github.com/pellared/seed

Go application GitHub repository template.


License
Unlicense
Install
go get github.com/pellared/seed

Documentation

Go Repository Template

Keep a Changelog GitHub Release Go Reference go.mod LICENSE Build Status Go Report Card Codecov

This is a GitHub repository template for Go. It has been created for ease-of-use for anyone who wants to:

  • quickly get into Go without losing too much time on environment setup,
  • create a new repoisitory with basic Continous Integration.

It includes:

Star this repository if you find it valuable and worth maintaining.

Watch this repository to get notified about new releases, issues, etc.

Usage

  1. Sign up on Codecov and configure Codecov GitHub Application for all repositories.
  2. Click the Use this template button (alt. clone or download this repository).
  3. Replace all occurences of golang-templates/seed to your_org/repo_name in all files.
  4. Replace all occurences of seed to repo_name in Dockerfile.
  5. Update the following files:

Setup

Below you can find sample instructions on how to set up the development environment. Of course you can use other tools like GoLand, Vim, Emacs. However take notice that the Visual Studio Go extension is officially supported by the Go team.

  1. Install Go.
  2. Install Visual Studio Code.
  3. Install Go extension.
  4. Clone and open this repository.
  5. F1 -> Go: Install/Update Tools -> (select all) -> OK.

Build

Terminal

  • make - execute the build pipeline.
  • make help - print help for the Make targets.

Visual Studio Code

F1 โ†’ Tasks: Run Build Task (Ctrl+Shift+B or โ‡งโŒ˜B) to execute the build pipeline.

Release

The release workflow is triggered each time a tag with v prefix is pushed.

CAUTION: Make sure to understand the consequences before you bump the major version. More info: Go Wiki, Go Blog.

Maintainance

Notable files:

FAQ

Why Visual Studio Code editor configuration

Developers that use Visual Studio Code can take advantage of the editor configuration. While others do not have to care about it. Setting configs for each repo is unnecessary time consuming. VS Code is the most popular Go editor (survey) and it is officially supported by the Go team.

You can always remove the .vscode directory if it really does not help you.

Why GitHub Actions, not any other CI server

GitHub Actions is out-of-the-box if you are already using GitHub. Here you can learn how to use it for Go.

However, changing to any other CI server should be very simple, because this repository has build logic and tooling installation in Makefile.

How can I build on Windows

Install tdm-gcc and copy C:\TDM-GCC-64\bin\mingw32-make.exe to C:\TDM-GCC-64\bin\make.exe. Alternatively, you may install mingw-w64 and copy mingw32-make.exe accordingly.

Alternatively use WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux) or develop inside a Remote Container. However, take into consideration that then you are not going to use "bare-metal" Windows.

How can I customize the release or add deb/rpm/snap packages, Homebrew Tap, Scoop App Manifest etc

Take a look at GoReleaser docs as well as its repo how it is dogfooding its functionality.

How can I create a library instead of an application

You can change the .goreleaser.yml to contain:

build:
  skip: true
release:
  github:
  prerelease: auto

Alternatively, you can completly remove the usage of GoReleaser if you prefer handcrafted release notes. Take a look how it is done in goyek.

Why the code coverage results are not accurate

By default go test records code coverage for the package that is currently tested. If you want to get more accurate (cross-package) coverage, then consider using go-acc. Read more.

How to automate generating git tags for next release version

Auto-tagging can be done in many ways e.g. by using GitHub Actions like:

However, creating a release tag manually is often the optimal approach. Take notice that this template executes a release workflow each time a git tag with v prefix is pushed.

Contributing

Simply create an issue or a pull request.