of when this is important: go test all
runs the tests of all direct and indirect dependencies of your module, which is one way to validate that your current combination of versions work together. If a test fails in one of your dependencies when you run go test all
, it is important to have a complete set of test dependency information recorded so that you have reproducible go test all
behavior).
Another reason you might have // indirect
dependencies in your go.mod
file is if you have upgraded (or downgraded) one of your indirect dependencies beyond what is required by your direct dependencies, such as if you ran go get -u
or go get foo@1.2.3
. The go tooling needs a place to record those new versions, and it does so in your go.mod
file (and it does not reach down into your dependencies to modify their go.mod
files).
In general, the behaviors described above are part of how modules provide 100% reproducible builds and tests by recording precise dependency information.
If you are curious as to why a particular module is showing up in your go.mod
, you can run go mod why -m <module>
to answer that question. Other useful tools for inspecting requirements and versions include go mod graph
and go list -m all
.
No, go.sum
is not a lock file. The go.mod
files in a build provide enough information for 100% reproducible builds.
For validation purposes, go.sum
contains the expected cryptographic checksums of the content of specific module versions. See the FAQ below for more details on go.sum
(including why you typically should check in go.sum
) as well as the “Module downloading and verification” section in the tip documentation.
In addition, your module's go.sum
records checksums for all direct and indirect dependencies used in a build (and hence your go.sum
will frequently have more modules listed than your go.mod
).
Typically your module's go.sum
file should be committed along with your go.mod
file.
go.sum
contains the expected cryptographic checksums of the content of specific module versions.go.sum
.go mod verify
checks that the on-disk cached copies of module downloads still match the entries in go.sum
.go.sum
is not a lock file as used in some alternative dependency management systems. (go.mod
provides enough information for reproducible builds).go.sum
. See the “Module downloading and verification” section of the tip documentation for more details. See possible future extensions being discussed for example in #24117 and #25530.Yes. This supports working outside of GOPATH, helps communicate to the ecosystem that you are opting in to modules, and in addition the module
directive in your go.mod
serves as a definitive declaration of the identity of your code (which is one reason why import comments might eventually be deprecated). Of course, modules are purely an opt-in capability in Go 1.11.
Please see the discussion on the Semantic Import Versioning and the import compatibility rule in the “Semantic Import Versioning” concepts section above. See also the blog post announcing the proposal, which talks more about the motivation and justification for the import compatibility rule.
Please see the question “Why are major versions v0, v1 omitted from import paths?” in the earlier FAQ from the official proposal discussion.
In response to a comment about “k8s does minor releases but changes the Go API in each minor release”, Russ Cox made the following response that highlights some implications for picking v0, v1, vs. frequently making breaking changes with v2, v3, v4, etc. with your project:
I don't fully understand the k8s dev cycle etc, but I think generally the k8s team needs to decide/confirm what they intend to guarantee to users about stability and then apply version numbers accordingly to express that.
- To make a promise about API compatibility (which seems like the best user experience!) then start doing that and use 1.X.Y.
- To have the flexibility to make backwards-incompatible changes in every release but allow different parts of a large program to upgrade their code on different schedules, meaning different parts can use different major versions of the API in one program, then use X.Y.0, along with import paths like k8s.io/client/vX/foo.
- To make no promises about API compatible and also require every build to have only one copy of the k8s libraries no matter what, with the implied forcing of all parts of a build to use the same version even if not all of them are ready for it, then use 0.X.Y.
On a related note, Kubernetes has some atypical build approaches (currently including custom wrapper scripts on top of godep), and hence Kubernetes is an imperfect example for many other projects, but it will likely be an interesting example as Kubernetes moves towards adopting Go 1.11 modules.
Yes.
If a repository has not opted in to modules but has been tagged with valid semver tags (including the required leading v
), then those semver tags can be used in a go get
, and a corresponding semver version will be record in the importing module‘s go.mod
file. If the repository does not have any valid semver tags, then the repository’s version will be recorded with a “pseudo-version” such as v0.0.0-20171006230638-a6e239ea1c69
(which includes a timestamp and a commit hash, and which are designed to allow a total ordering across versions recorded in go.mod
and to make it easier to reason about which recorded versions are “later” than another recorded version).
For example, if the latest version of package foo
is tagged v1.2.3
but foo
has not itself opted in to modules, then running go get foo
or go get foo@v1.2.3
from inside module M will be recorded in module M's go.mod
file as:
require foo v1.2.3
The go
tool will also use available semver tags for a non-module package in additional workflows (such as go list -u=patch
, which upgrades the dependencies of a module to available patch releases, or go list -u -m all
, which shows available upgrades, etc.).
Please see the next FAQs for additional details related to v2+ packages that have not opted in to modules.
Yes, a module can import a v2+ package that has not opted into modules, and if the imported v2+ package has a valid semver tag, it will be recorded with a +incompatible
suffix.
Additional Details
Please be familiar with the material in the “Semantic Import Versioning” section above.
It is helpful to first review some core principles that are generally useful but particularly important to keep in mind when thinking about the behavior described in this FAQ.
The following core principles are always true when the go
tool is operating in module mode (e.g., GO111MODULE=on
):
/vN
is treated as a v1 or v0 module (and this is true even if the imported package has not opted in to modules and has VCS tags that say the major version is greater than 1).module foo/v2
) declared at the start of a module's go.mod
file is both:As we will see in the next FAQ, these principles are not always true when the go
tool is not in module mode, but these principles are always true when the go
tool is in module mode.
In short, the +incompatible
suffix indicates that principle 2 above is in effect when the following are true:
/vN
is treated as a v1 or v0 module (even though the VCS tags say otherwise)When the go
tool is in module mode, it will assume a non-module v2+ package has no awareness of Semantic Import Versioning and treat it as an (incompatible) extension of the v1 version series of the package (and the +incompatible
suffix is an indication that the go
tool is doing so).
Example
Suppose:
oldpackage
is a package that predates the introduction of modulesoldpackage
has never opted in to modules (and hence does not have a go.mod
itself)oldpackage
has a valid semver tag v3.0.1
, which is its latest tagIn this case, running for example go get oldpackage@latest
from inside module M will record the following in module M's go.mod
file:
require oldpackage v3.0.1+incompatible
Note that there is no /v3
used at the end of oldpackage
in the go get
command above or in the recorded require
directive – using /vN
in module paths and import paths is a feature of Semantic Import Versioning, and oldpackage
has not signaled its acceptance and understanding of Semantic Import Versioning given oldpackage
has not opted into modules by having a go.mod
file within oldpackage
itself. In other words, even though oldpackage
has a semver tag of v3.0.1
, oldpackage
is not granted the rights and responsibilities of Semantic Import Versioning (such as using /vN
in import paths) because oldpackage
has not yet stated its desire to do so.
The +incompatible
suffix indicates that the v3.0.1
version of oldpackage
has not actively opted in to modules, and hence the v3.0.1
version of oldpackage
is assumed to not understand Semantic Import Versioning or how to use major versions in import paths. Therefore, when operating in module mode, the go
tool will treat the non-module v3.0.1
version of oldpackage
as an (incompatible) extension of the v1 version series of oldpackage
and assume that the v3.0.1
version of oldpackage
has no awareness of Semantic Import Versioning, and the +incompatible
suffix is an indication that the go
tool is doing so.
The fact that the v3.0.1
version of oldpackage
is considered to be part of the v1 release series according to Semantic Import Versioning means for example that versions v1.0.0
, v2.0.0
, and v3.0.1
are all always imported using the same import path:
import "oldpackage"
Note again that there is no /v3
used at the end of oldpackage
.
In general, packages with different import paths are different packages. In this example, given versions v1.0.0
, v2.0.0
, and v3.0.1
of oldpackage
would all be imported using the same import path, they are therefore treated by a build as the same package (again because oldpackage
has not yet opted in to Semantic Import Versioning), with a single copy of oldpackage
ending up in any given build. (The version used will be the semantically highest of the versions listed in any require
directives; see “Version Selection”).
If we suppose that later a new v4.0.0
release of oldpackage
is created that adopts modules and hence contains a go.mod
file, that is the signal that oldpackage
now understands the rights and responsibilities of Semantic Import Versioning, and hence a module-based consumer would now import using /v4
in the import path:
import "oldpackage/v4"
and the version would be recorded as:
require oldpackage/v4 v4.0.0
oldpackage/v4
is now a different import path than oldpackage
, and hence a different package. Two copies (one for each import path) would end up in a module-aware build if some consumers in the build have import "oldpackage/v4"
while other consumers in the same build have import "oldpackage"
. This is desirable as part of the strategy to allow gradual adoption of modules. In addition, even after modules are out of their current transitional phase, this behavior is also desirable to allow gradual code evolution over time with different consumers upgrading at different rates to newer versions (e.g., allowing different consumers in a large build to choose to upgrade at different rates from oldpackage/v4
to some future oldpackage/v5
).
When considering older Go versions or Go code that has not yet opted in to modules, Semantic Import Versioning has significant backwards-compatibility implications related to v2+ modules.
As described in the “Semantic Import Versioning” section above:
/vN
in its own module path declared in its go.mod
./vN
in the import path to import a v2+ module.However, the ecosystem is expected to proceed at varying paces of adoption for modules and Semantic Import Versioning.
As described in more detail in the “How to Release a v2+ Module” section, in the “Major Subdirectory” approach, the author of a v2+ module creates subdirectories such as mymodule/v2
or mymodule/v3
and moves or copies the approriate packages underneath those subdirectories. This means the traditional import path logic (even in older Go releases such as Go 1.8 or 1.7) will find the appropriate packages upon seeing an import statement such as import "mymodule/v2/mypkg"
. Hence, packages residing in a “Major Subdirectory” v2+ module will be found and used even if modules support is not enabled (whether that is because you are running Go 1.11 and have not enabled modules, or because you are running a older version like Go 1.7, 1.8, 1.9 or 1.10 that does not have full module support). Please see the “How to Release a v2+ Module” section for more details on the “Major Subdirectory” approach.
The remainder of this FAQ is focused on the “Major Branch” approach described in the “How to Release a v2+ Module” section. In the “Major Branch” approach, no /vN
subdirectories are created and instead the module version information is communicated by the go.mod
file and by applying semver tags to commits (which often will be on master
, but could be on different branches).
In order to help during the current transitional period, “minimal module compatibility” was introduced to Go 1.11 to provide greater compatibility for Go code that has not yet opted in to modules, and that “minimal module compatibility” was also backported to Go 1.9.7 and 1.10.3 (where those versions are effectively always operating with full module mode disabled given those older Go versions do not have full module support).
The primary goals of “minimal module compatibility” are:
Allow older Go versions 1.9.7+ and 1.10.3+ to be able to more easily compile modules that are using Semantic Import Versioning with /vN
in import paths, and provide that same behavior when module mode is disabled in Go 1.11.
Allow old code to be able to consume a v2+ module without requiring that old consumer code to immediately change to using a new /vN
import path when consuming a v2+ module.
Do so without relying on the module author to create /vN
subdirectories.
Additional Details – “Minimal Module Compatibility”
“Minimal module compatibility” only takes effect when full module mode is disabled for the go
tool, such as if you have set GO111MODULE=off
in Go 1.11, or are using Go versions 1.9.7+ or 1.10.3+.
When a v2+ module author has not created /v2
or /vN
subdirectories and you are instead relying on the “minimal module compatibility” mechanism in Go 1.9.7+, 1.10.3+ and 1.11:
go
tool is operating in full module mode. (A package that has opted in to modules is assumed to “speak” Semantic Import Versioning. If foo
is a module with v2+ versions, then under Semantic Import Versioning saying import "foo"
means import the v1 Semantic Import Versioning series of foo
)./vN
will be tried again after removing the /vN
if the import statement is inside code that has opted in to modules (that is, import statements in .go
files within a tree with a valid go.mod
file).import "foo/v2"
within code that lives inside of a module will still compile correctly in GOPATH mode in 1.9.7+, 1.10.3+ and 1.11, and it will resolve as if it said import "foo"
(without the /v2
), which means it will use the version of foo
that resides in your GOPATH without being confused by the extra /v2
.go
command line (such as arguments to go get
or go list
)./vN
import for v2+ modules.import "foo/v2"
appearing in module-based code resolves to the same code residing in your GOPATH as import "foo"
, and the build ends up with one copy of foo
– in particular, whatever version is on disk in GOPATH. This allows module-based code with import "foo/v2"
to compile even in GOPATH mode in 1.9.7+, 1.10.3+ and 1.11.go
tool is operating in full module mode:go
tool is in full module mode and foo
is a v2+ module, then import "foo"
is asking for a v1 version of foo
vs. import "foo/v2"
is asking for a v2 version of foo
.semver is a foundation of the modules system. In order to provide the best experience for consumers, module authors are encouraged to apply semver VCS tags (e.g., v0.1.0
or v1.2.3-rc.1
), but semver VCS tags are not strictly required:
Modules are required to follow the semver specification in order for the go
command to behave as documented. This includes following the semver specification regarding how and when breaking changes are allowed.
Modules that do not have semver VCS tags are recorded by consumers using a semver version in the form of a pseudo-version. Typically this will be a v0 major version, unless the module author constructed a v2+ module following the “Major Subdirectory” approach.
Therefore, modules that do not apply semver VCS tags and have not created a “Major Subdirectory” are effectively declaring themselves to be in the semver v0 major version series, and a module-based consumer will treat them as having a semver v0 major version.
A module can depend on a different major version of itself: by-and-large, this is comparable to depending on a different module. This can be useful for different reasons, including to allow a major version of a module to be implemented as a shim around a different major version.
In addition, a module can depend on a different major version of itself in a cycle, just as two completely different modules can depend on each other in a cycle.
However, if you are not expecting a module to depend on a different version of itself, it can be a sign of a mistake. For example, .go code intending to import a package from a v3 module might be missing the required /v3
in the import statement. That mistake can manifest as a v3 module depending on the v1 version of itself.
If you are surprised to see a module to depend on a different version of itself, it can be worthwhile to review the “Semantic Import Versioning” section above along with the FAQ “What can I check if I am not seeing the expected version of a dependency?”.
It continues to be a constraint that two packages may not depend on each other in a cycle.
A multi-module repository is a repository that contains multiple modules, each with its own go.mod file. Each module starts at the directory containing its go.mod file, and contains all packages from that directory and its subdirectories recursively, excluding any subtree that contains another go.mod file.
Each module has its own version information. Version tags for modules below the root of the repository must include the relative directory as a prefix. For example, consider the following repository:
my-repo `-- foo `-- rop `-- go.mod
The tag for version 1.2.3 of module “my-repo/foo/rop” is “foo/rop/v1.2.3”.
Typically, the path for one module in the repository will be a prefix of the others. For example, consider this repository:
my-repo |-- bar |-- foo | |-- rop | `-- yut |-- go.mod `-- mig |-- go.mod `-- vub
Fig. A top-level module‘s path is a prefix of another module’s path.
This repository contains two modules. However, the module “my-repo” is a prefix of the path of the module “my-repo/mig”.
Adding modules, removing modules, and versioning modules in such a configuration require considerable care and deliberation, so it is almost always easier and simpler to manage a single-module repository rather than multiple modules in an existing repository.
Russ Cox commented in #26664:
For all but power users, you probably want to adopt the usual convention that one repo = one module. It‘s important for long-term evolution of code storage options that a repo can contain multiple modules, but it’s almost certainly not something you want to do by default.
Two examples of how multi-modules can be more work:
go test ./...
from the repository root will no longer test everything in the repositoryreplace
directives.However, there is additional nuance beyond those two examples. Please read the FAQs in this sub-section carefully if you are considering having multiple modules in a single repository.
Two example scenarios where it can make sense to have more than one go.mod
in a repository:
if you have usage examples where the examples themselves have a complex set of dependencies (e.g., perhaps you have a small package but include an example of using your package with kubernetes). In that case, it can make sense for your repository to have an example
or _example
directory with its own go.mod
, such as shown here.
if you have a repository with a complex set of dependencies, but you have a client API with a smaller set of dependencies. In some cases, it might make sense to have an api
or clientapi
or similar directory with its own go.mod
, or to separate out that clientapi
into its own repository.
However, for both of those cases, if you are considering creating a multi-module repository for performance or download size for a large set of indirect dependencies, you are strongly encouraged to first try with a GOPROXY, which will be enabled by default in Go 1.13. Using a GOPROXY mostly equals any performance benefits or dependency download size benefits that might otherwise come from creating a multi-module repository.
Yes. However, there are two classes of this problem:
The first class: the package to which the module is being added to is not in version control yet (a new package). This case is straightforward: add the package and the go.mod in the same commit, tag the commit, and push.
The second class: the path at which the module is being added is in version control and contains one or more existing packages. This case requires a considerable amount of care. To illustrate, consider again the following repository (now in a github.com location to simulate the real-world better):
github.com/my-repo |-- bar |-- foo | |-- rop | `-- yut |-- go.mod `-- mig `-- vub
Consider adding module “github.com/my-repo/mig”. If one were to follow the same approach as above, the package /my-repo/mig could be provided by two different modules: the old version of “github.com/my-repo”, and the new, standalone module "github.com/my-repo/mig. If both modules are active, importing “github.com/my-repo/mig” would cause an “ambiguous import” error at compile time.
The way to get around this is to make the newly-added module depend on the module it was “carved out” from, at a version after which it was carved out.
Let's step through this with the above repository, assuming that “github.com/my-repo” is currently at v1.2.3:
Add github.com/my-repo/mig/go.mod:
cd path-to/github.com/my-repo/mig go mod init github.com/my-repo/mig # Note: if "my-repo/mig" does not actually depend on "my-repo", add a blank # import. # Note: version must be at or after the carve-out. go mod edit -require github.com/myrepo@v1.3
git commit
git tag v1.3.0
git tag mig/v1.0.0
Next, let‘s test these. We can’t go build
or go test
naively, since the go commands would try to fetch each dependent module from the module cache. So, we need to use replace rules to cause go
commands to use the local copies:
cd path-to/github.com/my-repo/mig go mod edit -replace github.com/my-repo@v1.3.0=../ go test ./... go mod edit -dropreplace github.com/my-repo@v1.3.0
git push origin master v1.3.0 mig/v1.0.0
push the commit and both tags
Note that in the future golang.org/issue/28835 should make the testing step a more straightforward experience.
Note also that code was removed from module “github.com/my-repo” between minor versions. It may seem strange to not consider this a major change, but in this instance the transitive dependencies continue to provide compatible implementations of the removed packages at their original import paths.
Yes, with the same two cases and similar steps as above.
Yes. Packages in one module are allowed to import internal packages from another module as long as they share the same path prefix up to the internal/ path component. For example, consider the following repository:
my-repo |-- foo | `-- go.mod |-- go.mod `-- internal
Here, package foo can import /my-repo/internal as long as module “my-repo/foo” depends on module “my-repo”. Similarly, in the following repository:
my-repo |-- foo | `-- go.mod `-- internal `-- go.mod
Here, package foo can import my-repo/internal as long as module “my-repo/foo” depends on module “my-repo/internal”. The semantics are the same in both: since my-repo is a shared path prefix between my-repo/internal and my-repo/foo, package foo is allowed to import package internal.
One additional use case for having multiple go.mod
files in a single repository is if the repository has files that should be pruned from a module. For example, a repository might have very large files that are not needed for the Go module, or a multi-language repository might have many non-Go files.
An empty go.mod
in a directory will cause that directory and all of its subdirectories to be excluded from the top-level Go module.
If the excluded directory does not contain any .go
files, no additional steps are needed beyond placing the empty go.mod
file. If the excluded directory does contain .go
files, please first carefully review the other FAQs in this multi-module repository section.
Please see the question “Won't minimal version selection keep developers from getting important updates?” in the earlier FAQ from the official proposal discussion.
go env
to confirm it does not show an empty value for the read-only GOMOD
variable.GOMOD
as a variable because it is effectively read-only debug output that go env
outputs.GO111MODULE=on
to enable modules, double-check that it is not accidentally the plural GO111MODULES=on
. (People sometimes naturally include the S
because the feature is often called “modules”).-mod=vendor
flag is being passed to go build
or similar, or that GOFLAGS=-mod=vendor
is set.vendor
directory unless you ask the go
tool to use vendor
.go list -m all
to see the list of actual versions selected for your buildgo list -m all
usually gives you more detail compared to if you were to instead just look a go.mod
file.go get foo
fails in some way, or if go build
is failing on a particular package foo
, it often can be helpful to check the output from go get -v foo
or go get -v -x foo
:go get
will often provide more a detailed error message than go build
.-v
flag to go get
asks to print more verbose details, though be mindful that certain “errors” such as 404 errors might be expected based on how a remote repository was configured.go get -v -x foo
, which also shows the git or other VCS commands being issued. (If warranted, you can often execute the same git commands outside of the context of the go
tool for troubleshooting purposes).vgo
prototype and Go 1.11 beta, but much less frequently in the GA 1.11.go
commands executing in parallel (see #26794, which is addressed for Go 1.12). As a troubleshooting step, you can copy $GOPATH/pkg/mod to a backup directory (in case further investigation is warranted later), run go clean -modcache
, and then see whether the original problem persists.The error you are currently examining might be a secondary issue caused by not having the expected version of a particular module or package in your build. Therefore, if the cause of a particular error is not obvious, it can be helpful to spot check your versions as described in the next FAQ.
A good first step is to run go mod tidy
. There is some chance this might resolve the issue, but it will also help put your go.mod
file into a consistent state with respect to your .go
source code, which will help make any subsequent investigation easier. (If go mod tidy
itself changes the versions of a dependency in a way you don't expect, first read this FAQ on ‘go mod tidy’. If that does not explain it, you can try resetting your go.mod
and then run go list -mod=readonly all
, which might give a more specific message about whatever was requiring a change to its version).
The second step usually should be to check go list -m all
to see the list of actual versions selected for your build. go list -m all
shows you the final selected versions, including for indirect dependencies and after resolving versions for any shared dependencies. It also shows the outcome of any replace
and exclude
directives.
A good next step can be to examine the output of go mod graph
or go mod graph | grep <module-of-interest>
. go mod graph
prints the module requirement graph (including taking into account replacements). Each line in the output has two fields: the first column is a consuming module, and the second column is one of that module's requirements (including the version required by that consuming module). This can be a quick way to see which modules are requiring a particular dependency, including when your build has a dependency that has different required versions from different consumers in your build (and if that is the case, it is important to be familiar with the behavior described in the “Version Selection” section above).
go mod why -m <module>
can also be useful here, although it is typically more useful for seeing why a dependency is included at all (rather than why a dependency ends up with a particular version).
go list
provides many more variations of queries that can be useful to interrogate your modules if needed. One example is the following, which will show the exact versions used in your build excluding test-only dependencies:
go list -deps -f '{{with .Module}}{{.Path}} {{.Version}}{{end}}' ./... | sort -u
A more detailed set of commands and examples for interrogating your modules can be seen in a runnable “Go Modules by Example” walkthough.
One cause of unexpected versions can be due to someone having created an invalid or unexpected go.mod
file that was not intended, or a related mistake (for example: a v2.0.1
version of module might have incorrectly declared itself to be module foo
in its go.mod
without the required /v2
; an import statement in .go
code intended to import a v3 module might be be missing the required /v3
; a require
statement in a go.mod
for a v4 module might be be missing the required /v4
). Therefore, if the cause of a particular issue you are seeing is not obvious, it can be worthwhile to first re-read the material in the “go.mod” and “Semantic Import Versioning” sections above (given these include important rules that modules must follow) and then take a few minutes to spot check the most relevant go.mod
files and import statements.
This is a general error message that can occur for several different underlying causes.
In some cases, this error is simply due to a mistyped path, so the first step likely should be to double-check for incorrect paths based on the details listed in the error message.
If you have not already done so, a good next step is often to try go get -v foo
or go get -v -x foo
:
go get
will often provide more a detailed error message than go build
.Some other possible causes:
You might see the error cannot find module providing package foo
if you have issued go build
or go build .
but do not have any .go
source files in the current directory. If this is what you are encountering, the solution might be an alternative invocation such as go build ./...
(where the ./...
expands out to match all the packages within the current module). See #27122.
The module cache in Go 1.11 can cause this error, including in the face of network issues or multiple go
commands executing in parallel. This is resolved in Go 1.12. See the first troubleshooting FAQ in this section above for more details and possible corrective steps.
go mod init
without any arguments will attempt to guess the proper module path based on different hints such as VCS meta data. However, it is not expected that go mod init
will always be able to guess the proper module path.
If go mod init
gives you this error, those heuristics were not able to guess, and you must supply the module path yourself (such as go mod init github.com/you/hello
).
Yes. This requires some manual steps, but can be helpful in some more complex cases.
When you run go mod init
when initializing your own module, it will automatically convert from a prior dependency manager by translating configuration files like Gopkg.lock
, glide.lock
, or vendor.json
into a go.mod
file that contains corresponding require
directives. The information in a pre-existing Gopkg.lock
file for example usually describes version information for all of your direct and indirect dependencies.
However, if instead you are adding a new dependency that has not yet opted in to modules itself, there is not a similar automatic conversion process from any prior dependency manager that your new dependency might have been using. If that new dependency itself has non-module dependencies that have had breaking changes, then in some cases that can cause incompatibility problems. In other words, a prior dependency manager of your new dependency is not automatically used, and that can cause problems with your indirect dependencies in some cases.
One approach is to run go mod init
on your problematic non-module direct dependency to convert from its current dependency manager, and then use the require
directives from the resulting temporary go.mod
to populate or update the go.mod
in your module.
For example, if github.com/some/nonmodule
is a problematic direct dependency of your module that is currently using another dependency manager, you can do something similar to:
$ git clone -b v1.2.3 https://github.com/some/nonmodule /tmp/scratchpad/nonmodule $ cd /tmp/scratchpad/nonmodule $ go mod init $ cat go.mod
The resulting require
information from the temporary go.mod
can be manually moved into the actual go.mod
for your module, or you can consider using https://github.com/rogpeppe/gomodmerge, which is a community tool targeting this use case. In addition, you will want to add a require github.com/some/nonmodule v1.2.3
to your actual go.mod
to match the version that you manually cloned.
A concrete example of following this technique for docker is in this #28489 comment, which illustrates getting a consistent set of versions of docker dependencies to avoid case sensitive issues between github.com/sirupsen/logrus
vs. github.com/Sirupsen/logrus
.
In general, a module declares its identity in its go.mod
via the module
directive, such as module example.com/m
. This is the “module path” for that module, and the go
tool enforces consistency between that declared module path and the import paths used by any consumer. If a module's go.mod
file reads module example.com/m
, then a consumer must import packages from that module using import paths that start with that module path (e.g., import "example.com/m"
or import "example.com/m/sub/pkg"
).
The go
command reports a parsing go.mod: unexpected module path
fatal error if there is a mismatch between an import path used by a consumer vs. the corresponding declared module path. In addition, in some cases the go
command will then report a more generic error loading module requirements
error afterwards.
The most common cause of this error is if there was a name change (e.g., github.com/Sirupsen/logrus
to github.com/sirupsen/logrus
), or if a module was sometimes used via two different names prior to modules due to a vanity import path (e.g., github.com/golang/sync
vs. the recommended golang.org/x/sync
).
This can then cause problems if you have a dependency that is still being imported via an older name (e.g., github.com/Sirupsen/logrus
) or a non-canonical name (e.g., github.com/golang/sync
) but that dependency has subsequently adopted modules and now declares its canonical name in its go.mod
. The error here can then trigger during an upgrade when the upgraded version of the module is found declaring a canonical module path that no longer matches the older import path.
github.com/Quasilyte/go-consistent
.github.com/quasilyte/go-consistent
(changing Q
to lowercase q
), which is a breaking change. GitHub forwards from the old name to the new name.go get -u
, which attempts to upgrade all of your direct and indirect dependencies.github.com/Quasilyte/go-consistent
is attempted to be upgraded, but the latest go.mod
found now reads module github.com/quasilyte/go-consistent
.go: github.com/Quasilyte/go-consistent@v0.0.0-20190521200055-c6f3937de18c: parsing go.mod: unexpected module path “github.com/quasilyte/go-consistent” go get: error loading module requirements
The most common form of the error is:
go: example.com/some/OLD/name@vX.Y.Z: parsing go.mod: unexpected module path “example.com/some/NEW/name”
If you visit the repository for example.com/some/NEW/name
(from the right-side of the error), you can check the go.mod
file for the latest release or master
to see if it declares itself on the first line of the go.mod
as module example.com/some/NEW/name
. If so, that is a hint that you are seeing an “old module name” vs. “new module name” problem.
This remainder of this section focuses on resolving the “old name” vs. “new name” form of this the error by following these steps in sequence:
Check your own code to see if you are importing using example.com/some/OLD/name
. If so, update your code to import using example.com/some/NEW/name
.
If you received this error during an upgrade, you should try upgrading using the tip version of Go, which has more targeted upgrade logic (#26902) that can often sidestep this problem and also often has a better error message for this situation. Note that the go get
arguments in tip / 1.13 are different than in 1.12. Example of obtaining tip and using it to upgrade your dependencies:
go get golang.org/dl/gotip && gotip download gotip get -u all gotip mod tidy
Because the problematic old import is often in an indirect dependency, upgrading with tip and then running go mod tidy
can frequently upgrade you past the problematic version and then also remove the problematic version from your go.mod
as no longer needed, which then puts you into a functioning state when you return to using Go 1.12 or 1.11 for day-to-day use. For example, see that approach work here to upgrade past github.com/golang/lint
vs. golang.org/x/lint
problems.
If you received this error while doing go get -u foo
or go get -u foo@latest
, try removing the -u
. This will give you the set of dependencies used by foo@latest
without upgrading the dependencies of foo
past the versions that the author of foo
likely verified as working when releasing foo
. This can be important especially during this transitional time when some of the direct and indirect dependencies of foo
might not yet have adopted semver or modules. (A common mistake is thinking go get -u foo
solely gets the latest version of foo
. In actuality, the -u
in go get -u foo
or go get -u foo@latest
means to also get the latest versions for all of the direct and indirect dependencies of foo
; that might be what you want, but it might not be especially if it is otherwise failing due to deep indirect dependencies).
If the steps above have not resolved the error, the next approach is slightly more complicated, but most often should work to resolve an “old name” vs. “new name” form of this error. This uses just information solely from the error message itself, plus some brief looking at some VCS history.
4.1. Go to the example.com/some/NEW/name
repository
4.2. Determine when the go.mod
file was introduced there (e.g., by looking at the blame or history view for the go.mod
).
4.3. Pick the release or commit from just before the go.mod
file was introduced there.
4.4. In your go.mod
file, add a replace
statement using the old name on both sides of the replace
statement: replace example.com/some/OLD/name => example.com/some/OLD/name <version-just-before-go.mod>
Using our prior example where github.com/Quasilyte/go-consistent
is the old name and github.com/quasilyte/go-consistent
is the new name, we can see that the go.mod
was first introduced there in commit 00c5b0cf371a. That repository is not using semver tags, so we will take the immediately prior commit 00dd7fb039e and add it to the replace using the old uppercase Quasilyte name on both sides of the replace
:
replace github.com/Quasilyte/go-consistent => github.com/Quasilyte/go-consistent 00dd7fb039e
This replace
statement then enables us to upgrade past the problematic “old name” vs. “new name” mismatch by effectively preventing the old name from being upgraded to the new name in the presence of a go.mod
. Usually, an upgrade via go get -u
or similar can now avoid the error. If the upgrade completes, you can check to see if anyone is still importing the old name (e.g., go mod graph | grep github.com/Quasilyte/go-consistent
) and if not, the replace
can then be removed. (The reason this often works is because the upgrade itself can otherwise fail if an old problematic import path is used even though it might not be used in the final result if the upgrade had completed, which is tracked in #30831).
gotip
in step 2. above might identify the problematic importer, but it does not do so in all cases, especially for upgrades (#30661). If it is unclear who is importing using the problematic old import path, you can usually find out by creating a clean module cache, performing the operation or operations that trigger the error, and then grepping for the old problematic import path within the module cache. For example:export GOPATH=$(mktemp -d) go get -u foo # peform operation that generates the error of interest cd $GOPATH/pkg/mod grep -R --include="*.go" github.com/Quasilyte/go-consistent
Finally, the above steps focus on how to resolve an underlying “old name” vs. “new name” problem. However, the same error message can also appear if a go.mod
was placed in the wrong location or simply has the wrong module path. If that is the case, the importing that module should always fail. If you are importing a new module that you just created and has never been successfully imported before, you should check that the go.mod
file is located correctly and that it has the proper module path that corresponds to that location. (The most common approach is a single go.mod
per repository, with the single go.mod
file placed in the repository root, and using the repository name as the module path declared in the module
directive). See the “go.mod” section for more details.
In short:
Because the pre-built packages are non-module builds and can’t be reused. Sorry. Disable cgo for now or install gcc.
This is only an issue when opting in to modules (e.g., via GO111MODULE=on
). See #26988 for additional discussion.
import "./subdir"
?No. See #26645, which includes:
In modules, there finally is a name for the subdirectory. If the parent directory says “module m” then the subdirectory is imported as “m/subdir”, no longer “./subdir”.
Directories without .go
files are not copied inside the vendor
directory by go mod vendor
. This is by design.
In short, setting aside any particular vendoring behavior – the overall model for go builds is that the files needed to build a package should be in the directory with the .go
files.
Using the example of cgo – modifying C source code in other directories will not trigger a rebuild, and instead your build will use stale cache entries. The cgo documentation now includes:
Note that changes to files in other directories do not cause the package to be recompiled, so all non-Go source code for the package should be stored in the package directory, not in subdirectories.
A community tool https://github.com/goware/modvendor allows you to easily copy a complete set of .c, .h, .s, .proto or other files from a module into the vendor
directory. Although this can be helpful, some care must be taken to make sure your go build is being handled properly in general (regardless of vendoring) if you have files needed to build a package that are outside of the directory with the .go
files.
See additional discussion in #26366.
An alternative approach to traditional vendoring is to check in the module cache. It can end up with similar benefits as traditional vendoring and in some ways ends up with a higher fidelity copy. This approach is explained as a “Go Modules by Example” walkthrough.