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gvt is the go vendoring tool for the GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT, based on gb-vendor

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gvt, the go vendoring tool

gvt is a simple Go vendoring tool made for the GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT.

It's based entirely on gb-vendor.

You run gvt fetch when you would run go get. gvt downloads packages to ./vendor/.... With GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT=1 the compiler will find and use those dependencies without import path rewriting.

gvt works recursively as you would expect, and lets you update vendored dependencies. It also writes a manifest to ./vendor/manifest. Finally, it strips the VCS metadata so that you can commit the vendored source cleanly.

Packages whose dependencies are vendored with gvt are go build-able and go get-able by Go 1.5 with GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT=1 set. Note that projects must live within the GOPATH tree in order to be go buildable with the GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT flag.

Installation

GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT=1 go get -u github.com/FiloSottile/gvt

Usage

You know how to use go get? That's how you use gvt fetch.

$ gvt fetch github.com/fatih/color
2015/09/05 02:38:06 fetching recursive dependency github.com/mattn/go-isatty
2015/09/05 02:38:07 fetching recursive dependency github.com/shiena/ansicolor

$ tree -d
.
└── vendor
    └── github.com
        ├── fatih
        │   └── color
        ├── mattn
        │   └── go-isatty
        └── shiena
            └── ansicolor
                └── ansicolor

9 directories

$ cat > main.go
package main
import "github.com/fatih/color"
func main() {
    color.Red("Hello, world!")
}

$ export GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT=1
$ go build .
$ ./hello
Hello, world!

$ git add main.go vendor/ && git commit

Full usage on GoDoc GoDoc

Alternative: not checking in vendored source

Some developers prefer not to check in the source of the vendored dependencies. In that case you can add lines like these to e.g. your .gitignore

vendor/**
!vendor/manifest

When you check out the source again, you can then run gvt rebuild to fetch all the dependencies at the revisions specified in the vendor/manifest file.

Please consider that this approach has the following consequences:

  • the package consumer will need gvt to fetch the dependencies
  • the dependencies will need to remain available from the source repositories: if the original repository goes down or rewrites history, build reproducibility is lost
  • go get won't work on your package

Troubleshooting

error: tag 'fetch' not found.

This kind of errors happens because you have an alias for gvt pointing to git verify-tag.

Run this, or add it to your ~/.bashrc / ~/.zshrc:

unalias gvt

go build can't find the vendored package

Make sure you set GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT=1.

Also note that GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT does not apply when outside the GOPATH tree. That is, your project must be somewhere in a subfolder of $GOPATH.

Why

There are many Go vendoring tools, but they all have some subset of the following problems

  • no GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT support: old tools are based on import path rewriting or GOPATH overrides
  • requirement to run on clients: some require the user to install the tool and run it after cloning, which breaks go get
  • no real fetching support: tools like Godep just copy packages from your GOPATH, instead of pulling it from the Internet, contaminating your system environment
  • prominent metadata files: there's no need for the manifest to be in your repository root, or in its own empty folder, or to be manually edited
  • complex feature set: many are project management tools with included vendoring features
  • different build stack: gb-vendor is awesome but it requires you to build your project with gb

About

gvt is the go vendoring tool for the GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT, based on gb-vendor

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