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A simple tool to vendor Go package dependencies. It's like "go get" for vendoring.

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govend

govend GoDoc Build Status Go Report Card Join the chat at https://gitter.im/govend/govend

govend is a simple tool to vendor Go package dependencies. It's like go get, but for vendoring external or third party packages.

govend is:

  • like go get, but for vendoring packages
  • compatible with any project directory structure
  • designed to vendor nested dependencies to the nth degree
  • compatible with Go versions 1.5+.

govend does not:

  • wrap the go command
  • try to create a new project
  • force you to lock dependency versions
  • generate temporary directories or files
  • alter any Go environment variables, including $GOPATH

Install

$ go get -u github.com/govend/govend

Usage

Small Project Usage

# ...                                        # code, code, code
$ govend github.com/gorilla/mux              # vendor a dependency
# ...                                        # code, code, code
$ go build                                   # go tools work normally
$ govend -u github.com/gorilla/mux           # updated a dependency
# ...                                        # code, code, code
$ go build                                   # go tools work normally

Big Project Usage

# ...                  # code, code, code
$ govend -v            # scan your project and download all dependencies
# ...                  # code, code, code
$ go build             # go tools work normally
$ govend -u            # scan your project and update all dependencies
# ...                  # code, code, code
$ go build             # go tools work normally

Team Usage

Sarah:

$ git init                     # start git project
# ...                          # code, code, code
$ govend -v -l                 # scan your project, download all dependencies,
                               # and create a vendor.yml file to lock
                               # dependency versions
# ...                          # code, code, code
$ go build                     # go tools work normally
$ govend -v -u                 # scan your project, update all dependencies,
                               # and update the vendor.yml revision versions
# ...                          # code, code, code
$ git push                     # push code to github
$ go build                     # go tools work normally

Mike:

$ git clone url       # grab all the code Sarah pushed
$ govend -v           # download all the dependencies in the vendor.yml file
                      # and use the same revision versions Sarah is using
$ go build            # build the exact same binary Sarah has
# ...                 # code, code, code

Verbose Mode

As with most unixy programs, no news is good news. Therefore, unless something goes wrong govend will not print anything to the terminal. If you want to see progress or proof something is happening use the -v flag to print out package import paths as they are downloaded and vendored.

The Dependency Tree

You can use the -t or --tree flag to view a rendition of the package dependency tree. This is helpful to visualize and understand what packages your dependencies rely on as well.

Explicitly Vendor A Package

You can explicitly tell govend to vendor one or more packages. It works the same way as go get but instead of running:

$ go get github.com/gorilla/mux

which will download the gorilla mux package into your $GOPATH, run:

$ govend github.com/gorilla/mux

which will download the gorilla mux package into your local project vendor/ directory. If you want govend to download more than one package, just tack them on. For example, you might want to vendor the gorilla mux, http, and securecookie packages like so:

$ govend github.com/gorilla/mux github.com/gorilla/http github.com/gorilla/securecookie

Explicitly Update Packages

To update a package that has already been vendored, simply use the -u network update flag. This flag has the same meaning as go get -u and will always use the network to download a fresh copy of the dependency.

To update the gorilla mux package in your $GOPATH you would run:

$ go get -u github.com/gorilla/mux

To update the gorilla mux package in your local project vendor/ directory run:

$ govend -u github.com/gorilla/mux

Vendor Packages Automatically

It would get old to ask govend to download and vendor each individual package when working on large Go projects. Thankfully govend can scan your project source code and identify dependencies for you.

govend assumes you want this behavior when no packages are explicitly provided:

$ cd project/root

$ govend

You can also show dependencies as they are vendored with the -v flag:

$ cd project/root

$ govend -v
github.com/kr/fs
github.com/BurntSushi/toml
github.com/spf13/cobra
github.com/inconshreveable/mousetrap
github.com/spf13/pflag
gopkg.in/yaml.v2
gopkg.in/check.v1

If you would like to update all vendored packages in a project use the -u flag:

$ cd project/root

$ govend -v -u
github.com/kr/fs
github.com/BurntSushi/toml
github.com/spf13/cobra
github.com/inconshreveable/mousetrap
github.com/spf13/pflag
gopkg.in/yaml.v2
gopkg.in/check.v1

Lock Packages

The command govend only scans for external packages and downloads them to the vendor/ directory in your project. You may need more control over versioning your dependencies so that reliable reproducible builds are possible.

govend can save the path and commit revisions of each repository downloaded in a vendor.yml file. This is called vendor locking. The format of the file can be specified to be JSON or TOML, YAML is used by default. Usually this file is located in the root directory of your project and should be included in your version control system.

To generate a vendor.yml file use the -l flag:

$ cd project/root

$ govend -v -l
github.com/kr/fs
github.com/BurntSushi/toml
github.com/spf13/cobra
github.com/inconshreveable/mousetrap
github.com/spf13/pflag
gopkg.in/yaml.v2
gopkg.in/check.v1

The resulting project structure should look something like:

.
├── ...
├── code
├── README.md
├── vendor
└── vendor.yml

The contents of the generated vendor.yml file in this example would be:

vendors:
- path: github.com/BurntSushi/toml
  rev: f772cd89eb0b33743387f826d1918df67f99cc7a
- path: github.com/inconshreveable/mousetrap
  rev: 76626ae9c91c4f2a10f34cad8ce83ea42c93bb75
- path: github.com/kr/fs
  rev: 2788f0dbd16903de03cb8186e5c7d97b69ad387b
- path: github.com/spf13/cobra
  rev: 65a708cee0a4424f4e353d031ce440643e312f92
- path: github.com/spf13/pflag
  rev: 7f60f83a2c81bc3c3c0d5297f61ddfa68da9d3b7
- path: gopkg.in/check.v1
  rev: 4f90aeace3a26ad7021961c297b22c42160c7b25
- path: gopkg.in/yaml.v2
  rev: f7716cbe52baa25d2e9b0d0da546fcf909fc16b4

You can now ignore the large vendor/ directory and pass the small vendor.yml file to your buddy. Your buddy can run $ govend and will get the exact same dependency versions as specified by vendor.yml.

This is how a team of developers can ensure reproducible builds if they do not want to check the vendor/ directory into a version control system.

Note: It is still a best practice to check in the vendor/ directory to your VCS.

Update Locked Packages

If you would like to update a particular vendored package to its latest version use the -u flag:

$ govend -u github.com/gorilla/mux

If you would like to update all the vendored packages to their latest versions run:

$ govend -u

If you want to update a particular vendored package to a particular revision, update the relevant rev: value inside the vendor.yml file. Then to update to that specific revision hash run:

$ govend -l

Prune Packages

Sometimes large repositories must be downloaded to satisfy a singular package dependency. This generates a lot of dead files if you are checking in vendor/ to your VCS.

The --prune flag will use the known dependency tree to remove or prune out all unused package leaving you with only relevant code.

Note: When pruning occurs it removes not only unused packages, but also files that start with ., _ and files that end with _test.go. This is because pruning is highly likely to break third party tests.

Hold onto Packages

If you stop using or importing a package path in your project code, govend will remove that package from your vendor.yml. Its how govend cleans up after you and keeps vendor.yml tidy.

The --hold flag will tell govend to keep that dependency, even if its not being used as an import by your project. This is great for versioning tooling that you might want to ship with a project.

$ govend --hold github.com/hashicorp/terraform

Note: When using the --hold flag a manifest file like vendor.yml is generated. Essentially, opting into --hold is also opting into --lock. Also because of the nature of hold, repos using hold cannot be pruned.

Vendor Report Summary

If you would like to get a report summary of the number of unique packages scanned, skipped and how many repositories were downloaded, run govend -v -r.

→ govend -v -r
github.com/kr/fs
github.com/BurntSushi/toml
github.com/spf13/cobra
github.com/inconshreveable/mousetrap
github.com/spf13/pflag
gopkg.in/yaml.v2
gopkg.in/check.v1

packages scanned: 7
packages skipped: 0
repos downloaded: 7

Vendor Scan

You may want to scan your code to determine how many third party dependencies are in your project. To do so run govend -s <path/to/dir>. You can also specify different output formats.

TXT

$ govend -s packages
github.com/kr/fs
gopkg.in/yaml.v2

JSON

$ govend -s -f json packages
[
  "github.com/kr/fs",
  "gopkg.in/yaml.v2"
]

YAML

$ govend -s -f yaml packages
- github.com/kr/fs
- gopkg.in/yaml.v2

XML

$ govend -s -f xml packages
<string>gopkg.in/yaml.v2</string>
<string>github.com/kr/fs</string>

More Flags

You can run govend -h to find more flags and options.

Vendor Supported Go Versions

  • Go 1.4 or less - Go does not support vendoring
  • Go 1.5 - vendor via GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT=1
  • Go 1.6 - vendor unless GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT=0
  • Go 1.7+ - vendor always despite the value of GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT

For further explanation please read https://golang.org/doc/go1.6#go_command.

Windows Support

govend works on Windows, but please report any bugs.

Contributing

Simply fork the code and send a pull request.

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A simple tool to vendor Go package dependencies. It's like "go get" for vendoring.

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