gow
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Missing watch mode for Go commands. Watch Go files and execute a command like "go run" or "go test"
Overview
Go Watch: missing watch mode for the go command. It's invoked exactly like go, but also watches Go files and reruns on changes.
Currently requires Unix (MacOS, Linux, BSD). On Windows, runs under WSL.
TOC
- Overview
- Why
- Installation
- Usage
- Hotkeys
- Watching Templates
- Alternatives
- License
- Misc
Why
Why not other runners, general-purpose watchers, etc:
- Has hotkeys!
- Go-specific, easy to remember.
- Ignores non-Go files by default.
- Better watcher: recursive, no delays, no polling; uses https://github.com/rjeczalik/notify.
- Silent by default.
- No garbage files.
- Can properly clear the terminal on restart.
- Minimal dependencies.
Installation
Make sure you have Go installed, then run this:
go install github.com/mitranim/gow@latest
This should download the source and compile the executable into $GOPATH/bin/gow. Make sure $GOPATH/bin is in your $PATH so the shell can discover the gow command. For example, my ~/.profile contains this:
export GOPATH="$HOME/go"
export PATH="$GOPATH/bin:$PATH"
Alternatively, you can run the executable using the full path. At the time of writing, ~/go is the default $GOPATH for Go installations. Some systems may have a different one.
~/go/bin/gow
On MacOS, if installation fails with dylib-related errors, you may need to run xcode-select --install or install Xcode. This is caused by gow's dependencies, which depend on C. See #15.
Usage
The first argument to gow, after the flags, can be any Go subcommand: build, install, tool, you name it.
# Start and restart on change
gow run .
# Pass args to the program
gow run . arg0 arg1 ...
# Run subdirectory
gow run ./subdir
# Vet and re-vet on change; verbose mode is recommended
gow -v vet
# Clear terminal on restart
gow -c run .
# Specify file extension to watch
gow -e=go,mod,html run .
# Help
gow -h
Hotkeys
Supported control codes with commonly associated hotkeys. Exact keys may vary between terminal apps. For example, ^- in MacOS Terminal vs ^? in iTerm2.
3 ^C Kill subprocess with SIGINT.
18 ^R Kill subprocess with SIGTERM, restart.
20 ^T Kill subprocess with SIGTERM.
28 ^\ Kill subprocess with SIGQUIT.
31 ^- or ^? Print currently running command.
Other input is forwarded to the subprocess as-is.
Watching Templates
Many Go programs, such as servers, include template files, and want to recompile those templates on change.
Easy but slow way: use gow -e.
gow -e=go,mod,html run .
This restarts your entire app on change to any .html file in the current directory or sub-directories. Beware: if the app also generates files with the same extensions, this could cause an infinite restart loop. Ignore any output directories with -i:
gow -e=go,mod,html -i=target run .
A smarter approach would be to watch the template files from inside the app and recompile them without restarting the entire app. This is out of scope for gow.
Finally, you can use a pure-Go rendering system such as github.com/mitranim/gax.
Alternatives
For general purpose file watching, consider these excellent tools:
- https://github.com/mattgreen/watchexec
- https://github.com/emcrisostomo/fswatch
License
https://unlicense.org
Misc
I'm receptive to suggestions. If this tool almost satisfies you but needs changes, open an issue or chat me up. Contacts: https://mitranim.com/#contacts