Go Dependencies via govendor
Last updated August 28, 2024
Table of Contents
Govendor is no longer maintained. Govendor support on Heroku is deprecated and will be removed on March 1, 2025. Heroku suggests using Go Modules instead. If you have a govendor based application, please port it to Go modules ASAP.
This guide outlines how to fully use Heroku’s support for deploying Go applications that use govendor to manage the vendoring of dependencies.
The govendor FAQ covers the most common usage of the tool. We’ll cover the most common activities below.
Build configuration
When pushing code that uses govendor, Heroku will use several entries in the vendor/vendor.json
file created by govendor to configure your build. These entries are:
rootPath
(String): the root package name of the packages you are pushing to Heroku. You can find this locally withgo list -e .
. There is no default for this and it must be specified. Recent versions of govendor automatically fill in this field for you. You can re-rungovendor init
after upgrading to have this field filled in automatically, or it will be filled the next time you use govendor to modify a dependency.heroku.goVersion
(String): the major version of Go you would like Heroku to use when compiling your code. If not specified, Heroku defaults to the most recent supported version of Go.heroku.install
(Array of Strings): a list of the packages you want Heroku to install. If not specified, this defaults to["."]
. Other common choices are:["./cmd/..."]
(all packages and sub packages in thecmd
directory) and["./..."]
(all packages and sub packages of the current directory). The exact choice depends on the layout of your repository. Please note that./...
includes any packages in yourvendor
directory.heroku.sync
(Boolean): By default Heroku runsgovendor sync
to ensure that the contents of vendor are what is specified invendor.json
. Sometimes there are reasons to not do this. Settingheroku.sync
tofalse
disablesgovendor sync
.
Here is an example of these fields for a project using go1.6
, located on your local machine at $GOPATH/src/github.com/heroku/go-getting-started
and requiring a single package spec of ./...
to install.
{
...
"rootPath": "github.com/heroku/go-getting-started",
"heroku": {
"install" : [ "./..." ],
"goVersion": "go1.6"
},
...
}
You will need to use a text editor or a tool like jq
to edit the vendor/vendor.json
file if you need to configure the heroku.install
or heroku.goVersion
entries.
Ignored vendor/
sub directories
As specified in the govendor FAQ, vendor/*/
can be added to your .gitignore
file, excluding any vendored code from being included in git.
Heroku runs govendor sync
before running go install
whenever govendor is detected. This is done to ensure that all dependencies specified in vendor.json
are installed in your application’s vendor/
directory.
Install or update govendor
$ go get -u github.com/kardianos/govendor
That command downloads or updates the package containing the tool, placing the source code in $GOPATH/src/github.com/kardianos/govendor
and then compiles the package, placing the govendor
binary in $GOPATh/bin
.
Getting started
govendor init
- Inspect the changes with
git diff
(or similar). - Commit the changes with
git add -A vendor; git commit -am "Setup Vendor"
This creates a vendor/
directory and a vendor.json
file in that directory.
Adding dependencies
govendor fetch <package>
- Inspect the changes with
git diff
(or similar). - Commit the changes with
git add -A vendor; git commit -am "Add dependency <package>"
The package spec that govendor takes can also contain a version spec consisting of a tag or commit SHA of the specific revision of packages that you want to install to vendor/
. For example, if you want to install v0.9.0
of the package github.com/Sirupsen/logrus
you would run govendor fetch github.com/Sirupsen/[email protected]
. When a version spec is not supplied, the most recent commit is used.
Dependency status
$ govendor list
v github.com/gin-gonic/gin
v github.com/gin-gonic/gin/binding
v github.com/gin-gonic/gin/render
v github.com/manucorporat/sse
v github.com/mattn/go-colorable
v github.com/mattn/go-isatty
v golang.org/x/net/context
v gopkg.in/bluesuncorp/validator.v5
pl github.com/heroku/go-getting-started/cmd/go-getting-started
This shows the different packages in use for the current project. See the govendor -h
section named Status Types
for a full description of what each letter means.
Updating an existing dependency
govendor fetch <package>@<version>
- Inspect the changes with
git diff
(or similar). - Commit the changes with
git add -A vendor; git commit -m "Update <dependency>"
.
Just like when adding a new dependency, fetch can be used to update an existing dependency by fetching it and recording the update to vendor/vendor.json
.
Removing unused dependencies
govendor remove +u
- Inspect the changes with
git diff
(or similar). - Commit the changes with
git add -A vendor; git commit -m "Remove unused dependencies"
.
This removes all unused dependencies. You may want to check the output of govendor list +u
first to see what govendor sees as being unused.