1 <!--{ 2 "Title": "Installing Go from source", 3 "Path": "/doc/install/source" 4 }--> 5 6 <h2 id="introduction">Introduction</h2> 7 8 <p> 9 Go is an open source project, distributed under a 10 <a href="/LICENSE">BSD-style license</a>. 11 This document explains how to check out the sources, 12 build them on your own machine, and run them. 13 </p> 14 15 <p> 16 Most users don't need to do this, and will instead install 17 from precompiled binary packages as described in 18 <a href="/doc/install">Getting Started</a>, 19 a much simpler process. 20 If you want to help develop what goes into those precompiled 21 packages, though, read on. 22 </p> 23 24 <div class="detail"> 25 26 <p> 27 There are two official Go compiler toolchains. 28 This document focuses on the <code>gc</code> Go 29 compiler and tools. 30 For information on how to work on <code>gccgo</code>, a more traditional 31 compiler using the GCC back end, see 32 <a href="/doc/install/gccgo">Setting up and using gccgo</a>. 33 </p> 34 35 <p> 36 The Go compilers support eight instruction sets. 37 There are important differences in the quality of the compilers for the different 38 architectures. 39 </p> 40 41 <dl> 42 <dt> 43 <code>amd64</code> (also known as <code>x86-64</code>) 44 </dt> 45 <dd> 46 A mature implementation. 47 </dd> 48 <dt> 49 <code>386</code> (<code>x86</code> or <code>x86-32</code>) 50 </dt> 51 <dd> 52 Comparable to the <code>amd64</code> port. 53 </dd> 54 <dt> 55 <code>arm</code> (<code>ARM</code>) 56 </dt> 57 <dd> 58 Supports Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD and Darwin binaries. Less widely used than the other ports. 59 </dd> 60 <dt> 61 <code>arm64</code> (<code>AArch64</code>) 62 </dt> 63 <dd> 64 Supports Linux and Darwin binaries. New in 1.5 and not as well exercised as other ports. 65 </dd> 66 <dt> 67 <code>ppc64, ppc64le</code> (64-bit PowerPC big- and little-endian) 68 </dt> 69 <dd> 70 Supports Linux binaries. New in 1.5 and not as well exercised as other ports. 71 </dd> 72 <dt> 73 <code>mips, mipsle</code> (32-bit MIPS big- and little-endian) 74 </dt> 75 <dd> 76 Supports Linux binaries. New in 1.8 and not as well exercised as other ports. 77 </dd> 78 <dt> 79 <code>mips64, mips64le</code> (64-bit MIPS big- and little-endian) 80 </dt> 81 <dd> 82 Supports Linux binaries. New in 1.6 and not as well exercised as other ports. 83 </dd> 84 <dt> 85 <code>s390x</code> (IBM System z) 86 </dt> 87 <dd> 88 Supports Linux binaries. New in 1.7 and not as well exercised as other ports. 89 </dd> 90 </dl> 91 92 <p> 93 Except for things like low-level operating system interface code, the run-time 94 support is the same in all ports and includes a mark-and-sweep garbage 95 collector, efficient array and string slicing, and support for efficient 96 goroutines, such as stacks that grow and shrink on demand. 97 </p> 98 99 <p> 100 The compilers can target the DragonFly BSD, FreeBSD, Linux, NetBSD, OpenBSD, 101 OS X (Darwin), Plan 9, Solaris and Windows operating systems. 102 The full set of supported combinations is listed in the discussion of 103 <a href="#environment">environment variables</a> below. 104 </p> 105 106 <p> 107 See the main installation page for the <a href="/doc/install#requirements">overall system requirements</a>. 108 The following additional constraints apply to systems that can be built only from source: 109 </p> 110 111 <ul> 112 <li>For Linux on PowerPC 64-bit, the minimum supported kernel version is 2.6.37, meaning that 113 Go does not support CentOS 6 on these systems. 114 </li> 115 </ul> 116 117 </div> 118 119 <h2 id="go14">Install Go compiler binaries</h2> 120 121 <p> 122 The Go toolchain is written in Go. To build it, you need a Go compiler installed. 123 The scripts that do the initial build of the tools look for an existing Go tool 124 chain in <code>$GOROOT_BOOTSTRAP</code>. 125 If unset, the default value of <code>GOROOT_BOOTSTRAP</code> 126 is <code>$HOME/go1.4</code>. 127 </p> 128 129 <p> 130 There are many options for the bootstrap toolchain. 131 After obtaining one, set <code>GOROOT_BOOTSTRAP</code> to the 132 directory containing the unpacked tree. 133 For example, <code>$GOROOT_BOOTSTRAP/bin/go</code> should be 134 the <code>go</code> command binary for the bootstrap toolchain. 135 </p> 136 137 <p> 138 To use a binary release as a bootstrap toolchain, see 139 <a href="/dl/">the downloads page</a> or use any other 140 packaged Go distribution. 141 </p> 142 143 <p> 144 To build a bootstrap toolchain from source, use 145 either the git branch <code>release-branch.go1.4</code> or 146 <a href="https://dl.google.com/go/go1.4-bootstrap-20171003.tar.gz">go1.4-bootstrap-20171003.tar.gz</a>, 147 which contains the Go 1.4 source code plus accumulated fixes 148 to keep the tools running on newer operating systems. 149 (Go 1.4 was the last distribution in which the toolchain was written in C.) 150 After unpacking the Go 1.4 source, <code>cd</code> to 151 the <code>src</code> subdirectory, set <code>CGO_ENABLED=0</code> in 152 the environment, and run <code>make.bash</code> (or, 153 on Windows, <code>make.bat</code>). 154 </p> 155 156 <p> 157 To cross-compile a bootstrap toolchain from source, which is 158 necessary on systems Go 1.4 did not target (for 159 example, <code>linux/ppc64le</code>), install Go on a different system 160 and run <a href="/src/bootstrap.bash">bootstrap.bash</a>. 161 </p> 162 163 <p> 164 When run as (for example) 165 </p> 166 167 <pre> 168 $ GOOS=linux GOARCH=ppc64 ./bootstrap.bash 169 </pre> 170 171 <p> 172 <code>bootstrap.bash</code> cross-compiles a toolchain for that <code>GOOS/GOARCH</code> 173 combination, leaving the resulting tree in <code>../../go-${GOOS}-${GOARCH}-bootstrap</code>. 174 That tree can be copied to a machine of the given target type 175 and used as <code>GOROOT_BOOTSTRAP</code> to bootstrap a local build. 176 </p> 177 178 <p> 179 To use gccgo as the bootstrap toolchain, you need to arrange 180 for <code>$GOROOT_BOOTSTRAP/bin/go</code> to be the go tool that comes 181 as part of gccgo 5. For example on Ubuntu Vivid: 182 </p> 183 184 <pre> 185 $ sudo apt-get install gccgo-5 186 $ sudo update-alternatives --set go /usr/bin/go-5 187 $ GOROOT_BOOTSTRAP=/usr ./make.bash 188 </pre> 189 190 <h2 id="git">Install Git, if needed</h2> 191 192 <p> 193 To perform the next step you must have Git installed. (Check that you 194 have a <code>git</code> command before proceeding.) 195 </p> 196 197 <p> 198 If you do not have a working Git installation, 199 follow the instructions on the 200 <a href="http://git-scm.com/downloads">Git downloads</a> page. 201 </p> 202 203 <h2 id="ccompiler">(Optional) Install a C compiler</h2> 204 205 <p> 206 To build a Go installation 207 with <code><a href="/cmd/cgo">cgo</a></code> support, which permits Go 208 programs to import C libraries, a C compiler such as <code>gcc</code> 209 or <code>clang</code> must be installed first. Do this using whatever 210 installation method is standard on the system. 211 </p> 212 213 <p> 214 To build without <code>cgo</code>, set the environment variable 215 <code>CGO_ENABLED=0</code> before running <code>all.bash</code> or 216 <code>make.bash</code>. 217 </p> 218 219 <h2 id="fetch">Fetch the repository</h2> 220 221 <p>Go will install to a directory named <code>go</code>. 222 Change to the directory that will be its parent 223 and make sure the <code>go</code> directory does not exist. 224 Then clone the repository and check out the latest release tag 225 (<code class="versionTag">go1.9</code>, for example):</p> 226 227 <pre> 228 $ git clone https://go.googlesource.com/go 229 $ cd go 230 $ git checkout <span class="versionTag"><i><tag></i></span> 231 </pre> 232 233 <p class="whereTag"> 234 Where <code><tag></code> is the version string of the release. 235 </p> 236 237 <h2 id="head">(Optional) Switch to the master branch</h2> 238 239 <p>If you intend to modify the go source code, and 240 <a href="/doc/contribute.html">contribute your changes</a> 241 to the project, then move your repository 242 off the release branch, and onto the master (development) branch. 243 Otherwise, skip this step.</p> 244 245 <pre> 246 $ git checkout master 247 </pre> 248 249 <h2 id="install">Install Go</h2> 250 251 <p> 252 To build the Go distribution, run 253 </p> 254 255 <pre> 256 $ cd src 257 $ ./all.bash 258 </pre> 259 260 <p> 261 (To build under Windows use <code>all.bat</code>.) 262 </p> 263 264 <p> 265 If all goes well, it will finish by printing output like: 266 </p> 267 268 <pre> 269 ALL TESTS PASSED 270 271 --- 272 Installed Go for linux/amd64 in /home/you/go. 273 Installed commands in /home/you/go/bin. 274 *** You need to add /home/you/go/bin to your $PATH. *** 275 </pre> 276 277 <p> 278 where the details on the last few lines reflect the operating system, 279 architecture, and root directory used during the install. 280 </p> 281 282 <div class="detail"> 283 <p> 284 For more information about ways to control the build, see the discussion of 285 <a href="#environment">environment variables</a> below. 286 <code>all.bash</code> (or <code>all.bat</code>) runs important tests for Go, 287 which can take more time than simply building Go. If you do not want to run 288 the test suite use <code>make.bash</code> (or <code>make.bat</code>) 289 instead. 290 </p> 291 </div> 292 293 294 <h2 id="testing">Testing your installation</h2> 295 296 <p> 297 Check that Go is installed correctly by building a simple program. 298 </p> 299 300 <p> 301 Create a file named <code>hello.go</code> and put the following program in it: 302 </p> 303 304 <pre> 305 package main 306 307 import "fmt" 308 309 func main() { 310 fmt.Printf("hello, world\n") 311 } 312 </pre> 313 314 <p> 315 Then run it with the <code>go</code> tool: 316 </p> 317 318 <pre> 319 $ go run hello.go 320 hello, world 321 </pre> 322 323 <p> 324 If you see the "hello, world" message then Go is installed correctly. 325 </p> 326 327 <h2 id="gopath">Set up your work environment</h2> 328 329 <p> 330 You're almost done. 331 You just need to do a little more setup. 332 </p> 333 334 <p> 335 <a href="/doc/code.html" class="download" id="start"> 336 <span class="big">How to Write Go Code</span> 337 <span class="desc">Learn how to set up and use the Go tools</span> 338 </a> 339 </p> 340 341 <p> 342 The <a href="/doc/code.html">How to Write Go Code</a> document 343 provides <b>essential setup instructions</b> for using the Go tools. 344 </p> 345 346 347 <h2 id="tools">Install additional tools</h2> 348 349 <p> 350 The source code for several Go tools (including <a href="/cmd/godoc/">godoc</a>) 351 is kept in <a href="https://golang.org/x/tools">the go.tools repository</a>. 352 To install all of them, run the <code>go</code> <code>get</code> command: 353 </p> 354 355 <pre> 356 $ go get golang.org/x/tools/cmd/... 357 </pre> 358 359 <p> 360 Or if you just want to install a specific command (<code>godoc</code> in this case): 361 </p> 362 363 <pre> 364 $ go get golang.org/x/tools/cmd/godoc 365 </pre> 366 367 <p> 368 To install these tools, the <code>go</code> <code>get</code> command requires 369 that <a href="#git">Git</a> be installed locally. 370 </p> 371 372 <p> 373 You must also have a workspace (<code>GOPATH</code>) set up; 374 see <a href="/doc/code.html">How to Write Go Code</a> for the details. 375 </p> 376 377 <p> 378 <b>Note</b>: The <code>go</code> command will install the <code>godoc</code> 379 binary to <code>$GOROOT/bin</code> (or <code>$GOBIN</code>) and the 380 <code>cover</code> and <code>vet</code> binaries to 381 <code>$GOROOT/pkg/tool/$GOOS_$GOARCH</code>. 382 You can access the latter commands with 383 "<code>go</code> <code>tool</code> <code>cover</code>" and 384 "<code>go</code> <code>tool</code> <code>vet</code>". 385 </p> 386 387 <h2 id="community">Community resources</h2> 388 389 <p> 390 The usual community resources such as 391 <code>#go-nuts</code> on the <a href="http://freenode.net/">Freenode</a> IRC server 392 and the 393 <a href="//groups.google.com/group/golang-nuts">Go Nuts</a> 394 mailing list have active developers that can help you with problems 395 with your installation or your development work. 396 For those who wish to keep up to date, 397 there is another mailing list, <a href="//groups.google.com/group/golang-checkins">golang-checkins</a>, 398 that receives a message summarizing each checkin to the Go repository. 399 </p> 400 401 <p> 402 Bugs can be reported using the <a href="//golang.org/issue/new">Go issue tracker</a>. 403 </p> 404 405 406 <h2 id="releases">Keeping up with releases</h2> 407 408 <p> 409 New releases are announced on the 410 <a href="//groups.google.com/group/golang-announce">golang-announce</a> 411 mailing list. 412 Each announcement mentions the latest release tag, for instance, 413 <code class="versionTag">go1.9</code>. 414 </p> 415 416 <p> 417 To update an existing tree to the latest release, you can run: 418 </p> 419 420 <pre> 421 $ cd go/src 422 $ git fetch 423 $ git checkout <span class="versionTag"><i><tag></i></psan> 424 $ ./all.bash 425 </pre> 426 427 <p class="whereTag"> 428 Where <code><tag></code> is the version string of the release. 429 </p> 430 431 432 <h2 id="environment">Optional environment variables</h2> 433 434 <p> 435 The Go compilation environment can be customized by environment variables. 436 <i>None is required by the build</i>, but you may wish to set some 437 to override the defaults. 438 </p> 439 440 <ul> 441 <li><code>$GOROOT</code> 442 <p> 443 The root of the Go tree, often <code>$HOME/go1.X</code>. 444 Its value is built into the tree when it is compiled, and 445 defaults to the parent of the directory where <code>all.bash</code> was run. 446 There is no need to set this unless you want to switch between multiple 447 local copies of the repository. 448 </p> 449 </li> 450 451 <li><code>$GOROOT_FINAL</code> 452 <p> 453 The value assumed by installed binaries and scripts when 454 <code>$GOROOT</code> is not set explicitly. 455 It defaults to the value of <code>$GOROOT</code>. 456 If you want to build the Go tree in one location 457 but move it elsewhere after the build, set 458 <code>$GOROOT_FINAL</code> to the eventual location. 459 </p> 460 </li> 461 462 <li><code>$GOOS</code> and <code>$GOARCH</code> 463 <p> 464 The name of the target operating system and compilation architecture. 465 These default to the values of <code>$GOHOSTOS</code> and 466 <code>$GOHOSTARCH</code> respectively (described below). 467 </li> 468 469 <p> 470 Choices for <code>$GOOS</code> are 471 <code>darwin</code> (Mac OS X 10.8 and above and iOS), <code>dragonfly</code>, <code>freebsd</code>, 472 <code>linux</code>, <code>netbsd</code>, <code>openbsd</code>, 473 <code>plan9</code>, <code>solaris</code> and <code>windows</code>. 474 Choices for <code>$GOARCH</code> are 475 <code>amd64</code> (64-bit x86, the most mature port), 476 <code>386</code> (32-bit x86), <code>arm</code> (32-bit ARM), <code>arm64</code> (64-bit ARM), 477 <code>ppc64le</code> (PowerPC 64-bit, little-endian), <code>ppc64</code> (PowerPC 64-bit, big-endian), 478 <code>mips64le</code> (MIPS 64-bit, little-endian), <code>mips64</code> (MIPS 64-bit, big-endian), 479 <code>mipsle</code> (MIPS 32-bit, little-endian), <code>mips</code> (MIPS 32-bit, big-endian), and 480 <code>s390x</code> (IBM System z 64-bit, big-endian). 481 The valid combinations of <code>$GOOS</code> and <code>$GOARCH</code> are: 482 <table cellpadding="0"> 483 <tr> 484 <th width="50"></th><th align="left" width="100"><code>$GOOS</code></th> <th align="left" width="100"><code>$GOARCH</code></th> 485 </tr> 486 <tr> 487 <td></td><td><code>android</code></td> <td><code>arm</code></td> 488 </tr> 489 <tr> 490 <td></td><td><code>darwin</code></td> <td><code>386</code></td> 491 </tr> 492 <tr> 493 <td></td><td><code>darwin</code></td> <td><code>amd64</code></td> 494 </tr> 495 <tr> 496 <td></td><td><code>darwin</code></td> <td><code>arm</code></td> 497 </tr> 498 <tr> 499 <td></td><td><code>darwin</code></td> <td><code>arm64</code></td> 500 </tr> 501 <tr> 502 <td></td><td><code>dragonfly</code></td> <td><code>amd64</code></td> 503 </tr> 504 <tr> 505 <td></td><td><code>freebsd</code></td> <td><code>386</code></td> 506 </tr> 507 <tr> 508 <td></td><td><code>freebsd</code></td> <td><code>amd64</code></td> 509 </tr> 510 <tr> 511 <td></td><td><code>freebsd</code></td> <td><code>arm</code></td> 512 </tr> 513 <tr> 514 <td></td><td><code>linux</code></td> <td><code>386</code></td> 515 </tr> 516 <tr> 517 <td></td><td><code>linux</code></td> <td><code>amd64</code></td> 518 </tr> 519 <tr> 520 <td></td><td><code>linux</code></td> <td><code>arm</code></td> 521 </tr> 522 <tr> 523 <td></td><td><code>linux</code></td> <td><code>arm64</code></td> 524 </tr> 525 <tr> 526 <td></td><td><code>linux</code></td> <td><code>ppc64</code></td> 527 </tr> 528 <tr> 529 <td></td><td><code>linux</code></td> <td><code>ppc64le</code></td> 530 </tr> 531 <tr> 532 <td></td><td><code>linux</code></td> <td><code>mips</code></td> 533 </tr> 534 <tr> 535 <td></td><td><code>linux</code></td> <td><code>mipsle</code></td> 536 </tr> 537 <tr> 538 <td></td><td><code>linux</code></td> <td><code>mips64</code></td> 539 </tr> 540 <tr> 541 <td></td><td><code>linux</code></td> <td><code>mips64le</code></td> 542 </tr> 543 <tr> 544 <td></td><td><code>linux</code></td> <td><code>s390x</code></td> 545 </tr> 546 <tr> 547 <td></td><td><code>netbsd</code></td> <td><code>386</code></td> 548 </tr> 549 <tr> 550 <td></td><td><code>netbsd</code></td> <td><code>amd64</code></td> 551 </tr> 552 <tr> 553 <td></td><td><code>netbsd</code></td> <td><code>arm</code></td> 554 </tr> 555 <tr> 556 <td></td><td><code>openbsd</code></td> <td><code>386</code></td> 557 </tr> 558 <tr> 559 <td></td><td><code>openbsd</code></td> <td><code>amd64</code></td> 560 </tr> 561 <tr> 562 <td></td><td><code>openbsd</code></td> <td><code>arm</code></td> 563 </tr> 564 <tr> 565 <td></td><td><code>plan9</code></td> <td><code>386</code></td> 566 </tr> 567 <tr> 568 <td></td><td><code>plan9</code></td> <td><code>amd64</code></td> 569 </tr> 570 <tr> 571 <td></td><td><code>solaris</code></td> <td><code>amd64</code></td> 572 </tr> 573 <tr> 574 <td></td><td><code>windows</code></td> <td><code>386</code></td> 575 </tr> 576 <tr> 577 <td></td><td><code>windows</code></td> <td><code>amd64</code></td> 578 </tr> 579 </table> 580 <br> 581 582 <li><code>$GOHOSTOS</code> and <code>$GOHOSTARCH</code> 583 <p> 584 The name of the host operating system and compilation architecture. 585 These default to the local system's operating system and 586 architecture. 587 </p> 588 </li> 589 590 <p> 591 Valid choices are the same as for <code>$GOOS</code> and 592 <code>$GOARCH</code>, listed above. 593 The specified values must be compatible with the local system. 594 For example, you should not set <code>$GOHOSTARCH</code> to 595 <code>arm</code> on an x86 system. 596 </p> 597 598 <li><code>$GOBIN</code> 599 <p> 600 The location where Go binaries will be installed. 601 The default is <code>$GOROOT/bin</code>. 602 After installing, you will want to arrange to add this 603 directory to your <code>$PATH</code>, so you can use the tools. 604 If <code>$GOBIN</code> is set, the <a href="/cmd/go">go command</a> 605 installs all commands there. 606 </p> 607 </li> 608 609 <li><code>$GO386</code> (for <code>386</code> only, default is auto-detected 610 if built on either <code>386</code> or <code>amd64</code>, <code>387</code> otherwise) 611 <p> 612 This controls the code generated by gc to use either the 387 floating-point unit 613 (set to <code>387</code>) or SSE2 instructions (set to <code>sse2</code>) for 614 floating point computations. 615 </p> 616 <ul> 617 <li><code>GO386=387</code>: use x87 for floating point operations; should support all x86 chips (Pentium MMX or later).</li> 618 <li><code>GO386=sse2</code>: use SSE2 for floating point operations; has better performance than 387, but only available on Pentium 4/Opteron/Athlon 64 or later.</li> 619 </ul> 620 </li> 621 622 <li><code>$GOARM</code> (for <code>arm</code> only; default is auto-detected if building 623 on the target processor, 6 if not) 624 <p> 625 This sets the ARM floating point co-processor architecture version the run-time 626 should target. If you are compiling on the target system, its value will be auto-detected. 627 </p> 628 <ul> 629 <li><code>GOARM=5</code>: use software floating point; when CPU doesn't have VFP co-processor</li> 630 <li><code>GOARM=6</code>: use VFPv1 only; default if cross compiling; usually ARM11 or better cores (VFPv2 or better is also supported)</li> 631 <li><code>GOARM=7</code>: use VFPv3; usually Cortex-A cores</li> 632 </ul> 633 <p> 634 If in doubt, leave this variable unset, and adjust it if required 635 when you first run the Go executable. 636 The <a href="//golang.org/wiki/GoArm">GoARM</a> page 637 on the <a href="//golang.org/wiki">Go community wiki</a> 638 contains further details regarding Go's ARM support. 639 </p> 640 </li> 641 642 <li><code>$GOMIPS</code> (for <code>mips</code> and <code>mipsle</code> only) 643 <p> 644 This sets whether to use floating point instructions. 645 </p> 646 <ul> 647 <li><code>GOMIPS=hardfloat</code>: use floating point instructions (the default)</li> 648 <li><code>GOMIPS=softfloat</code>: use soft floating point</li> 649 </ul> 650 </li> 651 652 </ul> 653 654 <p> 655 Note that <code>$GOARCH</code> and <code>$GOOS</code> identify the 656 <em>target</em> environment, not the environment you are running on. 657 In effect, you are always cross-compiling. 658 By architecture, we mean the kind of binaries 659 that the target environment can run: 660 an x86-64 system running a 32-bit-only operating system 661 must set <code>GOARCH</code> to <code>386</code>, 662 not <code>amd64</code>. 663 </p> 664 665 <p> 666 If you choose to override the defaults, 667 set these variables in your shell profile (<code>$HOME/.bashrc</code>, 668 <code>$HOME/.profile</code>, or equivalent). The settings might look 669 something like this: 670 </p> 671 672 <pre> 673 export GOROOT=$HOME/go1.X 674 export GOARCH=amd64 675 export GOOS=linux 676 </pre> 677 678 <p> 679 although, to reiterate, none of these variables needs to be set to build, 680 install, and develop the Go tree. 681 </p> 682