github.com/rohankumardubey/syslog-redirector-golang@v0.0.0-20140320174030-4859f03d829a/src/pkg/go/build/doc.go (about)

     1  // Copyright 2011 The Go Authors.  All rights reserved.
     2  // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
     3  // license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
     4  
     5  // Package build gathers information about Go packages.
     6  //
     7  // Go Path
     8  //
     9  // The Go path is a list of directory trees containing Go source code.
    10  // It is consulted to resolve imports that cannot be found in the standard
    11  // Go tree.  The default path is the value of the GOPATH environment
    12  // variable, interpreted as a path list appropriate to the operating system
    13  // (on Unix, the variable is a colon-separated string;
    14  // on Windows, a semicolon-separated string;
    15  // on Plan 9, a list).
    16  //
    17  // Each directory listed in the Go path must have a prescribed structure:
    18  //
    19  // The src/ directory holds source code.  The path below 'src' determines
    20  // the import path or executable name.
    21  //
    22  // The pkg/ directory holds installed package objects.
    23  // As in the Go tree, each target operating system and
    24  // architecture pair has its own subdirectory of pkg
    25  // (pkg/GOOS_GOARCH).
    26  //
    27  // If DIR is a directory listed in the Go path, a package with
    28  // source in DIR/src/foo/bar can be imported as "foo/bar" and
    29  // has its compiled form installed to "DIR/pkg/GOOS_GOARCH/foo/bar.a"
    30  // (or, for gccgo, "DIR/pkg/gccgo/foo/libbar.a").
    31  //
    32  // The bin/ directory holds compiled commands.
    33  // Each command is named for its source directory, but only
    34  // using the final element, not the entire path.  That is, the
    35  // command with source in DIR/src/foo/quux is installed into
    36  // DIR/bin/quux, not DIR/bin/foo/quux.  The foo/ is stripped
    37  // so that you can add DIR/bin to your PATH to get at the
    38  // installed commands.
    39  //
    40  // Here's an example directory layout:
    41  //
    42  //	GOPATH=/home/user/gocode
    43  //
    44  //	/home/user/gocode/
    45  //	    src/
    46  //	        foo/
    47  //	            bar/               (go code in package bar)
    48  //	                x.go
    49  //	            quux/              (go code in package main)
    50  //	                y.go
    51  //	    bin/
    52  //	        quux                   (installed command)
    53  //	    pkg/
    54  //	        linux_amd64/
    55  //	            foo/
    56  //	                bar.a          (installed package object)
    57  //
    58  // Build Constraints
    59  //
    60  // A build constraint is a line comment beginning with the directive +build
    61  // that lists the conditions under which a file should be included in the package.
    62  // Constraints may appear in any kind of source file (not just Go), but
    63  // they must appear near the top of the file, preceded
    64  // only by blank lines and other line comments.
    65  //
    66  // To distinguish build constraints from package documentation, a series of
    67  // build constraints must be followed by a blank line.
    68  //
    69  // A build constraint is evaluated as the OR of space-separated options;
    70  // each option evaluates as the AND of its comma-separated terms;
    71  // and each term is an alphanumeric word or, preceded by !, its negation.
    72  // That is, the build constraint:
    73  //
    74  //	// +build linux,386 darwin,!cgo
    75  //
    76  // corresponds to the boolean formula:
    77  //
    78  //	(linux AND 386) OR (darwin AND (NOT cgo))
    79  //
    80  // A file may have multiple build constraints. The overall constraint is the AND
    81  // of the individual constraints. That is, the build constraints:
    82  //
    83  //	// +build linux darwin
    84  //	// +build 386
    85  //
    86  // corresponds to the boolean formula:
    87  //
    88  //	(linux OR darwin) AND 386
    89  //
    90  // During a particular build, the following words are satisfied:
    91  //
    92  //	- the target operating system, as spelled by runtime.GOOS
    93  //	- the target architecture, as spelled by runtime.GOARCH
    94  //	- the compiler being used, either "gc" or "gccgo"
    95  //	- "cgo", if ctxt.CgoEnabled is true
    96  //	- "go1.1", from Go version 1.1 onward
    97  //	- "go1.2", from Go version 1.2 onward
    98  //	- any additional words listed in ctxt.BuildTags
    99  //
   100  // If a file's name, after stripping the extension and a possible _test suffix,
   101  // matches any of the following patterns:
   102  //	*_GOOS
   103  // 	*_GOARCH
   104  // 	*_GOOS_GOARCH
   105  // (example: source_windows_amd64.go) or the literals:
   106  //	GOOS
   107  // 	GOARCH
   108  // (example: windows.go) where GOOS and GOARCH represent any known operating
   109  // system and architecture values respectively, then the file is considered to
   110  // have an implicit build constraint requiring those terms.
   111  //
   112  // To keep a file from being considered for the build:
   113  //
   114  //	// +build ignore
   115  //
   116  // (any other unsatisfied word will work as well, but ``ignore'' is conventional.)
   117  //
   118  // To build a file only when using cgo, and only on Linux and OS X:
   119  //
   120  //	// +build linux,cgo darwin,cgo
   121  //
   122  // Such a file is usually paired with another file implementing the
   123  // default functionality for other systems, which in this case would
   124  // carry the constraint:
   125  //
   126  //	// +build !linux,!darwin !cgo
   127  //
   128  // Naming a file dns_windows.go will cause it to be included only when
   129  // building the package for Windows; similarly, math_386.s will be included
   130  // only when building the package for 32-bit x86.
   131  //
   132  package build