Commit 8b2a2d03 authored by Bryan C. Mills's avatar Bryan C. Mills

Revert "cmd/go: change the default value of GO111MODULE to 'on'"

This reverts commit cf469165
(CL 162698).

Reason for revert: broke make.bash bootstrapping from head.

Change-Id: I3de6d26b1af9038c6b92dec88667bfa734060a41
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/166985Reviewed-by: default avatarBrad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
parent 2bd28cee
......@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@
// fix update packages to use new APIs
// fmt gofmt (reformat) package sources
// generate generate Go files by processing source
// get add dependencies to current module and install them
// get download and install packages and dependencies
// install compile and install packages and dependencies
// list list packages or modules
// mod module maintenance
......@@ -534,105 +534,67 @@
// For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'.
//
//
// Add dependencies to current module and install them
// Download and install packages and dependencies
//
// Usage:
//
// go get [-d] [-m] [-u] [-v] [-insecure] [build flags] [packages]
// go get [-d] [-f] [-t] [-u] [-v] [-fix] [-insecure] [build flags] [packages]
//
// Get resolves and adds dependencies to the current development module
// and then builds and installs them.
//
// The first step is to resolve which dependencies to add.
//
// For each named package or package pattern, get must decide which version of
// the corresponding module to use. By default, get chooses the latest tagged
// release version, such as v0.4.5 or v1.2.3. If there are no tagged release
// versions, get chooses the latest tagged prerelease version, such as
// v0.0.1-pre1. If there are no tagged versions at all, get chooses the latest
// known commit.
//
// This default version selection can be overridden by adding an @version
// suffix to the package argument, as in 'go get golang.org/x/text@v0.3.0'.
// For modules stored in source control repositories, the version suffix can
// also be a commit hash, branch identifier, or other syntax known to the
// source control system, as in 'go get golang.org/x/text@master'.
// The version suffix @latest explicitly requests the default behavior
// described above.
//
// If a module under consideration is already a dependency of the current
// development module, then get will update the required version.
// Specifying a version earlier than the current required version is valid and
// downgrades the dependency. The version suffix @none indicates that the
// dependency should be removed entirely, downgrading or removing modules
// depending on it as needed.
//
// Although get defaults to using the latest version of the module containing
// a named package, it does not use the latest version of that module's
// dependencies. Instead it prefers to use the specific dependency versions
// requested by that module. For example, if the latest A requires module
// B v1.2.3, while B v1.2.4 and v1.3.1 are also available, then 'go get A'
// will use the latest A but then use B v1.2.3, as requested by A. (If there
// are competing requirements for a particular module, then 'go get' resolves
// those requirements by taking the maximum requested version.)
//
// The -u flag instructs get to update dependencies to use newer minor or
// patch releases when available. Continuing the previous example,
// 'go get -u A' will use the latest A with B v1.3.1 (not B v1.2.3).
// Get downloads the packages named by the import paths, along with their
// dependencies. It then installs the named packages, like 'go install'.
//
// The -u=patch flag (not -u patch) instructs get to update dependencies
// to use newer patch releases when available. Continuing the previous example,
// 'go get -u=patch A' will use the latest A with B v1.2.4 (not B v1.2.3).
// The -d flag instructs get to stop after downloading the packages; that is,
// it instructs get not to install the packages.
//
// In general, adding a new dependency may require upgrading
// existing dependencies to keep a working build, and 'go get' does
// this automatically. Similarly, downgrading one dependency may
// require downgrading other dependencies, and 'go get' does
// this automatically as well.
// The -f flag, valid only when -u is set, forces get -u not to verify that
// each package has been checked out from the source control repository
// implied by its import path. This can be useful if the source is a local fork
// of the original.
//
// The -m flag instructs get to stop here, after resolving, upgrading,
// and downgrading modules and updating go.mod. When using -m,
// each specified package path must be a module path as well,
// not the import path of a package below the module root.
// The -fix flag instructs get to run the fix tool on the downloaded packages
// before resolving dependencies or building the code.
//
// The -insecure flag permits fetching from repositories and resolving
// custom domains using insecure schemes such as HTTP. Use with caution.
//
// The second step is to download (if needed), build, and install
// the named packages.
// The -t flag instructs get to also download the packages required to build
// the tests for the specified packages.
//
// If an argument names a module but not a package (because there is no
// Go source code in the module's root directory), then the install step
// is skipped for that argument, instead of causing a build failure.
// For example 'go get golang.org/x/perf' succeeds even though there
// is no code corresponding to that import path.
// The -u flag instructs get to use the network to update the named packages
// and their dependencies. By default, get uses the network to check out
// missing packages but does not use it to look for updates to existing packages.
//
// Note that package patterns are allowed and are expanded after resolving
// the module versions. For example, 'go get golang.org/x/perf/cmd/...'
// adds the latest golang.org/x/perf and then installs the commands in that
// latest version.
// The -v flag enables verbose progress and debug output.
//
// The -d flag instructs get to download the source code needed to build
// the named packages, including downloading necessary dependencies,
// but not to build and install them.
// Get also accepts build flags to control the installation. See 'go help build'.
//
// With no package arguments, 'go get' applies to the main module,
// and to the Go package in the current directory, if any. In particular,
// 'go get -u' and 'go get -u=patch' update all the dependencies of the
// main module. With no package arguments and also without -u,
// 'go get' is not much more than 'go install', and 'go get -d' not much
// more than 'go list'.
// When checking out a new package, get creates the target directory
// GOPATH/src/<import-path>. If the GOPATH contains multiple entries,
// get uses the first one. For more details see: 'go help gopath'.
//
// For more about modules, see 'go help modules'.
// When checking out or updating a package, get looks for a branch or tag
// that matches the locally installed version of Go. The most important
// rule is that if the local installation is running version "go1", get
// searches for a branch or tag named "go1". If no such version exists
// it retrieves the default branch of the package.
//
// When go get checks out or updates a Git repository,
// it also updates any git submodules referenced by the repository.
//
// Get never checks out or updates code stored in vendor directories.
//
// For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'.
//
// This text describes the behavior of get using modules to manage source
// code and dependencies. If instead the go command is running in GOPATH
// mode, the details of get's flags and effects change, as does 'go help get'.
// See 'go help modules' and 'go help gopath-get'.
// For more about how 'go get' finds source code to
// download, see 'go help importpath'.
//
// See also: go build, go install, go clean, go mod.
// This text describes the behavior of get when using GOPATH
// to manage source code and dependencies.
// If instead the go command is running in module-aware mode,
// the details of get's flags and effects change, as does 'go help get'.
// See 'go help modules' and 'go help module-get'.
//
// See also: go build, go install, go clean.
//
//
// Compile and install packages and dependencies
......@@ -1876,72 +1838,6 @@
// See https://golang.org/s/go15vendor for details.
//
//
// Legacy GOPATH go get
//
// The 'go get' command changes behavior depending on whether the
// go command is running in module-aware mode or legacy GOPATH mode.
// This help text, accessible as 'go help gopath-get' even in module-aware mode,
// describes 'go get' as it operates in legacy GOPATH mode.
//
// Usage: go get [-d] [-f] [-t] [-u] [-v] [-fix] [-insecure] [build flags] [packages]
//
// Get downloads the packages named by the import paths, along with their
// dependencies. It then installs the named packages, like 'go install'.
//
// The -d flag instructs get to stop after downloading the packages; that is,
// it instructs get not to install the packages.
//
// The -f flag, valid only when -u is set, forces get -u not to verify that
// each package has been checked out from the source control repository
// implied by its import path. This can be useful if the source is a local fork
// of the original.
//
// The -fix flag instructs get to run the fix tool on the downloaded packages
// before resolving dependencies or building the code.
//
// The -insecure flag permits fetching from repositories and resolving
// custom domains using insecure schemes such as HTTP. Use with caution.
//
// The -t flag instructs get to also download the packages required to build
// the tests for the specified packages.
//
// The -u flag instructs get to use the network to update the named packages
// and their dependencies. By default, get uses the network to check out
// missing packages but does not use it to look for updates to existing packages.
//
// The -v flag enables verbose progress and debug output.
//
// Get also accepts build flags to control the installation. See 'go help build'.
//
// When checking out a new package, get creates the target directory
// GOPATH/src/<import-path>. If the GOPATH contains multiple entries,
// get uses the first one. For more details see: 'go help gopath'.
//
// When checking out or updating a package, get looks for a branch or tag
// that matches the locally installed version of Go. The most important
// rule is that if the local installation is running version "go1", get
// searches for a branch or tag named "go1". If no such version exists
// it retrieves the default branch of the package.
//
// When go get checks out or updates a Git repository,
// it also updates any git submodules referenced by the repository.
//
// Get never checks out or updates code stored in vendor directories.
//
// For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'.
//
// For more about how 'go get' finds source code to
// download, see 'go help importpath'.
//
// This text describes the behavior of get when using GOPATH
// to manage source code and dependencies.
// If instead the go command is running in module-aware mode,
// the details of get's flags and effects change, as does 'go help get'.
// See 'go help modules' and 'go help module-get'.
//
// See also: go build, go install, go clean.
//
//
// Module proxy protocol
//
// The go command by default downloads modules from version control systems
......@@ -2201,25 +2097,34 @@
// Modules replace the old GOPATH-based approach to specifying
// which source files are used in a given build.
//
// Module support
// Preliminary module support
//
// Go 1.13 includes official support for Go modules,
// including a module-aware 'go get' command.
// Module-aware mode is active by default.
// Go 1.11 includes preliminary support for Go modules,
// including a new module-aware 'go get' command.
// We intend to keep revising this support, while preserving compatibility,
// until it can be declared official (no longer preliminary),
// and then at a later point we may remove support for work
// in GOPATH and the old 'go get' command.
//
// For more fine-grained control, Go 1.13 continues to respect
// The quickest way to take advantage of the new Go 1.11 module support
// is to check out your repository into a directory outside GOPATH/src,
// create a go.mod file (described in the next section) there, and run
// go commands from within that file tree.
//
// For more fine-grained control, the module support in Go 1.11 respects
// a temporary environment variable, GO111MODULE, which can be set to one
// of three string values: off, auto, or on (the default).
// If GO111MODULE=on or is unset, then the go command requires the use of
// modules, never consulting GOPATH. We refer to this as the command
// being module-aware or running in "module-aware mode".
// If GO111MODULE=auto, then the go command enables or disables module
// support based on the current directory. Module support is enabled only
// when the current directory is outside GOPATH/src and itself contains a
// go.mod file or is below a directory containing a go.mod file.
// If GO111MODULE=off, then the go command never uses
// module support. Instead it looks in vendor directories and GOPATH
// of three string values: off, on, or auto (the default).
// If GO111MODULE=off, then the go command never uses the
// new module support. Instead it looks in vendor directories and GOPATH
// to find dependencies; we now refer to this as "GOPATH mode."
// If GO111MODULE=on, then the go command requires the use of modules,
// never consulting GOPATH. We refer to this as the command being
// module-aware or running in "module-aware mode".
// If GO111MODULE=auto or is unset, then the go command enables or
// disables module support based on the current directory.
// Module support is enabled only when the current directory is outside
// GOPATH/src and itself contains a go.mod file or is below a directory
// containing a go.mod file.
//
// In module-aware mode, GOPATH no longer defines the meaning of imports
// during a build, but it still stores downloaded dependencies (in GOPATH/pkg/mod)
......@@ -2541,6 +2446,110 @@
// are still ignored.
//
//
// Module-aware go get
//
// The 'go get' command changes behavior depending on whether the
// go command is running in module-aware mode or legacy GOPATH mode.
// This help text, accessible as 'go help module-get' even in legacy GOPATH mode,
// describes 'go get' as it operates in module-aware mode.
//
// Usage: go get [-d] [-m] [-u] [-v] [-insecure] [build flags] [packages]
//
// Get resolves and adds dependencies to the current development module
// and then builds and installs them.
//
// The first step is to resolve which dependencies to add.
//
// For each named package or package pattern, get must decide which version of
// the corresponding module to use. By default, get chooses the latest tagged
// release version, such as v0.4.5 or v1.2.3. If there are no tagged release
// versions, get chooses the latest tagged prerelease version, such as
// v0.0.1-pre1. If there are no tagged versions at all, get chooses the latest
// known commit.
//
// This default version selection can be overridden by adding an @version
// suffix to the package argument, as in 'go get golang.org/x/text@v0.3.0'.
// For modules stored in source control repositories, the version suffix can
// also be a commit hash, branch identifier, or other syntax known to the
// source control system, as in 'go get golang.org/x/text@master'.
// The version suffix @latest explicitly requests the default behavior
// described above.
//
// If a module under consideration is already a dependency of the current
// development module, then get will update the required version.
// Specifying a version earlier than the current required version is valid and
// downgrades the dependency. The version suffix @none indicates that the
// dependency should be removed entirely, downgrading or removing modules
// depending on it as needed.
//
// Although get defaults to using the latest version of the module containing
// a named package, it does not use the latest version of that module's
// dependencies. Instead it prefers to use the specific dependency versions
// requested by that module. For example, if the latest A requires module
// B v1.2.3, while B v1.2.4 and v1.3.1 are also available, then 'go get A'
// will use the latest A but then use B v1.2.3, as requested by A. (If there
// are competing requirements for a particular module, then 'go get' resolves
// those requirements by taking the maximum requested version.)
//
// The -u flag instructs get to update dependencies to use newer minor or
// patch releases when available. Continuing the previous example,
// 'go get -u A' will use the latest A with B v1.3.1 (not B v1.2.3).
//
// The -u=patch flag (not -u patch) instructs get to update dependencies
// to use newer patch releases when available. Continuing the previous example,
// 'go get -u=patch A' will use the latest A with B v1.2.4 (not B v1.2.3).
//
// In general, adding a new dependency may require upgrading
// existing dependencies to keep a working build, and 'go get' does
// this automatically. Similarly, downgrading one dependency may
// require downgrading other dependencies, and 'go get' does
// this automatically as well.
//
// The -m flag instructs get to stop here, after resolving, upgrading,
// and downgrading modules and updating go.mod. When using -m,
// each specified package path must be a module path as well,
// not the import path of a package below the module root.
//
// The -insecure flag permits fetching from repositories and resolving
// custom domains using insecure schemes such as HTTP. Use with caution.
//
// The second step is to download (if needed), build, and install
// the named packages.
//
// If an argument names a module but not a package (because there is no
// Go source code in the module's root directory), then the install step
// is skipped for that argument, instead of causing a build failure.
// For example 'go get golang.org/x/perf' succeeds even though there
// is no code corresponding to that import path.
//
// Note that package patterns are allowed and are expanded after resolving
// the module versions. For example, 'go get golang.org/x/perf/cmd/...'
// adds the latest golang.org/x/perf and then installs the commands in that
// latest version.
//
// The -d flag instructs get to download the source code needed to build
// the named packages, including downloading necessary dependencies,
// but not to build and install them.
//
// With no package arguments, 'go get' applies to the main module,
// and to the Go package in the current directory, if any. In particular,
// 'go get -u' and 'go get -u=patch' update all the dependencies of the
// main module. With no package arguments and also without -u,
// 'go get' is not much more than 'go install', and 'go get -d' not much
// more than 'go list'.
//
// For more about modules, see 'go help modules'.
//
// For more about specifying packages, see 'go help packages'.
//
// This text describes the behavior of get using modules to manage source
// code and dependencies. If instead the go command is running in GOPATH
// mode, the details of get's flags and effects change, as does 'go help get'.
// See 'go help modules' and 'go help gopath-get'.
//
// See also: go build, go install, go clean, go mod.
//
//
// Package lists and patterns
//
// Many commands apply to a set of packages:
......
......@@ -12,14 +12,9 @@ import (
"testing"
"cmd/go/internal/help"
"cmd/go/internal/modload"
)
func TestDocsUpToDate(t *testing.T) {
if !modload.Enabled() {
t.Skipf("help.Help in GOPATH mode is configured by main.main")
}
buf := new(bytes.Buffer)
// Match the command in mkalldocs.sh that generates alldocs.go.
help.Help(buf, []string{"documentation"})
......
......@@ -17,7 +17,6 @@ import (
"unicode/utf8"
"cmd/go/internal/base"
"cmd/go/internal/modload"
)
// Help implements the 'help' command.
......@@ -36,10 +35,8 @@ func Help(w io.Writer, args []string) {
usage := &base.Command{Long: buf.String()}
cmds := []*base.Command{usage}
for _, cmd := range base.Go.Commands {
if cmd.UsageLine == "gopath-get" {
// Avoid duplication of the "get" documentation.
if cmd.UsageLine == "module-get" && modload.Enabled() {
continue
} else if cmd.UsageLine == "gopath-get" && !modload.Enabled() {
continue
}
cmds = append(cmds, cmd)
......
......@@ -19,25 +19,34 @@ including recording and resolving dependencies on other modules.
Modules replace the old GOPATH-based approach to specifying
which source files are used in a given build.
Module support
Preliminary module support
Go 1.13 includes official support for Go modules,
including a module-aware 'go get' command.
Module-aware mode is active by default.
Go 1.11 includes preliminary support for Go modules,
including a new module-aware 'go get' command.
We intend to keep revising this support, while preserving compatibility,
until it can be declared official (no longer preliminary),
and then at a later point we may remove support for work
in GOPATH and the old 'go get' command.
For more fine-grained control, Go 1.13 continues to respect
The quickest way to take advantage of the new Go 1.11 module support
is to check out your repository into a directory outside GOPATH/src,
create a go.mod file (described in the next section) there, and run
go commands from within that file tree.
For more fine-grained control, the module support in Go 1.11 respects
a temporary environment variable, GO111MODULE, which can be set to one
of three string values: off, auto, or on (the default).
If GO111MODULE=on or is unset, then the go command requires the use of
modules, never consulting GOPATH. We refer to this as the command
being module-aware or running in "module-aware mode".
If GO111MODULE=auto, then the go command enables or disables module
support based on the current directory. Module support is enabled only
when the current directory is outside GOPATH/src and itself contains a
go.mod file or is below a directory containing a go.mod file.
If GO111MODULE=off, then the go command never uses
module support. Instead it looks in vendor directories and GOPATH
of three string values: off, on, or auto (the default).
If GO111MODULE=off, then the go command never uses the
new module support. Instead it looks in vendor directories and GOPATH
to find dependencies; we now refer to this as "GOPATH mode."
If GO111MODULE=on, then the go command requires the use of modules,
never consulting GOPATH. We refer to this as the command being
module-aware or running in "module-aware mode".
If GO111MODULE=auto or is unset, then the go command enables or
disables module support based on the current directory.
Module support is enabled only when the current directory is outside
GOPATH/src and itself contains a go.mod file or is below a directory
containing a go.mod file.
In module-aware mode, GOPATH no longer defines the meaning of imports
during a build, but it still stores downloaded dependencies (in GOPATH/pkg/mod)
......
......@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ import (
var (
cwd string // TODO(bcmills): Is this redundant with base.Cwd?
mustUseModules = true
MustUseModules = mustUseModules()
initialized bool
modRoot string
......@@ -70,6 +70,16 @@ func BinDir() string {
return filepath.Join(gopath, "bin")
}
// mustUseModules reports whether we are invoked as vgo
// (as opposed to go).
// If so, we only support builds with go.mod files.
func mustUseModules() bool {
name := os.Args[0]
name = name[strings.LastIndex(name, "/")+1:]
name = name[strings.LastIndex(name, `\`)+1:]
return strings.HasPrefix(name, "vgo")
}
var inGOPATH bool // running in GOPATH/src
// Init determines whether module mode is enabled, locates the root of the
......@@ -86,14 +96,15 @@ func Init() {
switch env {
default:
base.Fatalf("go: unknown environment setting GO111MODULE=%s", env)
case "auto":
mustUseModules = false
case "on", "":
mustUseModules = true
case "", "auto":
// leave MustUseModules alone
case "on":
MustUseModules = true
case "off":
mustUseModules = false
if !MustUseModules {
return
}
}
// Disable any prompting for passwords by Git.
// Only has an effect for 2.3.0 or later, but avoiding
......@@ -139,7 +150,7 @@ func Init() {
}
}
if inGOPATH && !mustUseModules {
if inGOPATH && !MustUseModules {
if CmdModInit {
die() // Don't init a module that we're just going to ignore.
}
......@@ -156,8 +167,8 @@ func Init() {
} else {
modRoot = findModuleRoot(cwd)
if modRoot == "" {
if !mustUseModules {
// GO111MODULE is 'auto', and we can't find a module root.
if !MustUseModules {
// GO111MODULE is 'auto' (or unset), and we can't find a module root.
// Stay in GOPATH mode.
return
}
......@@ -256,7 +267,7 @@ func init() {
// (usually through MustModRoot).
func Enabled() bool {
Init()
return modRoot != "" || mustUseModules
return modRoot != "" || MustUseModules
}
// ModRoot returns the root of the main module.
......@@ -289,7 +300,7 @@ func die() {
if os.Getenv("GO111MODULE") == "off" {
base.Fatalf("go: modules disabled by GO111MODULE=off; see 'go help modules'")
}
if inGOPATH && !mustUseModules {
if inGOPATH && !MustUseModules {
base.Fatalf("go: modules disabled inside GOPATH/src by GO111MODULE=auto; see 'go help modules'")
}
if cwd != "" {
......
......@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ func init() {
fix.CmdFix,
fmtcmd.CmdFmt,
generate.CmdGenerate,
modget.CmdGet,
get.CmdGet,
work.CmdInstall,
list.CmdList,
modcmd.CmdMod,
......@@ -89,10 +89,17 @@ func main() {
base.Usage()
}
if modload.MustUseModules {
// If running with modules force-enabled, change get now to change help message.
*get.CmdGet = *modget.CmdGet
}
if args[0] == "get" || args[0] == "help" {
if modload.Init(); !modload.Enabled() {
// Replace module-aware get with GOPATH get if appropriate.
*modget.CmdGet = *get.CmdGet
// Replace get with module-aware get if appropriate.
// Note that if MustUseModules is true, this happened already above,
// but no harm in doing it again.
if modload.Init(); modload.Enabled() {
*get.CmdGet = *modget.CmdGet
}
}
......
......@@ -8,6 +8,6 @@ set -e
go build -o go.latest
# If the command used to generate alldocs.go changes, update TestDocsUpToDate in
# help_test.go.
GO111MODULE='' ./go.latest help documentation >alldocs.go
./go.latest help documentation >alldocs.go
gofmt -w alldocs.go
rm go.latest
......@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ cd $GOPATH/src/example.com/x/y
! go mod init
stderr 'go: modules disabled inside GOPATH/src by GO111MODULE=auto; see ''go help modules'''
env GO111MODULE=
env GO111MODULE=on
# Derive module path from location inside GOPATH.
cd $GOPATH/src/example.com/x/y
......
......@@ -24,18 +24,12 @@ exec $WORK/testimport.exe other/x/y/z/w .
stdout w2.go
# GO111MODULE=on outside GOPATH/src
env GO111MODULE=
exec $WORK/testimport.exe other/x/y/z/w .
stdout w2.go
env GO111MODULE=on
exec $WORK/testimport.exe other/x/y/z/w .
stdout w2.go
# GO111MODULE=on in GOPATH/src
cd $GOPATH/src
env GO111MODULE=
exec $WORK/testimport.exe x/y/z/w .
stdout w1.go
env GO111MODULE=on
exec $WORK/testimport.exe x/y/z/w .
stdout w1.go
......
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