Go Language Modularization: Difference between revisions

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=External=
=Internal=
=Internal=
* [[Go_Language#Modularization|Go Language]]
* [[Go_Language#Modularization|Go Language]]
=Overview=
A standard organization of the files that are part of a project makes easier to share code with other people who also use the same standard. Go [[#Workspace|workspaces]] encourage such a standard.


=Overview=
=Overview=
=<span id='Workspace'></span>Workspaces=
Go modularization builds upon the concepts of package and module. [[Go_Packages#Overview|Packages]] provide a [[Go_Packages#Packages_as_Namespaces|namespace]] for their members, and they are a way to [[Go_Packages#Packages_as_Encapsulation_Mechanism|encapsulate]] code, hide implementation details and only expose features, such as [[Go_Language#Variables|variables]], [[Go_Functions|functions]] or [[Go_Language#Type|type]] definitions that are meant to be publicly consumed. Packages can be published as part of [[Go_Modules#Overview|modules]]. Modules have been introduced in Go 1.11.
The standard workspace layout is:
<font size=-2>
.  
├─ src
├─ pkg
└─ bin
</font>


This layout is recommended, but not enforced.
=Packages=
{{Internal|Go Packages#Overview|Packages}}
=Modules=
{{Internal|Go Modules#Overview|Modules}}
==Module-Aware or <tt>GOPATH</tt> Mode==
{{External|https://go.dev/ref/mod#mod-commands}}
The compiler must locate packages on the local file system every time it handles an [[Go_Packages#Import_Statement|<code>import</code> statement]].  


A workspace may contain multiple [[#Project|projects]].
The [[Go_Tool#Overview|<tt>go</tt> tool]] has two modes of resolving package dependencies: '''module-aware mode''' or '''GOPATH mode'''.  


<font color=darkkhaki>Define the relationship between workspace and the <code>[[Go Development and Execution Environment#GOPATH|GOPATH]]</code> variable.</font>
In module-aware mode, the <code>go</code> commands use <code>[[Go_Modules#go.mod|go.mod]]</code> files to find versioned dependencies and typically load packages out of the [[Go_Modules#Module_Cache|module cache]], downloading modules if they are missing. As of Go 1.16, the module-aware mode is enabled by default, regardless of whether <code>[[Go_Modules#go.mod|go.mod]]</code> is present or not. The behavior can be controlled with the <code>[[Go_Environment_Variables#GO111MODULE|GO111MODULE]]</code> environment variable.


=<span id='Project'></span>Project=
In GOPATH mode, <code>go</code> commands use the value of the <code>[[Go_Environment_Variables#GOPATH|GOPATH]]</code> environment variable and vendor directories to resolve packages.


=<span id='Package'></span>Packages=
Also see: {{Internal|GoLand#Module-Aware_or_GOPATH_Mode|GoLand Module-Aware or <tt>GOPATH</tt> Mode}}{{Internal|Go_Environment_Variables#GOPATH|<tt>GOPATH</tt>}}
A package is a group of related source files. A package can be imported by other packages. Always, there must be one package called <code>[[#main|main]]</code>, which produces an executable as result of its compilation. Other packages do not produce executables as result of their compilation.
=Project=
{{Internal|Go Project|Project}}


<font color=darkkhaki>Must the package live in a directory with the same name?</font>
=Repository=
A Go repository typically contains only one [[Go Modules|module]], located in the root of the repository. Repository may contain more than one module.


<font color=darkkhaki>Deplete, merge into this document and delete: [[Go Concepts - Packages]]</font>
=Packages, Modules, Projects and Repositories=
==Idiomatic Package Naming Conventions==
* Package names are generally given lowercase, single-word names. They should be short, concise and evocative, and it should provide context for their contents.
* Package-exported names start with an uppercase character.


Also see: {{Internal|Go_Style#Naming|Go Style}}
Designing your [[Go_Project#Overview|project]], to live in its own repository and host a single module in its root directory will help keep maintenance simpler, particularly over time as you publish new versions.


==Declaring Packages==
It is possible to maintain more than one module in a project and repository <font color=darkkhaki>TODO: https://go.dev/doc/modules/managing-source#multiple-module-source</font>.
===<span id='main'></span>The <tt>main</tt> Package===
The <code>main</code> package produces an executable as result of its compilation. The <code>main</code> package must have a function called <code>main()</code>, which is where the code execution starts. For more details see: {{Internal|Go_Functions#main.28.29|<tt>main()</tt>}}


The name of the source code file that declares the <code>main()</code> function does not matter. The following code, declared in a <code>blue.go</code> source file, placed in any directory, not necessarily in a <code>main</code> directory, produces an executable named <code>blue</code>:
=<span id='Standard_library'></span>Standard Library=
<syntaxhighlight lang='go'>
Go comes with a set of over 100 "built-in" packages, which are available as part of the locally installed Go development environment.
package main


import "fmt"
Standard library package documentation is available online here: {{External|https://pkg.go.dev/std}}


func main() {
The standard library is a good source of code examples, comments and [[Go_Style#Overview|style]] guidance.
  fmt.Printf("hello\n")
}
</syntaxhighlight>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
go build ./blue.go
./blue
hello
</syntaxhighlight>


==Importing Packages==
Standard library packages:
:::{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: left;"
| <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='archive'></span>[[Go Package archive|archive]]</font> || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='atomic'></span>[[go Package atomic|atomic]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='bytes'></span>[[go Package bytes|bytes]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='bufio'></span>[[Go_Package_bufio#Overview|bufio]]</font> || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='container'></span>[[go Package container|container]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='context'></span>[[go Package context|context]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='database'></span>[[go Package database|database]]</font>
|-
|  <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='encoding'></span>[[go Package encoding|encoding]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='json'></span><span id='encoding_json'></span>[[Go Package encoding/json|encoding/json]]  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='errors'></span>[[Go_Language_Error_Handling#The_errors_Package|errors]]</font> || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='filepath'></span>[[File_Paths_and_Names_in_Go#filepath|filepath]]</font> || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='flag'></span>[[go Package flag|flag]]</font> || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='fmt'></span>[[go Package fmt|fmt]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='io'></span>[[go Package io|io]]</font> 
|-
| <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='ioutil'></span>[[Go Package ioutil|ioutil]] || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='hash'></span>[[go Package hash|hash]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='html'></span>[[go Package html|html]]</font> || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='html_template'></span>[[go Package html/template|html/template]]</font> || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='log'></span>[[go Package log|log]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='maps'></span>[[go Package maps|maps]]</font> || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='math'></span>[[go Package math|math]]</font>
|-
|  <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='net'></span>[[Go Package net|net]]  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='net_http'></span>[[Go Package net/http|net/http]]  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='net_url'></span>[[Go Package net/url|net/url]]  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='os'></span>[[Go Package os|os]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='path'></span>[[File_Paths_and_Names_in_Go#path|path]]</font> ||  <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='rand'></span>[[Go Package rand|rand]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='reflect'></span>[[Go Package reflect|reflect]]</font>
|-
| <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='regexp'></span> [[go Package regexp|regexp]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='runtime'></span>[[go Package runtime|runtime]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='runtime_debug'></span>[[go Package runtime/debug|runtime/debug]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='slices'></span>[[Go Package slices|slices]]</font>  ||  <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='slog'></span>[[Go_Package_slog|slog]]</font> ||  <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='sort'></span>[[Go Package sort|sort]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='strings'></span>[[go Package strings|strings]]</font> 
|-
| <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='strconv'></span>[[Go Package strconv|strconv]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='sync'></span>[[Go Package sync|sync]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='text-tabwriter'></span>[[go Package text/tabwriter|text/tabwriter]]</font> || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='text-template'></span>[[go Package text/template|text/template]]</font>  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='testing'></span>[[Go Package testing|testing]]  || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='time'></span>[[Go Package time|time]]</font> || <font face='menlo' size='-2'><span id='unicode'></span>[[Go Package unicode|unicode]] 
|-
|}


When a package is imported during compilation, the compiler searches directories specified by the <code>[[Go_Development_and_Execution_Environment#GOROOT|GOROOT]]</code> and <code>[[Go_Development_and_Execution_Environment#GOPATH|GOPATH]]</code> environment variables.
=<tt>pkg.go.dev</tt>=
===<tt>import</tt> Keyword===
The place to look for published third-party packages is {{External|https://pkg.go.dev}}
The <code>import</code> is a [[Go_Language#import_keyword|keyword]] use to access other packages.
<syntaxhighlight lang='go'>
import "fmt"
</syntaxhighlight>
<syntaxhighlight lang='go'>
import (
"bufio"
"fmt"
"os"
"strings"
)
</syntaxhighlight>


==Relationship between Source Code Files and Packages==
=<span id='Workspaces'></span>Workspace=
<font color=darkkhaki>TODO: how do we add source code files to package? Is it a flat space? It is a hierarchy? What kind of names should the files use?</font>
<font color=darkkhaki>This section needs refactoring after reading:
* Tutorial: Getting started with multi-module workspaces https://go.dev/doc/tutorial/workspaces
* Get familiar with workspaces https://go.dev/blog/get-familiar-with-workspaces
</font>


==<span id='Standard_Library'></span>Standard library==
The workspace is a concept introduced in Go 1.18. A workspace allows organizing the code for a project that has several [[Go_Modules#Overview|modules]] which share a common list of dependencies. The workspace maintains metadata, especially dependency metadata, in a file called <code>go.work</code>. The dependencies declared in this file can span modules and anything declared in <code>go.work</code> will override dependencies in the modules's <code>go.mod</code>. The packages and modules maintained in a workspace are managed with the [[Go_Tool#Overview|<code>go</code> tool]].
Go comes with a set of "built-in" packages, which come with the Go development environment.


The content of the Standard library is available here: https://pkg.go.dev/std
A workspace may contain multiple [[#Project|projects]].


The standard library is a good source of code examples, comments and [[Go_Style#Overview|style]].
The standard workspace layout is:
 
<font size=-2>
Interesting Standard library packages:
. <font color=teal>← GOPATH should point to this directory, it contains src, pkg and bin</font>
 
* <span id='ioutil'></span>[[Go Package ioutil|ioutil]]
├─ src
* <span id='json'></span><span id='encoding_json'></span>[[Go Package encoding/json|encoding/json]]
│  ├─ a
* <span id='net'></span>[[Go Package net|net]]
│  │  └─ b
* <span id='os'></span>[[Go Package os|os]]
│  │    └─color  <font color=teal># "color" package directory, with the "a/b/color" import path</font>
* <span id='reflect'></span>[[Go Package reflect|reflect]]
│  │        ├─ colors.go
* <span id='slices'></span>[[Go Package slices|slices]]
│  │        ├─ aux.go
* <span id='sort'></span>[[Go Package sort|sort]]
│  │        └─ ...
* <span id='strconv'></span>[[Go Package strconv|strconv]]
│  │
* <span id='strings'></span>[[Go Package strings|strings]]
│  ├─ weight  <font color=teal># "weight" package directory, with the "weight" import path</font>
* <span id='sync'></span>[[Go Package sync|sync]]
│  │  ├─ weights.go
* <span id='time'></span>[[Go Package time|time]]
│  │  ├─ aux.go
* <span id='unicode'></span>[[Go Package unicode|unicode]]
│  │  └─ ...
 
│  │
=<span id='Dependency'></span>Dependencies=
│  ├─ novaordis.com
=Vendoring=
│  │  └─ tools
"Vendoring" is the act of making a local copy of a third party package your project depends on. This copy is traditionally placed inside each project and then saved in the project repository.
│  │      └─ hammer <font color=teal># "hammer" package directory, with the "novaordis.com/tools/hammer" import path</font>
=Export=
│  │          └─ ...
 
│  │
<span id='Encapsulation'></span>The functions and variable that start with a capital letter in a package get '''exported''': somebody who imports the package can access the exported names, but not the "private" names, which start with lower case letter. "Hidden" names is also used in this situation. This is how '''encapsulation''' is implemented for packages.
│  └─ github.com
 
│      └─ blue-org
In the following example:
│          └─ tools
│              └─ wrench <font color=teal># "wrench" package directory, with the "github.com/blue-org/tools/wrench" import path</font>
│                  ├─  .git
│                  └─ ...
├─ pkg
│  └─ darwin_amd64
│      ├─ weights.go
│      ├─ a/b/color.a
│      ├─ novaordis.com/tools/hammer.a
│      └─ github.com/bue-org/tools/wrench.a
└─ bin
</font>
==Content==
===<tt>src</tt>===
The <code>src</code> subdirectory holds source code. Each package resides in a directory whose name relative to <code>${GOPATH}/src</code> represents the package's [[Go_Packages#Import_Path|import path]].  


<syntaxhighlight lang='go'>
The <code>src</code> subdirectory may contain multiple version-control repository workareas.
package colors


var color string = "blue"
===<tt>pkg</tt>===
The build tool stores compiled packages in the <code>pkg</code> directory, under <code>${GOOS}_${GOARCH}</code> subdirectories.


func GetColor() {
===<tt>bin</tt>===
  return color
The <code>bin</code> directory is where the executables are stored.
}
===<tt>vendor</tt>===
</syntaxhighlight>
<font color=darkkhaki>TODO: expand this and link to [[Go_Packages#Vendoring]].</font>


the <code>color</code> variable is private to the package, but it can be accessed with the public <code>GetColor()</code> function.
==Relationship between Workspace and <tt>GOPATH</tt>==
 
<code>[[Go_Environment_Variables#GOPATH|GOPATH]]</code> should point to the root of the workspace, the directory that contains <code>src</code>, <code>pkg</code> and <code>bin</code>. <font color=darkkhaki>Further research is required.</font>
=<span id='Module'></span>Modules=
=Program=
 
Go programs are constructed by linking together [[Go_Packages#Overview|packages]]. There must be a [[Go_Packages#The_main_Package|<code>main</code> package]], which contains the <code>main()</code>, to trigger the linker.
<font color=darkkhaki>Explain <code>go.mod</code></font>
 
=TODO=
<font color=darkkhaki>Deplete, merge into this document and delete:
* [[Go Concepts - Dependency Handling]]
* [[Go Concepts - Standard Library]]
</font>

Latest revision as of 17:42, 4 September 2024

Internal

Overview

Go modularization builds upon the concepts of package and module. Packages provide a namespace for their members, and they are a way to encapsulate code, hide implementation details and only expose features, such as variables, functions or type definitions that are meant to be publicly consumed. Packages can be published as part of modules. Modules have been introduced in Go 1.11.

Packages

Packages

Modules

Modules

Module-Aware or GOPATH Mode

https://go.dev/ref/mod#mod-commands

The compiler must locate packages on the local file system every time it handles an import statement.

The go tool has two modes of resolving package dependencies: module-aware mode or GOPATH mode.

In module-aware mode, the go commands use go.mod files to find versioned dependencies and typically load packages out of the module cache, downloading modules if they are missing. As of Go 1.16, the module-aware mode is enabled by default, regardless of whether go.mod is present or not. The behavior can be controlled with the GO111MODULE environment variable.

In GOPATH mode, go commands use the value of the GOPATH environment variable and vendor directories to resolve packages.

Also see:

GoLand Module-Aware or GOPATH Mode
GOPATH

Project

Project

Repository

A Go repository typically contains only one module, located in the root of the repository. Repository may contain more than one module.

Packages, Modules, Projects and Repositories

Designing your project, to live in its own repository and host a single module in its root directory will help keep maintenance simpler, particularly over time as you publish new versions.

It is possible to maintain more than one module in a project and repository TODO: https://go.dev/doc/modules/managing-source#multiple-module-source.

Standard Library

Go comes with a set of over 100 "built-in" packages, which are available as part of the locally installed Go development environment.

Standard library package documentation is available online here:

https://pkg.go.dev/std

The standard library is a good source of code examples, comments and style guidance.

Standard library packages:

archive atomic bytes bufio container context database
encoding encoding/json errors filepath flag fmt io
ioutil hash html html/template log maps math
net net/http net/url os path rand reflect
regexp runtime runtime/debug slices slog sort strings
strconv sync text/tabwriter text/template testing time unicode

pkg.go.dev

The place to look for published third-party packages is

https://pkg.go.dev

Workspace

This section needs refactoring after reading:

The workspace is a concept introduced in Go 1.18. A workspace allows organizing the code for a project that has several modules which share a common list of dependencies. The workspace maintains metadata, especially dependency metadata, in a file called go.work. The dependencies declared in this file can span modules and anything declared in go.work will override dependencies in the modules's go.mod. The packages and modules maintained in a workspace are managed with the go tool.

A workspace may contain multiple projects.

The standard workspace layout is:

. ← GOPATH should point to this directory, it contains src, pkg and bin
│
├─ src 
│   ├─ a 
│   │  └─ b
│   │     └─color  # "color" package directory, with the "a/b/color" import path
│   │        ├─ colors.go 
│   │        ├─ aux.go 
│   │        └─ ... 
│   │
│   ├─ weight  # "weight" package directory, with the "weight" import path
│   │   ├─ weights.go 
│   │   ├─ aux.go 
│   │   └─ ... 
│   │
│   ├─ novaordis.com
│   │   └─ tools
│   │       └─ hammer # "hammer" package directory, with the "novaordis.com/tools/hammer" import path
│   │           └─ ... 
│   │
│   └─ github.com
│       └─ blue-org
│           └─ tools
│               └─ wrench # "wrench" package directory, with the "github.com/blue-org/tools/wrench" import path
│                   ├─  .git
│                   └─ ... 
│ 
├─ pkg 
│   └─ darwin_amd64 
│       ├─ weights.go 
│       ├─ a/b/color.a 
│       ├─ novaordis.com/tools/hammer.a
│       └─ github.com/bue-org/tools/wrench.a
└─ bin

Content

src

The src subdirectory holds source code. Each package resides in a directory whose name relative to ${GOPATH}/src represents the package's import path.

The src subdirectory may contain multiple version-control repository workareas.

pkg

The build tool stores compiled packages in the pkg directory, under ${GOOS}_${GOARCH} subdirectories.

bin

The bin directory is where the executables are stored.

vendor

TODO: expand this and link to Go_Packages#Vendoring.

Relationship between Workspace and GOPATH

GOPATH should point to the root of the workspace, the directory that contains src, pkg and bin. Further research is required.

Program

Go programs are constructed by linking together packages. There must be a main package, which contains the main(), to trigger the linker.