Note: If you are interested in learning Golang, then for that we have a golang comprehensive tutorial series. Do check it out – Golang Comprehensive Tutorial Series. Now let’s see the current tutorial. Below is the table of contents.
Table of Contents
Overview
Module is go support for dependency management. A module by definition is a collection of related packages with go.mod at its root. The go.mod file defines the
- Module import path.
- The version of go with which the module is created
- Dependency requirements of the module for a successful build. It defines both project’s dependencies requirement and also locks them to their correct version.
go.sum
This file lists down the checksum of direct and indirect dependency required along with the version. It is to be mentioned that the go.mod file is enough for a successful build. They why go.sum file is needed?. The checksum present in go.sum file is used to validate the checksum of each of direct and indirect dependency to confirm that none of them has been modified.
We mentioned above that go.mod file lists down the dependency requirement of the module. Now a dependency of a module can be of two kind
- Direct -A direct dependency is a dependency which the module directly imports.
- Indirect – It is the dependency that is imported by the module’s direct dependencies. Also, any dependency that is mentioned in the go.mod file but not imported in any of the source files of the module is also treated as an indirect dependency.
go.mod file only records the direct dependency. However, it may record an indirect dependency in the below case
- Any indirect dependency which is not listed in the go.mod file of your direct dependency or if direct dependency doesn’t have a go.mod file, then that dependency will be added to the go.mod file with //indirect as the suffix. We will see an example of this later in the article to know this better.
Also please note that both go.mod as well as go.sum file should be checked into the Version Control System (VCS) such as git
Example
Let’s see an example to understand what ever we talked above about go.mod and go.sum file. For that let’s first create a module
go mod init learn
This command will create a go.mod file in the same directory. Let’s examine the contents of this file. Do a cat go.mod
module learn
go 1.14
When the module is first created using the init command, the go.mod file will have two things only
- Import path of the module at the top
module learn
- Version of go with which the module was created
go 1.14
Since it is an empty module it doesn’t have any direct dependency specified yet. Let’s create a file named uuid.go in the same directory with below contents
uuid.go
package main
import (
"fmt"
"strings"
"github.com/pborman/uuid"
)
func main() {
uuidWithHyphen := uuid.NewRandom()
uuid := strings.Replace(uuidWithHyphen.String(), "-", "", -1)
fmt.Println(uuid)
}
Notice that we have imported the dependency in the uuid.go as well
"github.com/pborman/uuid"
Let’s run the below command
go mod tidy
This command will download all the dependencies that are required in your source files and update go.mod file with that dependency. After running this command let’s now let’s again examine the contents of go.mod file . Do a cat go.mod
module learn
go 1.14
require github.com/pborman/uuid v1.2.1
It lists direct dependency which was specified in the uuid file along with exact version of the dependency as well. Now let’s check the go.sum file as well
Do a cat go.sum
github.com/google/uuid v1.0.0 h1:b4Gk+7WdP/d3HZH8EJsZpvV7EtDOgaZLtnaNGIu1adA=
github.com/google/uuid v1.0.0/go.mod h1:TIyPZe4MgqvfeYDBFedMoGGpEw/LqOeaOT+nhxU+yHo=
github.com/pborman/uuid v1.2.1 h1:+ZZIw58t/ozdjRaXh/3awHfmWRbzYxJoAdNJxe/3pvw=
github.com/pborman/uuid v1.2.1/go.mod h1:X/NO0urCmaxf9VXbdlT7C2Yzkj2IKimNn4k+gtPdI/k=
go.sum file lists down the checksum of direct and indirect dependency required by the module. github.com/google/uuid is internally used by the github.com/pborman/uuid . It is an indirect dependency of the module and hence it is recorded in the go.sum file.
We can also run this file now and it will give the correct output
go run uuid.go
Output
e594dc4d9a754bcb83b56e89b18b4b46
Example of indirect dependency in go.mod file
We mentioned above that go.mod file might contain an indirect dependency in the below case.
- Any indirect dependency which is not listed in the go.mod file of your direct dependency or if direct dependency doesn’t have a go.mod file , then that dependency will be added to the go.mod file with //indirect as the suffix. We will see an example of this later in the article to know this better.
Let’s understand it with an example. For that let’s first create a module again
git mod init learn
Now create a file learn.go
package main
import (
"github.com/gocolly/colly"
)
func main() {
_ = colly.NewCollector()
}
Notice that we have specified the dependency in the learn.go as
github.com/gocolly/colly
So github.com/gocolly/colly is a direct dependency of the learn module as it is directly imported in the module. Now let’s run the below command
go mod tidy
After running this command let’s now let’s again examine the contents of go.mod file. Since colly version v1.2.0 doesn’t have a go.mod file , all dependencies required by colly will be added to the go.mod file with //indirect as suffix
Do a cat go.mod
module learn
go 1.14
require (
github.com/PuerkitoBio/goquery v1.6.0 // indirect
github.com/antchfx/htmlquery v1.2.3 // indirect
github.com/antchfx/xmlquery v1.3.3 // indirect
github.com/gobwas/glob v0.2.3 // indirect
github.com/gocolly/colly v1.2.0
github.com/kennygrant/sanitize v1.2.4 // indirect
github.com/saintfish/chardet v0.0.0-20120816061221-3af4cd4741ca // indirect
github.com/temoto/robotstxt v1.1.1 // indirect
golang.org/x/net v0.0.0-20201027133719-8eef5233e2a1 // indirect
google.golang.org/appengine v1.6.7 // indirect
)
All other dependencies are suffixed by //indirect. Also checksum of all direct and indirect dependencies will be recorded in the go.sum file.