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Grapnel

Version 0.4

Build Status

A dependency management solution for the Go Programming Language.

Grapnel is designed to solve a host of dependency management corner-cases, with a focus on repeatable builds without need of a vendored code graph.

Grapnel's approach draws heavy inspiration from Bundler and Cargo. Features include verision/commit pinning, semantic versioning, and rewriting of import handling without touching your code.

For more information about the problems Grapnel solves, see: Why Use Grapnel?.

Installation

Clone this repository and compile the program.

make all

# or

go install grapnel

Copy the bin/grapnel binary to the location of your choice, preferably somewhere on the executable path.

How to Use Grapnel - A Basic Guide

1. Add Dependencies

Add your dependencies to grapnel.toml. Dependencies support tagging, branching, semantic versioning, and url overriding, repository type overriding, and more.

# my grapnel file

[[dependencies]]
import = "gopkg.in/inconshreveable/log15.v2"
version = "2.8"  # install a specific version, not just "latest" v2

[[dependencies]]
import = "gopkg.in/mgo.v2"
version = "2015.01.24"  #mgo uses dates for release numbers

[[dependencies]]
import = "github.com/spf13/viper" 

[[dependencies]]
import = "github.com/spf13/cobra"

More on writing Dependencies into grapnel.toml here

More on TOML syntax here.

2. Update

Run grapnel update to update the project dependencies in grapnel.toml. This 'updates' the project with the latest versions of all dependencies that match the specifications within grapnel.toml.

$ grapnel update

Grapnel will also install any additional dependencies it finds within the cited imports, just like go get. If there is a collision or a conflict within the dependency graph, Grapnel will stop and tell you - it won't write anything to the src directory until it can resolve the entire graph.

In addition to installing a dependency graph, grapnel update generates a lockfile: grapnel-lock.toml. This file contains the "pinned" state of everything that was installed, down to the commit hash for unversioned entries. This includes any additional dependencies that were discovered.

# example lockfile snippet for spf13/cobra - your lockfile may contain many such sections

[[dependencies]]                                                                                      
# Unversioned
type = "git"
import = "github.com/spf13/cobra"
url = "http://github.com/spf13/cobra"
branch = "master"
tag = "f8e1ec56bdd7494d309c69681267859a6bfb7549"

3. Code and Distribute

Make sure to publish the grapnel.toml file, and the grapnel-lock.toml file with your project, so other users of grapnel can reproduce your build by running grapnel install - this will install the exact dependency graph cited in the lockfile.

4. Maintainence

When a new version of a depdendency is available, simply modify the grapnel.toml file to point at the new code. This may involve settting the version, tag, or branch keys for the dependency in question. Then, run grapnel update to get the latest code, and follow up with a unit-test run to make sure the upgrade was successful.

6. Feedback

Grapnel is a work in progress. If you have any ideas, suggestions, or complaints, please feel free to file an issue! No software is perfect, but together, we can make Grapnel more perfect than when you found it.

Advanced Use

1. The Configuration File

Grapnel doesn't need a config file, but it will complain if you don't have one. At the minimum, add an empty .grapnelrc file to your system:

touch /etc/.grapnelrc

Grapnel looks in the following locations for .grapnelrc, in order:

  • ./.grapnelrc # project-level configuration
  • ~/.grapnelrc # user-level configuration
  • /etc/.grapnelrc # system-level configuration

In general it is a best practice to create a project local .grapnelrc, and then migrate the contents out to /etc/.grapnelrc when the contents are made final.

The .grapnelrc should also be added to your .gitignore file, or equivalent for your repository type. In general, the contents of the file aren't meant for distribution (like rewrite rules). If you desire to share this information, consider publishing a grapnelrc file, or placing the contents in your project documentation instead.

2. Dependency Rewrite Rules

Sometimes you need more leverage than what Grapnel gives you out of the box. For that Grapnel supports Dependency Rewrite Rules which can come in handy under the following situations:

  • When a repository is moved to another site, directory, or URL
  • A dependency on a repo that Grapnel may support but doesn't quite understand
  • Locally hosted/cached repository mirrors
  • A public or private fork of a well-used library

More about rewrite rules here.

Roadmap

Grapnel will eventually cover support for Subversion, Mercurial, and Bazaar. At the moment, only git repositories are supported.

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A dependency management solution for the Go Programming Language.

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