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Go Project Layout
[11]
Kyle C. Quest (Q)
[12]
golang-learn
[13]Kyle C. Quest (Q)
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Sep 11, 2017
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You went through the [19]Tour of Go, played with [20]https://play.golang.org/
and you feel you are ready to write some code. Great! However, you are not sure
how to structure your projects. Can you put your code anywhere you want? Is
there a standard way to organize your code? What if you need to have multiple
application binaries? What does it mean to be go gettable? These are some of
the questions youll be asking yourself.
First, you have to understand Go workspaces. [21]How to Write Go Code is a
good place to start. By default, Go keeps and expects all code in a single
workspace. This place is identified by the GOPATH environment variable. What
does it mean for you? It means you have to put your code in the default
workspace or you have to change the GOPATH variable to point to your own
location. Either way the actual source code for your project needs to be placed
in the src subdirectory (e.g., $GOPATH/src/your_project or $GOPATH/src/
github.com/your_github_username/your_project). Technically your project doesnt
have to be in a workspace if you dont import external packages and you use
relative imports for your own code, but its not recommended. Its fine for a
toy project or a PoC though. Go v1.11 does introduce the concept of [22]modules
that allows you to have your project code outside of your GOPATHwithout the
import restrictions mentioned above, but its still an experimental feature at
this point in time.
You have your project directory in the right place. Whats next?
For a PoC or a very small project where you are the only one writing the code
using a single main.go file in the root directory for your project is enough.
If you know your project will be large enough or itll go into production and
others will be contributing to it you should consider adopting, at least, some
of the project layout patterns outlined here.
There are a number of project layout patterns emerging in the Go ecosystem. The
two most common patterns are the cmd and pkg directories. You should adopt
these patterns unless you have a tiny project.
The cmd layout pattern is very useful when you need to have more than one
application binary. Each binary gets a subdirectory (e.g., your_project/cmd/
your_app). This patterns also helps you keep your project/package go
gettable. What does it mean? It means you can use the go get command to fetch
(and install) your project, its applications and its libraries (e.g., go get
github.com/your_github_username/your_project/cmd/appxg). You dont have to
separate the application files. Youll be able to build each application with
the right set of go build flags, but go get will no longer work because it will
not know which application code to build. The official [23]Go tools is one
example of the cmd layout patter. A number of other well known projects use the
same pattern: [24]Kubernetes, [25]Docker, [26]Prometheus, [27]Influxdb.
The pkg layout pattern is also pretty popular. For new Go developers its one
of the most confusing package structure concepts because Go workspaces have a
directory with the same name and that directory has a different purpose (its
used to store object files for the packages the Go compiler builds). The pkg
directory is where you put your public libraries. They can be used internally
by your application. They can also be used by external projects. This is an
informal contract between you and other external users of your code. Other
projects will import these libraries expecting them to work, so think twice
before you put something here. Many well known projects use this pattern: [28]
Kubernetes, [29]Docker, [30]Grafana, [31]Influxdb, [32]Etcd.
Some of the libraries in the pkg directory are not always for public use. Why
is that? It happens because many existing Go projects predate the ability to
hide internal packages. Some projects put those internal libraries in the pkg
directory to be consistent with the rest of their code structure. Other
projects put their internal libraries into separate directories outside of the
pkg directory. [33]Go 1.4 introduce an ability to hide code using internal
directories. What does it mean? If you put your code in an internal directory
no external project will be able to import that code. Even other code in your
project wont be able to access this internal code if it lives outside of its
parent directory. This feature is not widely used yet because its relatively
new; however, its extremely valuable as an additional layer of control (in
addition to the lowercase and uppercase function visibility rules in Go). A
number of new and well known projects use this pattern: [34]Dep, [35]Docker,
[36]Nsq, [37]Go Ethereal, [38]Contour.
The internal directory is the place to put your private packages. You can
optionally add additional structure by separating your internally shared
libraries (e.g., your_project/internal/pkg/your_private_lib) and the
application code you dont want others to import (e.g., your_project/internal/
app/your_app). When you put all of you private code in the internal directory
the application code in the cmd directory will be limited to small files that
define the main function for the corresponding application binaries.
Everything else will be imported from the internal or pkg directories ([39]ark,
from Heptio, and [40]loki, from Grafana, are good examples of this tiny main
package pattern).
What if you forked and modified a piece of an external project? Some projects
put that code in the pkg directory, but its better to put it in the
third_party top level directory to keep your code separate from the code you
borrowed from others.
What about the external packages you import in your projects? Where do they go?
You have several options. You can keep them outside of your project. The
packages you install with go get will be saved in your Go workspace. It works
most of the times, but depending on the package it might be brittle and
unpredictable because when somebody else tries to build your project they might
get a backward incompatible version of that package. The solution is
vendoring. With vendoring you freeze your dependencies by committing them
with your project. [41]Go 1.6 introduced a standard way to vendor external
packages (it was an experimental feature in Go 1.5). Put your external package
in the vendor directory. How is this different from the third_party directory?
If you import and use external code as-is then it should go into the vendor
directory. If you are using a modified version of an external project then put
it in the third_party directory.
If you want to learn more about the project structure used by other Go projects
read the [42]Analysis of the Top 1000 Go Repositories. Its a little dated,
but its still useful.
A real project will have additional directories too. You can use this layout
template as a starting point for your Go projects: [43]https://github.com/
golang-standards/project-layout. It covers the Go project layout patterns
described in this blog post and it includes a number of supporting directories
youll need to have.
Now its time to write some code! If you dont have Go installed take a look at
this [44]quick setup guide for Mac OS X (setup on other platforms is similar).
Go through the [45]Tour of Go if you havent done it yet and then read [46]
50 Shades of Go to learn about the most common gotchas in Go, which will save
you quite a bit of time when you start writing and debugging code.
[47]
Golang
[48]
Go
[49]
Standards
[50]
Project Structure
--
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Kyle C. Quest (Q)
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[9] https://medium.com/m/signin?operation=login&redirect=https%3A%2F%2Fmedium.com%2Fgolang-learn%2Fgo-project-layout-e5213cdcfaa2&source=post_page---two_column_layout_nav-----------------------global_nav-----------
[11] https://medium.com/@kcq?source=post_page-----e5213cdcfaa2--------------------------------
[12] https://medium.com/golang-learn?source=post_page-----e5213cdcfaa2--------------------------------
[13] https://medium.com/@kcq?source=post_page-----e5213cdcfaa2--------------------------------
[14] https://medium.com/m/signin?actionUrl=https%3A%2F%2Fmedium.com%2F_%2Fsubscribe%2Fuser%2F6aac7a58837&operation=register&redirect=https%3A%2F%2Fmedium.com%2Fgolang-learn%2Fgo-project-layout-e5213cdcfaa2&user=Kyle+C.+Quest+%28Q%29&userId=6aac7a58837&source=post_page-6aac7a58837----e5213cdcfaa2---------------------post_header-----------
[15] https://medium.com/golang-learn?source=post_page-----e5213cdcfaa2--------------------------------
[19] https://tour.golang.org/
[20] https://play.golang.org/
[21] https://golang.org/doc/code.html
[22] https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/Modules
[23] https://github.com/golang/tools/tree/master/cmd
[24] https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/tree/master/cmd
[25] https://github.com/moby/moby/tree/master/cmd
[26] https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/tree/master/cmd
[27] https://github.com/influxdata/influxdb/tree/master/cmd
[28] https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/tree/master/pkg
[29] https://github.com/moby/moby/tree/master/pkg
[30] https://github.com/grafana/grafana/tree/master/pkg
[31] https://github.com/influxdata/influxdb/tree/master/pkg
[32] https://github.com/coreos/etcd/tree/master/pkg
[33] https://golang.org/doc/go1.4#internalpackages
[34] https://github.com/golang/dep/tree/master/internal
[35] https://github.com/moby/moby/tree/master/internal
[36] https://github.com/nsqio/nsq/tree/master/internal
[37] https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/tree/master/internal
[38] https://github.com/heptio/contour/tree/master/internal
[39] https://github.com/heptio/ark/blob/master/cmd/ark/main.go
[40] https://github.com/grafana/loki/blob/master/cmd/loki/main.go
[41] https://golang.org/doc/go1.6#go_command
[42] http://blog.sgmansfield.com/2016/01/an-analysis-of-the-top-1000-go-repositories/
[43] https://github.com/golang-standards/project-layout
[44] https://medium.com/golang-learn/quick-go-setup-guide-on-mac-os-x-956b327222b8
[45] https://tour.golang.org/
[46] http://devs.cloudimmunity.com/gotchas-and-common-mistakes-in-go-golang/
[47] https://medium.com/tag/golang?source=post_page-----e5213cdcfaa2---------------golang-----------------
[48] https://medium.com/tag/go?source=post_page-----e5213cdcfaa2---------------go-----------------
[49] https://medium.com/tag/standards?source=post_page-----e5213cdcfaa2---------------standards-----------------
[50] https://medium.com/tag/project-structure?source=post_page-----e5213cdcfaa2---------------project_structure-----------------
[53] https://medium.com/@kcq?source=post_page-----e5213cdcfaa2--------------------------------
[54] https://medium.com/golang-learn?source=post_page-----e5213cdcfaa2--------------------------------
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