This gist is based on the information available at golang/dep, only slightly more terse and annotated with a few notes and links primarily for my own personal benefit. It's public in case this information is helpful to anyone else as well.
I initially advocated Glide for my team and then, more recently, vndr. I've also taken the approach of exerting direct control over what goes into vendor/
in my Dockerfiles, and also work from
isolated GOPATH environments on my system per project to ensure that dependencies are explicitly found under vendor/
.
At the end of the day, vendoring (and committing vendor/
) is about being in control of your dependencies and being able to achieve reproducible builds. While you can achieve this manually, things that are nice to have in a vendoring tool include:
- automated ability to determine all of a project's dependencies
- identify the latest version of a package that satisifies all dependencies in the dependency graph
- ability to specify a range of acceptable versions of packages that satisfy the project's dependencies
- ability to pin the range of acceptable versions to a set of explicit versions used for reproducible builds
- ability to prune any unnecessary packages from the resulting vendor set
Because it looks like dep is the future for Go vendoring, it makes sense to embrace dep now even though it is still undergoing change until it is merged into the toolchain and reaches a v1 release. As noted in the roadmap, there is no "guarantee dep will be accepted"; yet, nevertheless, there appears to be a good deal of momentum behind dep at this point.
$ go get -u github.com/golang/dep/cmd/dep
Run
dep init
to initialize your project.
dep will analyize your project, identify your dependencies, pick the highest compatible version for each dependency,
generate a Gopkg.toml manifest and Gopkg.lock files
(see here for background on the two file format),
and install dependencies in vendor/
.
$ dep init
If you are already using glide, godep, vndr, or govend, dep will convert the existing dependency management file. See this issue and this interface for implementing configuration importers.
If you have an existing vendor/
directory, it will be backed up to _vendor-TIMESTAMP/
.
You can tell dep to resolve dependencies from GOPATH
before resorting to network mode with dep init -gopath
.
See here for
a bit more detail.
Run
dep ensure
to ensurevendor/
is in the correct state for your configuration.
$ dep ensure
dep's solver regenerates Gopkg.lock
if it detects any change in your code imports and/or Gopkg.toml
. If this is
the case, then the new Gopkg.lock
file is used to completely rewrite vendor/
(at some point
vendor verification will allow the contents of vendor/
to also be
checked for consistency with Gopkg.lock
, updating only what is necessary to make the contents current).
This process may be slow for large projects, especially the first time as dependencies are cloned or when it hasn't been run in a while and there are many changesets to fetch. dep manages a cache at $GOPATH/pkg/dep
to mitigate fetch overhead. See
here for further details.
There are a number of variations to this command. Run dep ensure -examples
for details. One in particular to note
that may be relevant when creating a Dockerfile is dep ensure -vendor-only
.
Use
dep ensure -add
to update your configuration with a new dependency.
$ dep ensure -add github.com/foo/bar github.com/foo/baz...
dep will update your Gopkg.toml
, Gopkg.lock
, and vendor/
to the latest version unless version constraints
are applied; for example:
$ dep ensure -add github.com/foo/[email protected] github.com/foo/baz@master
Use this to detect a mismatch between the configuration and state of your project
One way this can happen is when you import a package that is resolved when you build because it is found
in your GOPATH
, but it has not been added to your configuration (and therefore is not present in the
generated Gopkg.lock
file).
$ dep status
Use this information to update your configuration with dep ensure -add
as appropriate.
dep will update your dependencies to the latest versions that satisify the constraints specified in
Gopkg.toml
.
Preferred
$ dep ensure -update github.com/foo/bar github.com/foo/baz...
Possible, but being specific is preferred
$ dep ensure -update
The latest version means the latest version in a semver range or if depending on a branch, the tip of the branch.
- Remove the relevant
import
package statements and usage in your code - Remove the relevant
[[constraint]]
rules fromGopkg.toml
- Run
dep ensure
Your project may rely on dependencies that you wish to edit. These dependencies should not be updated
directly under vendor/
since they can be overwritted by dep. Instead, volatile dependencies should be removed
manually from under vendor/
and then placed in the appropriate location in your $GOPATH. When building,
Go will first search your vendor/
directory, then it will search your $GOPATH.
If the package update has been pushed to its public repo, then simply run dep ensure -update
as described in
Changing Dependencies.
While dep init
will generate a Gopkg.toml
file and dep ensure -add
will add new dependencies to it, there are
occasions where you will need to edit this file manually besides when removing a dependency. The format is straightforward
and consists of the following elements:
required
ignored
metadata
(under the root as well as underconstraint
andoverride
declarations; ignored by dep)constraint
override
version
(a property ofconstraint
andoverride
declarations)
There are important (and subtle) details involved, so it is best to read the spec directly.