Pull requests and other any other contributions would be very much appreciated.
GVM provides an interface to manage Go versions.
Features
Install/Uninstall Go versions with gvm install [tag] where tag is "60.3", "go1", "weekly.2011-11-08", or "tip"
List added/removed files in GOROOT with gvm diff
Manage GOPATHs with gvm pkgset [create/use/delete] [name]. Use --local as name to manage repository under local path (/path/to/repo/.gvm_local).
List latest release tags with gvm listall. Use --all to list weekly as well.
Cache a clean copy of the latest Go source for multiple version installs.
Link project directories into GOPATH
Background
When we started developing in Go mismatched dependencies and API changes plauged our build process and made it extremely difficult to merge with other peoples changes.
After nuking my entire GOROOT several times and rebuilding I decided to come up with a tool to oversee the process. It eventually evolved into what gvm is today.
Once this is done Go will be in the path and ready to use. $GOROOT and $GOPATH are set automatically.
Additional options can be specified when installing Go:
Usage: gvm install [version] [options]
-s, --source=SOURCE Install Go from specified source.
-n, --name=NAME Override the default name for this version.
-pb, --with-protobuf Install Go protocol buffers.
-b, --with-build-tools Install package build tools.
-B, --binary Only install from binary.
--prefer-binary Attempt a binary install, falling back to source.
-h, --help Display this message.
A Note on Compiling Go 1.5+
Go 1.5+ removed the C compilers from the toolchain and replaced them with one written in Go. Obviously, this creates a bootstrapping problem if you don't already have a working Go install. In order to compile Go 1.5+, make sure Go 1.4 is installed first.
GVM supports vendoring package set-specific native code and related
dependencies, which is useful if you need to qualify a new configuration
or version of one of these dependencies against a last-known-good version
in an isolated manner. Such behavior is critical to maintaining good release
engineering and production environment hygiene.
As a convenience matter, GVM will furnish the following environment variables to
aid in this manner if you want to decouple your work from what the operating
system provides:
${GVM_OVERLAY_PREFIX} functions in a manner akin to a root directory
hierarchy suitable for auto{conf,make,tools} where it could be passed in
to ./configure --prefix=${GVM_OVERLAY_PREFIX} and not conflict with any
existing operating system artifacts and hermetically be used by your
workspace. This is suitable to use with C{PP,XX}FLAGS and LDFLAGS, but you will have
to manage these yourself, since each tool that uses them is different.
${PATH} includes ${GVM_OVERLAY_PREFIX}/bin so that any tools you
manually install will reside there, available for you.
${LD_LIBRARY_PATH} includes ${GVM_OVERLAY_PREFIX}/lib so that any
runtime library searching can be fulfilled there on FreeBSD and Linux.
${DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH} includes ${GVM_OVERLAY_PREFIX}/lib so that any
runtime library searching can be fulfilled there on Mac OS X.
${PKG_CONFIG_PATH} includes ${GVM_OVERLAY_PREFIX}/lib/pkgconfig so
that pkg-config can automatically resolve any vendored dependencies.
Recipe for success:
gvm use go1.1
gvm pkgset use current-known-good
# Let's assume that this includes some C headers and native libraries, which
# Go's CGO facility wraps for us. Let's assume that these native
# dependencies are at version V.
gvm pkgset create trial-next-version
# Let's assume that V+1 has come along and you want to safely trial it in
# your workspace.
gvm pkgset use trial-next-version
# Do your work here replicating current-known-good from above, but install
# V+1 into ${GVM_OVERLAY_PREFIX}.
See examples/native for a working example.
Troubleshooting
Sometimes especially during upgrades the state of gvm's files can get mixed up. This is mostly true for upgrade from older version than 0.0.8. Changes are slowing down and a LTR is imminent. But for now rm -rf ~/.gvm will always remove gvm. Stay tuned!
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