How can I get Goland to lint my go.mod correctly and not report "missing dependency" errors for a module I am maintaining in a sub directory of my main project?
I'm trying to follow the pattern in hashicorp's vault project where I maintain an api module in a sub folder (that can be imported by others without dragging in all deps used by my main project.) Just like in vault, I reference the api module by url in my main project's go.mod and override it with a replace pointing to the relative path location.
module github.com/hashicorp/vault
go 1.16
replace github.com/hashicorp/vault/api => ./api
// ...
require (
// ...
github.com/hashicorp/vault/api v1.0.5-0.20210210214158-405eced08457
// ...
)
All this works as expected from a build perspective (and dependency resolution within the source code), however Goland is highlighting both the import statement and the replace statement in my main project's go.mod in red (the error is "missing dependency"). The red lightbulb suggests I "Sync Dependencies" which i have tried, but after a "Finished Successfully" message, the error remains.
I am using Goland 2020.3.5 and go 1.16.3. My project is outside of my GOPATH and I have go modules enabled in the Goland settings menu.
Just to reiterate, everything builds correctly, however the linting for my go.mod acts like there is a missing dependency error.
Upgrading to the latest version of Goland (2021.1.3) solved the issue.
Thanks #s0xzwasd !
Related
I wrote a program and want to encapsulate some logic.
So I did new module and pull it in my git. Link for git looks like
gitlab.xxx.ru/group/subgroup/proj
but when I tried to get it with go get, I got error
fatal: «https://xxx.ru:#gitlab.xxx.ru/group/subgroup.git/» unreachable: URL using bad/illegal format or missing URL
Go tried to load subgroup instead project.
I made folder gitlab.xxx.ru/group/subgroup/ in $GOPATH/src/ and clone my project.
And now it wrote
could not import gitlab.xxx.ru/group/subgroup/proj (no required module provides package "gitlab.xxx.ru/group/subgroup/proj")
So, if I understand correctly, in Golang 1.16 I can't just put my project in the correct directory and I can't use local packages.
How to fix loading from my GitLab and load it with ssh?
Thank you.
UDP go.mod in my proj.
module gitlab.xxx.ru/group/subgroup/proj
go 1.16
require (
golang.org/x/sys v0.0.0-20210608053332-aa57babbf139
golang.org/x/text v0.3.6
)
You may be hitting the intended behaviour from Gitlab which will prevent go from fetching the list of subgroups while trying to compute project dependencies. Since go get requests are unauthenticated, existing projects not under the root group are invisible and cannot be found.
To overcome this limitation, which Gitlab has yet to provide a solution, you can use one of the following two approaches:
Have the project located at the root and not in a subgroup (not always possible)
Leverage the .git extension as well as the replace directive in the project which imports your module (see below)
Go is able to fetch the project living under a subgroup if it knows the version control qualifier (.git). To indicate this, make sure you import the project using the following format gitlab.xxx.ru/group/subgroup/proj.git
While this alone works, it would force you to have all those .git in your imports. To overcome this, you also need a replace directive in your go.mod so you can use the original import path.
In the end, the project which imports your module should have a go.mod that look like this:
require(
gitlab.xxx.ru/group/subgroup/proj v1.7.0
)
replace(
gitlab.xxx.ru/group/subgroup/proj => gitlab.xxx.ru/group/subgroup/proj.git v1.7.0
)
I have my projects that have many packages which import each other and import outside packages. When I make a change to one of my low lever packages, and then push it to git it is fine and works in that section. When I go get it for use in another project that was working perfectly I now get this go get this error:
module declares its path as: github.com/xdg-go/scram
but was required as: github.com/xdg/scram
None of my code uses either of those directly. It looks like it automatically updated some lower external packages and broke things the used to then old import.
How do I either find out the package that is importing the wrong name or stop all auto-updates?
The go.mod file at github.com/xdg/scram declares itself as github.com/xdg-go/scram:
module github.com/xdg-go/scram
go 1.11
require (
github.com/xdg-go/stringprep v1.0.2
golang.org/x/crypto v0.0.0-20210322153248-0c34fe9e7dc2
)
The go.mod file should be updated to reflect the correct import path.
Unfortunately if this module is for you an indirect dependency, the best fix possible is to update whatever project you import that is directly importing it.
When that is not an option, a solution to this error is to clone the problematic repository locally and use the replace directive in your go.mod file:
module mymodule
replace github.com/xdg/stringprep => ../strprep
go 1.16.2
require (
github.com/divjotarora/mgo v0.0.0-20190308170442-1d451d2a3149
)
where ../strprep is where the code of the required module exists in your local machine, relative to the go.mod file of your project.
The downside of this of course is that you have to replicate this palliative fix wherever you plan to go get your modules.
Note also:
divjotarora/mgo is just a random example of a project that imports one of those packages using their old import path.
I'm using xdg/stringprep as an example because I can't find modules that import xdg/scram instead, but apparently it suffers from the same issue
Beside, you can use:
go mod why <package> to find out why a certain package is listed as a dependency of your project
go mod graph to show the full dependency graph. The output is in <package> <requirement> format
As a work requirement learning gRPC through an online course.
I have a project defined in folder greet (outside of GOPATH) with three packages called:
greet_client
greet_server
greetpb
In the go.mod file at the root of my project, I've specified the following:
module example.com/myuser/myproject
go 1.14
The code in greet_server/server.go makes a reference to greetpb.
I'm referencing it like the following:
I'm able to run server.go successfully.
It returns the expected the result:
My question is on the red squiggly lines VSCode throws saying it could not import greetpb:
Here's how package greetpb is defined (it's an auto generated file):
How can I get rid of this warning message?
Is it something I've not setup properly?
Update:
When I try to ctrl+click to view the module greetpb on the file server.go, I note that it's pointing to the url pkg.go.dev.
How can I make the program to do a "local" lookup?
Why would you use example.com? You don't have your package defined there.
Initialize go modules first i.e.
go mod init github.com/$USER/$REPO
Go mod vendor
go mod tidy && go mod vendor
That's it.
I'm trying to understand how to organize my golang project using go1.11 modules. I tried several options, but none of them worked.
I have some code in the main package under the application folder and a local package that the main package uses.
$GOPATH
+ src
+ application/
+ main/
+ main.go
+ otherFileUnderMainPackage.go
+ aLocalPackage/
+ someCode.go
+ someCode_test.go
+ someMoreCode.go
+ someMoreCode_test.go
Files in the main package, imports ../aLocalPackage. When I compile by go build main/*.go it's working.
Then, I ran go mod init application: V.0.9.9 and got the go.mod file, but the build always fails. I always get error about not finding the local package: build application:V0.9.9/main: cannot find module for path _/.../src/application/aLocalPackage. I also tried to place the local package right under src/, place it under main/ etc. but none of these methods worked for me.
What is the way to use modules and local packages?
Thanks.
Relative import paths are not supported in module mode. You will need to update your import statements to use a full (absolute) import path.
You should also choose a module name other than application. Your module path should generally begin with a URL prefix that you control — either your own domain name, or a unique path such as github.com/$USER/$REPO.
I had some problems working with local packages myself.
There are two tricks to make it work:
you run "go build" in the package directory
This compiles the package and places it in the build cache.
This link about code organisation in go explains more.
You can identify where the cache is using:
>go env GOCACHE
/home/<user>/.cache/go-build
Import using a path relative to the project
I puzzled loads over what the correct import path was and finally discovered that go doc or go list will tell you.
>go doc
package docs // import "tools/src/hello/docs"
>go list
tools/src/hello/docs
For example. I have a hello world API project and was using swaggo to generate documentation which it does in a docs sub-directory.
To use it I add an import:
_ "tools/src/hello/docs"
For my case the _ is important as docs is not used directly but we its init() function to be invoked.
Now in hello/main.go I can add "tools/src/hello/docs" and it will import the correct package.
The path is relative to the location of go.mod if you have one.
I have tools/ here as I have a go.mod declaring "modules tools".
Modules are a different kettle of fish - see https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/Modules.
Recent versions of go (1.11 and later) can create a go.mod file which you may use to fix the version of a module that is used and avoid go's crazy default behaviour of just downloading the latest version of any package you import.
I have written a blogpost on how to start your first Go project using modules.
https://marcofranssen.nl/start-on-your-first-golang-project/
In general it boils down to just create a new folder somewhere on your system (doesn't have to be in GOPATH).
mkdir my-project
cd my-project
go mod init github.com/you-user/my-project
This will create the go.mod file. Now you can simply create your project layout and start building whatever you like.
Maybe one of my other blogs can inspire you a bit more on how to do things.
https://marcofranssen.nl/categories/software-development/golang/
Following the release of Go 1.11, I have been trying to move my repositories to Go modules, by adding a go.mod file at their root.
One of my root libraries my.host/root is in its version 17.0.1, so I wrote in its go.mod file:
module my.host/root/v17
I tagged that version v17.0.1 as documented in the Go modules manual.
When I try to make a new Go project that uses my root library, like:
package main
import root "my.host/root/v17"
func main() {
root.DoSomething()
}
And try to compile it, I get the following error:
go: my.host/root#v0.0.0-20180828034419-6bc78016491a: go.mod has post-v0 module path "my.host/root/v17" at revision 6bc78016491a
I am at loss figuring out why this happens. I explicitly added v17.0.1 in the go.mod file, yet every attempt at go build replaces the entry with a v0.0.0-20180828034419-6bc78016491a version which then fails because at that commit, the go.mod file module entry of my root library indeed ends with a v17, as it should.
For the record, this commit is the same as the tagged v17.0.1 version.
What am I doing wrong here? How can I debug this situation?
I had make two mistakes:
My initial v17.0.0 tag would point to a commit where go.mod did not contain the v17 import path suffix. As a result, it seems Go tooling considers the whole v17 major version as a v0/v1 instead, even if later v17 tags point to a commit with a correct go.mod directive, hence the commit ID "translation".
In my dependent projects, in the go.mod file, I mistakenly specified
require my.host/root v17.0.1 instead of
require my.host/root/v17 v17.0.1.
After fixing both those issues, everything seems back to normal and it works perfectly. I wish the documentation had been clearer about this but I guess this is a good opportunity to make a contribution!
The error I got was: github.com/emicklei/go-restful#v0.0.0-20180531035034-3658237ded10: go.mod has post-v0 module path "github.com/emicklei/go-restful/v2" at revision 3658237ded10
Appending github.com/emicklei/go-restful with v2 like so: github.com/emicklei/go-restful/v2 in my go.mod file fixed it for me.