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title | weight | menu |
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Quick Start | 10 | true |
In this example we will build, archive and release a sample Go project.
Create a GitHub repository and add a single main package:
// main.go
package main
func main() {
println("Ba dum, tss!")
}
Run goreleaser init
to create an example .goreleaser.yaml
file:
$ goreleaser init
• Generating .goreleaser.yml file
• config created; please edit accordingly to your needs file=.goreleaser.yml
You can customize the generated .goreleaser.yml
or leave
it as-is, it's up to you.
You can test the configuration at any time by running GoReleaser with a few extra parameters to not require a version tag, skip publishing to GitHub, and remove any already-built files:
$ goreleaser --snapshot --skip-publish --rm-dist
If you are not using vgo or Go modules, then you will need to comment out the before hooks in the generated config file or update them to match your setup accordingly.
GoReleaser will build the binaries for your app for Windows, Linux and macOS,
both amd64 and i386 architectures. You can customize that by changing the
builds
section. Check the documentation for more information.
After building the binaries, GoReleaser will create an archive for each OS/Arch
pair into a separate file. You can customize several things by changing
the archive
section, including releasing only the binaries and not creating
archives at all. Check the documentation for more information.
You'll need to export a GITHUB_TOKEN
environment variable, which should
contain a valid GitHub token with the repo
scope.
It will be used to deploy releases to your GitHub repository.
You can create a token here.
$ export GITHUB_TOKEN=`YOUR_TOKEN`
GoReleaser will use the latest Git tag of your repository. Create a tag and push it to GitHub:
$ git tag -a v0.1.0 -m "First release"
$ git push origin v0.1.0
Attention: Check if your tag adheres to semantic versioning.
If you don't want to create a tag yet, you can also create a release
based on the latest commit by using the --snapshot
flag.
Now you can run GoReleaser at the root of your repository:
$ goreleaser
That's all! Check your GitHub project's release page. The release should look like this:
Dry run
If you want to test everything before doing a release "for real", you can
use the --skip-publish
flag, which will only build and package things:
$ goreleaser release --skip-publish
You can check the other options by running:
$ goreleaser --help
and
$ goreleaser release --help