Migrating Projects from Dep to Go Modules

Elliot Chance
2 min readMar 21, 2019
Photo by Josh Edgoose on Unsplash

Go Modules are the future of Go package management. They have been available to try since Go 1.11, and will be the default behaviour from Go 1.13.

I’m not going to go over (pun-intended) how a package manager works in this article. I will be strictly talking about the path to upgrade existing projects using dep to Go modules.

Spoiler alert… It’s easy!

In my examples I will be using our proprietary (and therefore private) package github.com/kounta/luigi (more on this later). It contains all sorts of top secret stuff that I can’t talk about. Let’s just say that it is used by several of our other projects written in Go. A perfect candidate.

First, we need to initialise the module:

cd github.com/kounta/luigi
go mod init github.com/kounta/luigi

Just two lines of output (but they are lovely):

go: creating new go.mod: module github.com/kounta/luigi
go: copying requirements from Gopkg.lock

Yep. That’s right. It’s already migrated all the dependencies from dep right out of the box. Woot!

Now you should see a new file called go.mod which looks something like this:

module github.com/kounta/luigigo 1.12require (
github.com/elliotchance/tf v1.5.0
github.com/gin-gonic/gin v1.3.0
github.com/go-redis/redis v6.15.0+incompatible
)

There were many more requires, but I removed most of them to keep it brief.

Like dep that has a separate .toml and .lock file, we need to generate the go.sumfile. Simple run (this also validates everything is OK):

go build

Now you can remove the Gopkg.lock and Gopkg.toml and commit the new go.mod and go.sum files.

Travis CI

If you are using Travis CI you will need to enable modules by setting an environment variable until it becomes the default setting in Go 1.13:

GO111MODULE=on

Private Repositories

If you need to import from a private repository you may see an error like:

invalid module version "v6.5.0": unknown revision v6.5.0

This is misleading. What it’s really trying to say is that it recognises what do with the URL (in this case it is github.com). However, it can’t find the repository because GitHub will not confirm its existence.

Fixing it is pretty straight forward:

  1. Log into your Github account and goto Settings > Personal access tokens.
  2. Create a new token and make sure you check the permission to allow it access to private repositories.
  3. Then run:
export GITHUB_TOKEN=xxx
git config — global url."https://${GITHUB_TOKEN}:x-oauth-basic@github.com/kounta".insteadOf "https://github.com/kounta"

Originally published at http://elliot.land on March 21, 2019.

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Elliot Chance

I’m a data nerd and TDD enthusiast originally from Sydney. Currently working for Uber in New York. My thoughts here are my own. 🤓 elliotchance@gmail.com