| # Introduction |
| |
| A common use case is to create a reusable library and an application that consumes it, and host both on Github. We will illustrate this with a trivial application called "` uselessd `" that consumes a likewise trivial library called "` useless `". |
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| # Code Layout |
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| The app and both libraries live on Github, each in its own repository. ` $GOPATH ` is the root of the _project_ - each of your Github repos will be checked out several folders below ` $GOPATH `. |
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| Your code layout would look like this: |
| |
| ``` |
| $GOPATH/ |
| src/ |
| github.com/ |
| jmcvetta/ |
| useless/ |
| .git/ |
| useless.go |
| useless_test.go |
| README.md |
| uselessd/ |
| .git/ |
| uselessd.go |
| uselessd_test.go |
| README.md |
| ``` |
| |
| Each folder under ` src/github.com/jmcvetta/ ` is the root of a separate git checkout. |
| |
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| # $GOPATH |
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| Your ` $GOPATH ` variable will point to the root of your Go workspace, as described in [How to Write Go Code](http://golang.org/doc/code.html). |
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| # Note for Eclipse Users |
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| Both Go and Eclipse use the term "workspace", but they use it to mean something different. What Go calls a "workspace" is what Eclipse calls a "project". Whenever this document uses either term, it refers to a Go workspace. |
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| # Setup the Workspace |
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| Let's assume we are starting from scratch. Initialize the two new repositories on Github, using the "Initialize this repository with a README" option so your repos can be cloned immediately. Then setup the project like this: |
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| ```sh |
| cd ~/workspace # Standard location for Eclipse workspace |
| mkdir mygo # Create your Go workspace |
| export GOPATH=~/workspace/mygo # GOPATH = Go workspace |
| cd $GOPATH |
| mkdir -p src/github.com/jmcvetta |
| cd src/github.com/jmcvetta |
| git clone git@github.com:jmcvetta/useless.git |
| git clone git@github.com:jmcvetta/uselessd.git |
| ``` |
| |
| # Libraries |
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| Conventionally, the name of the repository is the same as the name of the package it contains. Our ` useless ` repo contains ` useless.go ` which defines ` package useless `: |
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| ```Go |
| package useless |
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| func Foobar() string { |
| return "Foobar!" |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
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| # Applications |
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| An application - Go code that will be compiled into an executable command - always defines ` package main ` with a ` main() ` function. |
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| So ` uselessd.go ` looks like this: |
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| ```Go |
| package main |
| |
| import ( |
| "net/http" |
| |
| "golang.org/x/net/websocket" |
| "github.com/jmcvetta/useless" |
| ) |
| |
| func main() { |
| http.Handle("/useless", websocket.Handler(func(ws *websocket.Conn) { |
| ws.Write([]byte(useless.Foobar())) |
| })) |
| http.ListenAndServe(":3000", nil) |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| |
| # Dependencies |
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| Your project will probably depend on some existing packages. The application above depends upon ` golang.org/x/net/websocket `. You can install all dependencies by running "` go get -v ./... `" from the root of your workspace. The "` go get `" command is similar to "` go install `" in that it will attempt to build and install all packages in the workspace (technically, all packages matched by "` ./... `"), except that it will also examine their dependencies and download (and install) any that are missing first. |
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| See the output of "` go help packages `" for a full explanation of the "` ... `" syntax. |
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| All dependencies will be installed alongside your code under "` $GOPATH/src `". All Github reposities checked out by "` go get `" will be use the read-only ` https:// ` repository by default. To push changes back to github from one of these repositories, change the "` origin/master `" ref in ` .git/config ` to match the SSH repository from Github. |
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| # Build |
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| During development you can build the ` useless ` library by itself with the command "` go build ...useless `". You could also give the full path to the package name, "` go build github.com/jmcvetta/useless `". |
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| To compile ` uselessd.go ` and its dependencies into an executable, use the command "` go build ...uselessd `". |
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| # Example Code |
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| FWIW all the repo addresses on this page are real, and the ` uselessd ` application should compile if you follow the directions above. |