bb0a9fb7e1 | ||
---|---|---|
build | ||
cmd/myapp | ||
pkg/version | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
Dockerfile.in | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md | ||
go.mod |
README.md
Go app template build environment
This is a skeleton project for a Go application, which captures the best build techniques I have learned to date. It uses a Makefile to drive the build (the universal API to software projects) and a Dockerfile to build a docker image.
This has only been tested on Linux, and depends on Docker to build.
Customizing it
To use this, simply copy these files and make the following changes:
Makefile:
- change
BIN
to your binary name - rename
cmd/myapp
tocmd/$BIN
- change
REGISTRY
to the Docker registry you want to use - maybe change
SRC_DIRS
if you use some other layout - choose a strategy for
VERSION
values - git tags or manual
Dockerfile.in:
- maybe change or remove the
USER
if you need
Go Modules
This assumes the use of go modules (which will be the default for all Go builds
as of Go 1.13) and vendoring (which reasonable minds might disagree about).
You will need to run go mod vendor
to create a vendor
directory when you
have dependencies.
Building
Run make
or make build
to compile your app. This will use a Docker image
to build your app, with the current directory volume-mounted into place. This
will store incremental state for the fastest possible build. Run make all-build
to build for all architectures.
Run make container
to build the container image. It will calculate the image
tag based on the most recent git tag, and whether the repo is "dirty" since
that tag (see make version
). Run make all-container
to build containers
for all architectures.
Run make push
to push the container image to REGISTRY
. Run make all-push
to push the container images for all architectures.
Run make clean
to clean up.