glide

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Published: Oct 23, 2015 License: MIT Imports: 5 Imported by: 0

README

Glide: The Lightweight Vendor Package Manager

Manage your vendor and vendored packages with ease. Glide is a tool for managing the vendor directory within a Go package. This feature, first introduced in Go 1.5, allows each package to have a vendor directory containing dependent packages for the project. These vendor packages can be installed by a tool (e.g. glide), similar to go get or they can be vendored and distributed with the package.

Build Status Go Report Card

Features
  • Ease dependency management
  • Support versioning packages
  • Support aliasing packages (e.g. for working with github forks)
  • Remove the need for munging import statements
  • Work with all of the go tools
  • Support the VCS tools that Go supports:
    • git
    • bzr
    • hg
    • svn
  • Support custom local and global plugins (see docs/plugins.md)

How It Works

The dependencies for a project are listed in a glide.yaml file. This can include a version, VCS, repository location (that can be different from the package name), etc. When glide up is run it downloads the packages (or updates) to the vendor directory. It then recursively walks through the downloaded packages looking for those with a glide.yaml file that don't already have a vendor directory and installing their dependencies to their vendor directories.

A projects is structured like this:

- $GOPATH/src/myProject (Your project)
  |
  |-- glide.yaml
  |
  |-- main.go (Your main go code can live here)
  |
  |-- mySubpackage (You can create your own subpackages, too)
  |    |
  |    |-- foo.go
  |
  |-- vendor
       |-- github.com
            |
            |-- Masterminds
                  |
                  |-- ... etc.

Take a look at the Glide source code to see this philosophy in action.

Install

On Mac OS X you can install the latest release via Homebrew:

$ brew install glide

Binary packages are available for Mac, Linux and Windows.

To build from source you can:

  1. Clone this repository and change directory into it
  2. Run make bootstrap

This will leave you with ./glide, which you can put in your $PATH if you'd like. (You can also take a look at make install to install for you.)

The Glide repo has now been configured to use glide to manage itself, too.

Usage

$ glide create                            # Start a new workspaces
$ open glide.yaml                         # and edit away!
$ glide get github.com/Masterminds/cookoo # Get a package and add to glide.yaml
$ glide install                           # Install packages and dependencies
# work, work, work
$ go build                                # Go tools work normally
$ glide up                                # Update to newest versions of the package

Check out the glide.yaml in this directory, or examples in the docs/ directory.

glide create [optional package name]

Initialize a new workspace. Among other things, this creates a stub glide.yaml

$ glide create
[INFO] Initialized. You can now edit 'glide.yaml'

If an optional package name is specified, Glide will add it to glide.yaml as the name of your project.

glide get [package name]

You can download package to your vendor directory and have it added to your glide.yaml file with glide get.

$ glide get github.com/Masterminds/cookoo
glide guess and glide pin

To help with the creating and managing your glide.yaml files there are two more helper commands. The glide guess command will look over your project, read the imports, attempt to intelligently guess at the ones you need to list, and create the text for a glide.yaml file.

There are times you need to pin a dependency to a version, such as when you're preparing to deploy to production. For that case there is the glide pin command that will pin each dependency in the glide.yaml file to the current commit id.

glide up (aliased to update and install)

Download or update all of the libraries listed in the glide.yaml file and put them in the vendor directory. It will also recursively walk through the dependency packages doing the same thing if no vendor directory exists.

$ glide up

If the dependent vendor packages listed in your glide.yaml file use GPM or Godep you can use the --import flag to import them. If an import occurs a vendor directory will be created in each project with with dependencies being imported. A glide.yaml file will also be created for each project.

glide novendor (aliased to nv)

When you run commands like go test ./... it will iterate over all the subdirectories including the vendor directory. When you are testing your application you may want to test your application files without running all the tests of your dependencies and their dependencies. This is where the novendor command comes in. It lists all of the directories except vendor.

$ go test $(glide novendor)

This will run go test over all directories of your project except the vendor directory.

glide name

When you're scripting with Glide there are occasions where you need to know the name of the package you're working on. glide name returns the name of the package listed in the glide.yaml file.

glide rebuild

Re-run go install on the packages in the glide.yaml file. This (along with glide install and glide update) pays special attention to the contents of the subpackages: directive in the YAML file.

$ glide rebuild
[INFO] Building dependencies.
[INFO] Running go build github.com/kylelemons/go-gypsy/yaml
[INFO] Running go build github.com/Masterminds/cookoo/cli
[INFO] Running go build github.com/Masterminds/cookoo

This is useful when you are working with large 3rd party libraries. It will create the .a files, which can have a positive impact on your build times.

glide tree

Glide includes a few commands that inspect code and give you details about what is imported. glide tree is one such command. Running it gives data like this:

$ glide tree
github.com/Masterminds/glide
	github.com/Masterminds/cookoo   (/Users/mbutcher/Code/Go/src/github.com/Masterminds/glide/vendor/github.com/Masterminds/cookoo)
		github.com/Masterminds/cookoo/io   (/Users/mbutcher/Code/Go/src/github.com/Masterminds/glide/vendor/github.com/Masterminds/cookoo/io)
	github.com/Masterminds/glide/cmd   (/Users/mbutcher/Code/Go/src/github.com/Masterminds/glide/cmd)
		github.com/Masterminds/cookoo   (/Users/mbutcher/Code/Go/src/github.com/Masterminds/glide/vendor/github.com/Masterminds/cookoo)
			github.com/Masterminds/cookoo/io   (/Users/mbutcher/Code/Go/src/github.com/Masterminds/glide/vendor/github.com/Masterminds/cookoo/io)
		github.com/Masterminds/vcs   (/Users/mbutcher/Code/Go/src/github.com/Masterminds/glide/vendor/github.com/Masterminds/vcs)
		github.com/codegangsta/cli   (/Users/mbutcher/Code/Go/src/github.com/Masterminds/glide/vendor/github.com/codegangsta/cli)
		github.com/kylelemons/go-gypsy/yaml   (/Users/mbutcher/Code/Go/src/github.com/Masterminds/glide/vendor/github.com/kylelemons/go-gypsy/yaml)
	github.com/codegangsta/cli   (/Users/mbutcher/Code/Go/src/github.com/Masterminds/glide/vendor/github.com/codegangsta/cli)

This shows a tree of imports, excluding core libraries. Because vendoring makes it possible for the same package to live in multiple places, glide tree also prints the location of the package being imported.

glide list

Glide's list command shows an alphabetized list of all the packages that a project imports.

$ glide list
github.com/Masterminds/cookoo (Present: yes)
github.com/Masterminds/cookoo/io (Present: yes)
github.com/Masterminds/glide/cmd (Present: yes)
github.com/Masterminds/vcs (Present: yes)
github.com/codegangsta/cli (Present: yes)
github.com/kylelemons/go-gypsy/yaml (Present: yes)

If it finds a reference to a package that has not been installed, Present is set to no.

glide help

Print the glide help.

$ glide help
glide --version

Print the version and exit.

$ glide --version
glide version 0.5.0
glide.yaml

The glide.yaml file does two critical things:

  1. It names the current package
  2. It declares external dependencies

A brief glide.yaml file looks like this:

package: github.com/Masterminds/glide
import:
  - package: github.com/kylelemons/go-gypsy
  - package: github.com/Masterminds/cookoo
    vcs: git
    ref: master
    repo: git@github.com:Masterminds/cookoo.git

The above tells glide that...

  1. This package is named github.com/Masterminds/glide
  2. That this package depends on two libraries.

The first library exemplifies a minimal package import. It merely gives the fully qualified import path.

When Glide reads the definition for the second library, it will get the repo from the source in repo, checkout the master branch, and put it in github.com/Masterminds/cookoo in the vendor directory. (Note that package and repo can be completely different)

TIP: The ref is VCS dependent and can be anything that can be checked out. For example, with Git this can be a branch, tag, or hash. This varies and depends on what's supported in the VCS.

TIP: In general, you are advised to use the base package name for importing a package, not a subpackage name. For example, use github.com/kylelemons/go-gypsy and not github.com/kylelemons/go-gypsy/yaml.

Controlling package and subpackage builds

In addition to fetching packages, Glide builds the packages with go install. The YAML file can give special instructions about how to build a package. Example:

package: github.com/technosophos/glide
import:
  - package: github.com/kylelemons/go-gypsy
    subpackage: yaml
  - package: github.com/Masterminds/cookoo
    subpackage:
      - .
      - cli
      - web
  - package: github.com/crowdmob/amz
    subpackage: ...

According to the above, the following packages will be built:

  1. The go-gypsy/yaml package
  2. The cookoo package (.), along with cookoo/web and cookoo/cli
  3. Everything in awz (...)

See the docs/ folder for more examples.

Supported Version Control Systems

The Git, SVN, Mercurial (Hg), and Bzr source control systems are supported. This happens through the vcs package.

Troubleshooting

Q: bzr (or hg) is not working the way I expected. Why?

These are works in progress, and may need some additional tuning. Please take a look at the vcs package. If you see a better way to handle it please let us know.

Q: Should I check vendor/ into version control?

That's up to you. It's not necessary, but it may also cause you extra work and lots of extra space in your VCS.

Q: How do I import settings from GPM or Godep?

There are two ways to approach importing. The first is when you use glide up or glide get there is an --import flag. It will attempt to import from GPM and Godep automatically. If fetching is happening recursively this will be applied to recursive packages as well.

Alternatively, Glide can import from GPM's Godeps file format or from Godep's Godeps/Godeps.json file format with the import command.

For GPM, use glide import gpm.

For Godep, use glide import godep.

Each of these will merge your existing glide.yaml file with the dependencies it finds for those managers, and then emit the file as output. It will not overwrite your glide.yaml file.

You can write it to file like this:

$ glide import godep > new-glide.yaml

Q: Can Glide fetch a package based on OS or Arch?

A: Yes. Using the os and arch fields on a package, you can specify which OSes and architectures the package should be fetched for. For example, the following package will only be fetched for 64-bit Darwin/OSX systems:

- package: some/package
  os:
    - darwin
  arch:
    - amd64

The package will not be fetched for other architectures or OSes.

Q: How do I prevent vendored packages from importing the same package

You can use the flatten: true config option on the entire project or just one specific dependency.

LICENSE

This package is made available under an MIT-style license. See LICENSE.txt.

Thanks!

We owe a huge debt of gratitude to the GPM and GVP projects, which inspired many of the features of this package. If glide isn't the right Go project manager for you, check out those.

The Composer (PHP), npm (JavaScript), and Bundler (Ruby) projects all inspired various aspects of this tool, as well.

The Name

Aside from being catchy, "glide" is a contraction of "Go Elide". The idea is to compress the tasks that normally take us lots of time into a just a few seconds.

Documentation

Overview

Glide is a command line utility that manages Go project dependencies and your GOPATH.

Dependencies are managed via a glide.yaml in the root of a project. The yaml

Params:

  • filename (string): The name of the glide YAML file. Default is glide.yaml.
  • project (string): The name of the project. Default is 'main'.

file lets you specify projects, versions (tags, branches, or references), and even alias one location in as other one. Aliasing is useful when supporting forks without needing to rewrite the imports in a codebase.

A glide.yaml file looks like:

package: github.com/Masterminds/glide
imports:
	- package: github.com/Masterminds/cookoo
	  vcs: git
	  ref: 1.1.0
	  subpackages: **
	- package: github.com/kylelemons/go-gypsy
	  subpackages: yaml

Glide puts dependencies in a vendor directory. Go utilities require this to be in your GOPATH. Glide makes this easy. Use the `glide in` command to enter a shell (your default) with the GOPATH set to the projects vendor directory. To leave this shell simply exit it.

If your .bashrc, .zshrc, or other startup shell sets your GOPATH you many need to optionally set it using something like:

if [ "" = "${GOPATH}" ]; then
  export GOPATH="/some/dir"
fi

For more information use the `glide help` command or see https://github.com/Masterminds/glide

Directories

Path Synopsis
Package cmd provides re-usable commands for Glide.
Package cmd provides re-usable commands for Glide.
Package gb provides compatibility with GB manifests.
Package gb provides compatibility with GB manifests.

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