The glide.yaml file contains information about the project and the dependent packages. Here the elements of the glide.yaml file are outlined.
package: github.com/Masterminds/glide
homepage: https://masterminds.github.io/glide
license: MIT
owners:
- name: Matt Butcher
email: technosophos@gmail.com
homepage: http://technosophos.com
- name: Matt Farina
email: matt@mattfarina.com
homepage: https://www.mattfarina.com
ignore:
- appengine
excludeDirs:
- node_modules
import:
- package: gopkg.in/yaml.v2
- package: github.com/Masterminds/vcs
version: ^1.2.0
repo: git@github.com:Masterminds/vcs
vcs: git
- package: github.com/codegangsta/cli
- package: github.com/Masterminds/semver
version: ^1.0.0
These elements are:
package: The top level package is the location in the GOPATH. This is used for things such as making sure an import isn't also importing the top level package.homepage: To find the place where you can find details about the package or applications. For example, http://k8s.ioowners: The owners is a list of one or more owners for the project. This can be a person or organization and is useful for things like notifying the owners of a security issue without filing a public bug.ignore: A list of packages for Glide to ignore importing. These are package names to ignore rather than directories.excludeDirs: A list of directories in the local codebase to exclude from scanning for dependencies.import: A list of packages to import. Each package can include:package: The name of the package to import and the only non-optional item. Package names follow the same patterns the go tool does. That means:example.com/foo/pkg.git/subpkg.version: A semantic version, semantic version range, branch, tag, or commit id to use. For more information see the versioning documentation.repo: If the package name isn't the repo location or this is a private repository it can go here. The package will be checked out from the repo and put where the package name specifies. This allows using forks.vcs: A VCS to use such as git, hg, bzr, or svn. This is only needed when the type cannot be detected from the name. For example, a repo ending in .git or on GitHub can be detected to be Git. For a repo on Bitbucket we can contact the API to discover the type.os: A list of operating systems used for filtering. If set it will compare the current runtime OS to the one specified and only fetch the dependency if there is a match. If not set filtering is skipped. The names are the same used in build flags and GOOS environment variable.arch: A list of architectures used for filtering. If set it will compare the current runtime architecture to the one specified and only fetch the dependency if there is a match. If not set filtering is skipped. The names are the same used in build flags and GOARCH environment variable.devImport: A list of development packages. Each package has the same details as those listed under import.