errcheck is a program for checking for unchecked errors in go programs.
go get -u github.com/kisielk/errcheck
errcheck requires Go 1.9 or newer and depends on the package go/packages from the golang.org/x/tools repository.
For basic usage, just give the package path of interest as the first argument:
errcheck github.com/kisielk/errcheck/testdata
To check all packages beneath the current directory:
errcheck ./...
Or check all packages in your $GOPATH and $GOROOT:
errcheck all
errcheck also recognizes the following command-line options:
The -tags
flag takes a space-separated list of build tags, just like go build
. If you are using any custom build tags in your code base, you may need
to specify the relevant tags here.
The -asserts
flag enables checking for ignored type assertion results. It
takes no arguments.
The -blank
flag enables checking for assignments of errors to the
blank identifier. It takes no arguments.
Use the -exclude
flag to specify a path to a file containing a list of functions to
be excluded.
errcheck -exclude errcheck_excludes.txt path/to/package
The file should contain one function signature per line. The format for function signatures is
package.FunctionName
while for methods it's (package.Receiver).MethodName
for value receivers
and (*package.Receiver).MethodName
for pointer receivers. If the function name is followed by string of form (TYPE)
, then
the the function call is excluded only if the type of the first argument is TYPE
. It also accepts a special suffix
(os.Stdout)
and (os.Stderr)
, which excludes the function only when the first argument is a literal os.Stdout
or os.Stderr
.
An example of an exclude file is:
io/ioutil.ReadFile
io.Copy(*bytes.Buffer)
io.Copy(os.Stdout)
(*net/http.Client).Do
The exclude list is combined with an internal list for functions in the Go standard library that have an error return type but are documented to never return an error.
The -ignore
flag takes a comma-separated list of pairs of the form package:regex.
For each package, the regex describes which functions to ignore within that package.
The package may be omitted to have the regex apply to all packages.
For example, you may wish to ignore common operations like Read and Write:
errcheck -ignore '[rR]ead|[wW]rite' path/to/package
or you may wish to ignore common functions like the print
variants in fmt
:
errcheck -ignore 'fmt:[FS]?[Pp]rint*' path/to/package
The -ignorepkg
flag takes a comma-separated list of package import paths
to ignore:
errcheck -ignorepkg 'fmt,encoding/binary' path/to/package
Note that this is equivalent to:
errcheck -ignore 'fmt:.*,encoding/binary:.*' path/to/package
If a regex is provided for a package pkg
via -ignore
, and pkg
also appears
in the list of packages passed to -ignorepkg
, the latter takes precedence;
that is, all functions within pkg
will be ignored.
Note that by default the fmt
package is ignored entirely, unless a regex is
specified for it. To disable this, specify a regex that matches nothing:
errcheck -ignore 'fmt:a^' path/to/package
The -ignoretests
flag disables checking of _test.go
files. It takes
no arguments.
Currently errcheck is unable to check packages that import "C" due to limitations in the importer when used with versions earlier than Go 1.11.
However, you can use errcheck on packages that depend on those which use cgo. In order for this to work you need to go install the cgo dependencies before running errcheck on the dependent packages.
See #16 for more details.
errcheck returns 1 if any problems were found in the checked files. It returns 2 if there were any other failures.
go-errcheck.el
integrates errcheck with Emacs by providing a go-errcheck
command
and customizable variables to automatically pass flags to errcheck.
vim-go can run errcheck via both its :GoErrCheck
and :GoMetaLinter
commands.