One way to solve it is that suggested by Ivan Rave and http://blog.campoy.cat/2014/03/github-and-go-forking-pull-requests-and.html -- the way of forking.
Another one is to workaround the golang behavior. When you go get
, golang lays out your directories under same name as in the repository URI, and this is where the trouble begins.
If, instead, you issue your own git clone
, you can clone your repository onto your filesystem on a path named after the original repository.
Assuming original repository is in github.com/awsome-org/tool
and you fork it onto github.com/awesome-you/tool
, you can:
cd $GOPATH
mkdir -p {src,bin,pkg}
mkdir -p src/github.com/awesome-org/
cd src/github.com/awesome-org/
git clone [email protected]:awesome-you/tool.git # OR: git clone https://github.com/awesome-you/tool.git
cd tool/
go get ./...
golang is perfectly happy to continue with this repository and doesn't actually care some upper directory has the name awesome-org
while the git remote is awesome-you
. All import for awesome-org
are resovled via the directory you have just created, which is your local working set.
In more length, please see my blog post: Forking Golang repositories on GitHub and managing the import path
edit: fixed directory path
ec2
package - it has anlaunchpad.net/goamz/aws
import. Both, theaws
and theec2
packages reside in the SAME repository, so when forked, will not reference the correct package (the one in the fork).