Go Build Tags: Difference between revisions

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A '''build tag''' is an identifier added to a piece of code that determines when the file should be including in a package during the build process.
A '''build tag''' is an identifier added to a piece of code that determines when the file should be including in a package during the build process.


Build tags provide conditional compilation in Go. Go does not have a preprocessor, a macro system, or a #define declaration to control the inclusion of platform-specific code, it uses build tags instead.
Build tags provide conditional compilation in Go. Go does not have a preprocessor, a macro system, or a #define declaration to control the inclusion of platform-specific code, it uses build tags instead. Build tags are implemented as comments which must appear '''at the top of the file''' in any source file (not just go files). To differentiate between the package and build tags, there must be a blank line between them:
 
Build tags are implemented as comments which must appear '''at the top of the file''' in any source file (not just go files). To differentiate between the package and build tags, there must be a blank line between them:


<syntaxhighlight lang='go'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='go'>
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go build|test [...] -tags=tag_a,tag_x [...]
go build|test [...] -tags=tag_a,tag_x [...]
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
If a file contains build tags, but no <code>-tags</code> build option is provided on the compiler's or tester's command line, the file will '''not''' be compiled/included in testing. Once a file has been marked with a build tag, the build tag must be present for the file to be handled.


=Providing Tags on Command Line=
=Providing Tags on Command Line=
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==File will be Included if All Tags are Present During Compilation==
==File will be Included if All Tags are Present During Compilation==
When the tags are separated by a comma in the declaration, all of them must be present . The following declaration:
When the tags are separated by the <code>&&</code> operator, all of them must be present . The following declaration:
<syntaxhighlight lang='go'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='go'>
//go:build tag_a,tag_b,tag_c
//go:build tag_a && tag_b && tag_c


package somepkg
package somepkg
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</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
=Controlling Test Execution with Build Tags=
=Controlling Test Execution with Build Tags=
See [[Go_Testing#unit_test_Build_Tag|<code>unit_test</code>]], [[Go_Testing#integration_test_Build_Tag|<code>integration_test</code>]] and [[Go_Testing#system_test_Build_Tag|<code>system_test</code>]] build tag usage.
See [[Go_Testing#unit_test_Build_Tag|<code>unit_test</code>]], [[Go_Testing#integration_test_Build_Tag|<code>integration_test</code>]], [[Go_Testing#system_test_Build_Tag|<code>system_test</code>]] and [[Github.com/stretchr/testify#Build_Tags|build tags in mock files]].


To run tests selectively:
To run tests selectively:

Latest revision as of 22:51, 12 March 2024

External

Internal

Overview

A build tag is an identifier added to a piece of code that determines when the file should be including in a package during the build process.

Build tags provide conditional compilation in Go. Go does not have a preprocessor, a macro system, or a #define declaration to control the inclusion of platform-specific code, it uses build tags instead. Build tags are implemented as comments which must appear at the top of the file in any source file (not just go files). To differentiate between the package and build tags, there must be a blank line between them:

//go:build tag_a tag_b

package somepkg

To select building or test execution:

go build|test [...] -tags=tag_a,tag_x [...]

If a file contains build tags, but no -tags build option is provided on the compiler's or tester's command line, the file will not be compiled/included in testing. Once a file has been marked with a build tag, the build tag must be present for the file to be handled.

Providing Tags on Command Line

go build|test -tags=tag_a [...]

Combining Tags

Multiple tags are supported, and they can be combined using an OR, AND or NOT logic.

File will be Included if Either Tags are Present During Compilation

When the || operator is used, is sufficient that any of them is present for the file to be compiled. The following declaration:

//go:build tag_a || tag_b || tag_c

package somepkg

has the semantics:

tag_a OR tag_b OR tag_c

File will be Included if All Tags are Present During Compilation

When the tags are separated by the && operator, all of them must be present . The following declaration:

//go:build tag_a && tag_b && tag_c

package somepkg

has the semantics:

tag_a AND tag_b AND tag_c

File will Not Be Included if the Tag Is Present During Compilation

A negated tag means that the file will not be compiled if the tag is provided at compilation:

//go:build !tag_a

package somepkg

Controlling Test Execution with Build Tags

See unit_test, integration_test, system_test and build tags in mock files.

To run tests selectively:

go test [...] -tags=unit_test,integration_test,system_test [...]