Looking how actively golang packages grow and improve I wonder how the problem with package versions is solved?
I see that one way is to store third-party packages under a project folder.
But what if I install it with go get
?
go get
will install the package in the first directory listed at GOPATH
(an environment variable which might contain a colon separated list of directories). You can use go get -u
to update existing packages.
You can also use go get -u all
to update all packages in your GOPATH
For larger projects, it might be reasonable to create different GOPATHs for each project, so that updating a library in project A wont cause issues in project B.
Type go help gopath
to find out more about the GOPATH
environment variable.
go get -u all
sorry to resurrect, but just in case anyone else was looking.
Apr 18, 2014 at 20:11
go get -u all
no longer works! Running this command in the GOPATH, at least for Go 1.13, will return a warning: `warning "all" matched no packages"
Since the question mentioned third-party libraries and not all packages then you probably want to fall back to using wildcards.
A use case being: I just want to update all my packages that are obtained from the Github VCS, then you would just say:
go get -u github.com/... // ('...' being the wildcard).
This would go ahead and only update your github packages in the current $GOPATH
Same applies for within a VCS too, say you want to only upgrade all the packages from ogranizaiton A's repo's since as they have released a hotfix you depend on:
go get -u github.com/orgA/...
The above answeres have the following problems:
To avoid these, do the following:
go get -d
To specify versions, or commits:
go get -u [email protected]
go get -u otherpackage@git-sha
See https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/Modules#daily-workflow
Since this is one of the top hits when googling, I just wanted to add that for 1.17 "installing executables with 'go get' in module mode is deprecated".
go get -d
go install
go install <with_version>
go 1.13
(exec from module root directory)
Update specified dependencies:
go get -u <package-name>
Update all direct and indirect dependencies to latest minor or patch upgrades (pre-releases are ignored):
go get -u ./...
# or
go get -u=patch ./...
Reference:
https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/Modules#daily-workflow
go help get
go get -u
and go get -u ./...
In theory it should be the same but in practice go get -u ./...
recursively updates all the dependencies of dependencies (major versions) in my project and can cause a bunch of errors.
If you want to upgrade a version from a specific branch, you can use:
go get -u <path-to-repo>@<branch>
Go to path and type
go get -u ./...
It will update all require packages.