Go Commands - build

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Revision as of 21:30, 8 September 2023 by Ovidiu (talk | contribs) (→‎Internal)
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Overview

Depending on the arguments, go build compiles packages or individual files, treating them as part of a single package.

The artifacts are written into the current directory, unless the -o option is used.

TODO

When compiling multiple packages or a single non-main package, build compiles the packages but discards the resulting object, serving only as a check that the packages can be built.

'go tool compile'

'go tool link'

go build builds the current package.

A specific package can be also built: go build <package-path-string-literal> where the <package-path-string-literal> is the same literal used by the import statement.

Wildcards can be specified in the package specifiers. A three period indicates a pattern matching any string: go build something/...

Syntax

go build [-o output] [-i] [build flags] [packages]

Building an Executable

If the arguments are a list of .go files, build treats them as a list of source files specifying a single package.

If that package is "main", build writes the resulting executable to an output file named after the first source file ('go build a.go b.go' writes an "a" executable) or the source code directory ('go build a/b' writes 'b'). The output is overridden by -o flag.

Also see:

Building an Executable

Building a Library

If the arguments are a list of import paths, build compiles the packages named by the import paths, along with their dependencies, but it does not install the results.

-o

-o flag can only be used when compiling a single package or building an executable. It forces build to write the executable or object file to the given file name, instead of the default behavior.

-i

The -i flag installs the packages that are dependencies of the target.

Shared Tool Flags

Shared Flags

Finding a Race Condition

go build -race ...