README ¶
fileb0x
What is fileb0x?
A better customizable tool to embed files in go.
It is an alternative to go-bindata
that have better features and organized configuration.
a better go-bindata
How does it compare to go-bindata
?
Feature | fileb0x | go-bindata |
---|---|---|
gofmt | yes (optional) | no |
golint | safe | unsafe |
gzip compression | yes | yes |
gzip decompression | yes (optional: runtime) | yes (on read) |
gzip compression levels | yes | no |
separated prefix / base for each file | yes | no (all files only) |
different build tags for each file | yes | no |
exclude / ignore files | yes (glob) | yes (regex) |
spread files | yes | no (single file only) |
unexported vars/funcs | yes (optional) | no |
virtual memory file system | yes | no |
http file system / handler | yes | no |
replace text in files | yes | no |
glob support | yes | no (walk folders only) |
regex support | no | yes (ignore files only) |
config file | yes (config file only) | no (cmd args only) |
update files remotely | yes | no |
What are the benefits of using a Virtual Memory File System?
By using a virtual memory file system you can have access to files like when they're stored in a hard drive instead of a map[string][]byte
you would be able to use IO writer and reader.
This means you can read
, write
, remove
, stat
and rename
files also make
, remove
and stat
directories.
Virtual Memory File System has similar functions as a hdd stored files would have.
Features
-
golint safe code output
-
optional: gzip compression (with optional run-time decompression)
-
optional: formatted code (gofmt)
-
optional: spread files
-
optional: unexporTed variables, functions and types
-
optional: include multiple files and folders
-
optional: exclude files or/and folders
-
optional: replace text in files
-
optional: custom base and prefix path
-
Virtual Memory FileSystem - webdav
-
HTTP FileSystem and Handler
-
glob support - doublestar
-
json / yaml / toml support
-
optional: Update files remotely
-
optional: Build tags for each file
License
MIT
Get Started
How to use it?
1. Download
go get -u github.com/UnnoTed/fileb0x
2. Create a config file
First you need to create a config file, it can be *.json
, *.yaml
or *.toml
. (*
means any file name)
Now write into the file the configuration you wish, you can use the example files as a start.
json config file example b0x.json
yaml config file example b0x.yaml
toml config file example b0x.toml
3. Run
if you prefer to use it from the cmd or terminal
edit and run the command below.
fileb0x YOUR_CONFIG_FILE.yaml
or if you wish to generate the embedded files through go generate
just add and edit the line below into your main.go
.
//go:generate fileb0x YOUR_CONFIG_FILE.yaml
What functions and variables fileb0x let me access and what are they for?
HTTP
var HTTP http.FileSystem
Type
What is it?
A In-Memory HTTP File System.
What it does?
Serve files through a HTTP FileServer.
How to use it?
// http.ListenAndServe will create a server at the port 8080
// it will take http.FileServer() as a param
//
// http.FileServer() will use HTTP as a file system so all your files
// can be avialable through the port 8080
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", http.FileServer(myEmbeddedFiles.HTTP))
How to use it with `echo`?
package main
import (
"github.com/labstack/echo"
"github.com/labstack/echo/engine/standard"
// your embedded files import here ...
"github.com/UnnoTed/fileb0x/_example/echo/myEmbeddedFiles"
)
func main() {
e := echo.New()
// enable any filename to be loaded from in-memory file system
e.GET("/*", echo.WrapHandler(myEmbeddedFiles.Handler))
// http://localhost:1337/public/README.md
e.Start(":1337")
}
How to serve a single file through echo
?
package main
import (
"github.com/labstack/echo"
// your embedded files import here ...
"github.com/UnnoTed/fileb0x/_example/echo/myEmbeddedFiles"
)
func main() {
e := echo.New()
// read ufo.html from in-memory file system
htmlb, err := myEmbeddedFiles.ReadFile("ufo.html")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// convert to string
html := string(htmlb)
// serve ufo.html through "/"
e.GET("/", func(c echo.Context) error {
// serve as html
return c.HTML(http.StatusOK, html)
})
e.Start(":1337")
}
Examples
package main
import (
"log"
"net/http"
// your generaTed package
"github.com/UnnoTed/fileb0x/_example/simple/static"
)
func main() {
files, err := static.WalkDirs("", false)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
log.Println("ALL FILES", files)
// here we'll read the file from the virtual file system
b, err := static.ReadFile("public/README.md")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// byte to str
s := string(b)
s += "#hello"
// write file back into the virtual file system
err := static.WriteFile("public/README.md", []byte(s), 0644)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
log.Println(string(b))
// true = handler
// false = file system
as := false
// try it -> http://localhost:1337/public/secrets.txt
if as {
// as Handler
panic(http.ListenAndServe(":1337", static.Handler))
} else {
// as File System
panic(http.ListenAndServe(":1337", http.FileServer(static.HTTP)))
}
}
Update files remotely
Having to upload an entire binary just to update some files in a b0x and restart a server isn't something that i like to do...
How it works?
By enabling the updater option, the next time that you generate a b0x, it will include a http server, this http server will use a http basic auth and it contains 1 endpoint /
that accepts 2 methods: GET, POST
.
The GET
method responds with a list of file names and sha256 hash of each file.
The POST
method is used to upload files, it creates the directory tree of a new file and then creates the file or it updates an existing file from the virtual memory file system... it responds with a ok
string when the upload is successful.
How to update files remotely?
- First enable the updater option in your config file:
##################
## yaml example ##
##################
# updater allows you to update a b0x in a running server
# without having to restart it
updater:
# disabled by default
enabled: false
# empty mode creates a empty b0x file with just the
# server and the filesystem, then you'll have to upload
# the files later using the cmd:
# fileb0x -update=http://server.com:port b0x.yaml
#
# it avoids long compile time
empty: false
# amount of uploads at the same time
workers: 3
# to get a username and password from a env variable
# leave username and password blank (username: "")
# then set your username and password in the env vars
# (no caps) -> fileb0x_username and fileb0x_password
#
# when using env vars, set it before generating a b0x
# so it can be applied to the updater server.
username: "user" # username: ""
password: "pass" # password: ""
port: 8041
- Generate a b0x with the updater option enabled, don't forget to set the username and password for authentication.
- When your files update, just run
fileb0x -update=http://yourServer.com:8041 b0x.toml
to update the files in the running server.
Build Tags
To use build tags for a b0x package just add the tags to the tags
property in the main object of your config file
# default: main
pkg: static
# destination
dest: "./static/"
# build tags for the main b0x.go file
tags: "!linux"
You can also have different build tags for a list of files, you must enable the spread
property in the main object of your config file, then at the custom
list, choose the set of files which you want a different build tag
# default: main
pkg: static
# destination
dest: "./static/"
# build tags for the main b0x.go file
tags: "windows darwin"
# [spread] means it will make a file to hold all fileb0x data
# and each file into a separaTed .go file
#
# example:
# theres 2 files in the folder assets, they're: hello.json and world.txt
# when spread is activaTed, fileb0x will make a file:
# b0x.go or [output]'s data, assets_hello.json.go and assets_world.txt.go
#
#
# type: bool
# default: false
spread: true
# type: array of objects
custom:
# type: array of strings
- files:
- "start_space_ship.exe"
# build tags for this set of files
# it will only work if spread mode is enabled
tags: "windows"
# type: array of strings
- files:
- "ufo.dmg"
# build tags for this set of files
# it will only work if spread mode is enabled
tags: "darwin"
the config above will make:
ab0x.go # // +build windows darwin
b0xfile_ufo.exe.go # // +build windows
b0xfile_start_space_ship.bat.go # // +build darwin
Functions and Variables
FS (File System)
var FS webdav.FileSystem
Type
What is it?
In-Memory File System.
What it does?
Lets you read, write, remove, stat and rename
files and make, remove and stat
directories...
How to use it?
func main() {
// you have the following functions available
// they all control files/dirs from/to the in-memory file system!
func Mkdir(name string, perm os.FileMode) error
func OpenFile(name string, flag int, perm os.FileMode) (File, error)
func RemoveAll(name string) error
func Rename(oldName, newName string) error
func Stat(name string) (os.FileInfo, error)
// you should remove those lines ^
// 1. creates a directory
err := myEmbeddedFiles.FS.Mkdir(myEmbeddedFiles.CTX, "assets", 0777)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// 2. creates a file into the directory we created before and opens it
// with fileb0x you can use ReadFile and WriteFile instead of this complicaTed thing
f, err := myEmbeddedFiles.FS.OpenFile(myEmbeddedFiles.CTX, "assets/memes.txt", os.O_WRONLY|os.O_CREATE|os.O_TRUNC, 0644)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
data := []byte("I are programmer I make computer beep boop beep beep boop")
// write the data into the file
n, err := f.Write(data)
if err == nil && n < len(data) {
err = io.ErrShortWrite
}
// close the file
if err1 := f.Close(); err == nil {
log.Fatal(err1)
}
// 3. rename a file
// can also move files
err = myEmbeddedFiles.FS.Rename(myEmbeddedFiles.CTX, "assets/memes.txt", "assets/programmer_memes.txt")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// 4. checks if the file we renamed exists
if _, err = myEmbeddedFiles.FS.Stat(myEmbeddedFiles.CTX, "assets/programmer_memes.txt"); os.IsExist(err) {
// exists!
// tries to remove the /assets/ directory
// from the in-memory file system
err = myEmbeddedFiles.FS.RemoveAll(myEmbeddedFiles.CTX, "assets")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
}
// 5. checks if the dir we removed exists
if _, err = myEmbeddedFiles.FS.Stat(myEmbeddedFiles.CTX, "public/"); os.IsNotExist(err) {
// doesn't exists!
log.Println("works!")
}
}
Handler
var Handler *webdav.Handler
Type
What is it?
A HTTP Handler implementation.
What it does?
Serve your embedded files.
How to use it?
// ListenAndServer will create a http server at port 8080
// and use Handler as a http handler to serve your embedded files
http.ListenAndServe(":8080", myEmbeddedFiles.Handler)
ReadFile
func ReadFile(filename string) ([]byte, error)
Type
What is it?
A Helper function to read your embedded files.
What it does?
Reads the specified file from the in-memory file system and return it as a byte slice.
How to use it?
// it works the same way that ioutil.ReadFile does.
// but it will read the file from the in-memory file system
// instead of the hard disk!
//
// the file name is passwords.txt
// topSecretFile is a byte slice ([]byte)
topSecretFile, err := myEmbeddedFiles.ReadFile("passwords.txt")
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
log.Println(string(topSecretFile))
WriteFile
func WriteFile(filename string, data []byte, perm os.FileMode) error
Type
What is it?
A Helper function to write a file into the in-memory file system.
What it does?
Writes the data
into the specified filename
in the in-memory file system, meaning you embedded a file!
-- IMPORTANT -- IT WON'T WRITE THE FILE INTO THE .GO GENERATED FILE, IT WILL BE TEMPORARY, WHILE YOUR APP IS RUNNING THE FILE WILL BE AVAILABLE, AFTER IT SHUTDOWN, IT IS GONE.
How to use it?
// it works the same way that ioutil.WriteFile does.
// but it will write the file into the in-memory file system
// instead of the hard disk!
//
// the file name is secret.txt
// data should be a byte slice ([]byte)
// 0644 is a unix file permission
data := []byte("jet fuel can't melt steel beams")
err := myEmbeddedFiles.WriteFile("secret.txt", data, 0644)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
WalkDirs
func WalkDirs(name string, includeDirsInList bool, files ...string) ([]string, error) {
Type
[]string
What is it?
A Helper function to walk dirs from the in-memory file system.
What it does?
Returns a list of files (with option to include dirs) that are currently in the in-memory file system.
How to use it?
includeDirsInTheList := false
// WalkDirs returns a string slice with all file paths
files, err := myEmbeddedFiles.WalkDirs("", includeDirsInTheList)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
log.Println("List of all my files", files)
Documentation ¶
There is no documentation for this package.