An example repository to demonstrate Pants's experimental Golang support.
See the Golang blog post for some unique benefits Pants brings to Golang repositories, and see pantsbuild.org/docs/go-overview for more detailed documentation.
This is only one possible way of laying out your project with Pants. See pantsbuild.org/docs/source-roots#examples for some other example layouts.
You run Pants goals using the pants
launcher binary, which will bootstrap the
version of Pants configured for this repo if necessary.
See here for how to install the pants
binary.
Pants commands are called goals. You can get a list of goals with
pants help goals
Most goals take arguments to run on. To run on a single directory, use the directory name with
:
at the end. To recursively run on a directory and all its subdirectories, add ::
to the
end.
For example:
pants lint cmd: internal::
You can run on all changed files:
pants --changed-since=HEAD lint
You can run on all changed files, and any of their "dependees":
pants --changed-since=HEAD --changed-dependees=transitive test
Try these out in this repo!
pants fmt :: # Format all packages.
pants fmt cmd/greeter_en: # Format only this package.
pants lint pkg:: # Check that all packages under `pkg` are formatted.
pants check :: # Compile all packages.
pants check cmd/greeter_en: # Compile only this package and its transitive dependencies.
pants test :: # Run all tests in the repository.
pants test pkg/uuid: # Run all the tests in this package.
pants test pkg/uuid: -- -run TestGenerateUuid # Run just this one test.
Writes the result to the dist/
folder.
pants package cmd/greeter_en:
pants package cmd:: # Create all binaries.
pants run cmd/greeter_en:
pants run cmd/greeter_es: -- --help
pants dependencies cmd/greeter_en:
pants dependencies --transitive cmd/greeter_en:
That is, find what code depends on a particular package(s).
pants dependees pkg/uuid:
pants dependees --transitive pkg/uuid:
pants count-loc '**/*'