godoc

command
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Published: Sep 2, 2020 License: BSD-3-Clause Imports: 33 Imported by: 0

Documentation

Overview

Godoc extracts and generates documentation for Go programs.

It runs as a web server and presents the documentation as a web page.

godoc -http=:6060

Usage:

godoc [flag]

The flags are:

-v
	verbose mode
-timestamps=true
	show timestamps with directory listings
-index
	enable identifier and full text search index
	(no search box is shown if -index is not set)
-index_files=""
	glob pattern specifying index files; if not empty,
	the index is read from these files in sorted order
-index_throttle=0.75
	index throttle value; a value of 0 means no time is allocated
	to the indexer (the indexer will never finish), a value of 1.0
	means that index creation is running at full throttle (other
	goroutines may get no time while the index is built)
-index_interval=0
	interval of indexing; a value of 0 sets it to 5 minutes, a
	negative value indexes only once at startup
-play=false
	enable playground
-links=true
	link identifiers to their declarations
-write_index=false
	write index to a file; the file name must be specified with
	-index_files
-maxresults=10000
	maximum number of full text search results shown
	(no full text index is built if maxresults <= 0)
-notes="BUG"
	regular expression matching note markers to show
	(e.g., "BUG|TODO", ".*")
-goroot=$GOROOT
	Go root directory
-http=addr
	HTTP service address (e.g., '127.0.0.1:6060' or just ':6060')
-analysis=type,pointer
	comma-separated list of analyses to perform
	"type": display identifier resolution, type info, method sets,
		'implements', and static callees
	"pointer": display channel peers, callers and dynamic callees
		(significantly slower)
	See https://golang.org/lib/godoc/analysis/help.html for details.
-templates=""
	directory containing alternate template files; if set,
	the directory may provide alternative template files
	for the files in $GOROOT/lib/godoc
-url=path
	print to standard output the data that would be served by
	an HTTP request for path
-zip=""
	zip file providing the file system to serve; disabled if empty

By default, godoc looks at the packages it finds via $GOROOT and $GOPATH (if set). This behavior can be altered by providing an alternative $GOROOT with the -goroot flag.

When the -index flag is set, a search index is maintained. The index is created at startup.

The index contains both identifier and full text search information (searchable via regular expressions). The maximum number of full text search results shown can be set with the -maxresults flag; if set to 0, no full text results are shown, and only an identifier index but no full text search index is created.

By default, godoc uses the system's GOOS/GOARCH. You can provide the URL parameters "GOOS" and "GOARCH" to set the output on the web page for the target system.

The presentation mode of web pages served by godoc can be controlled with the "m" URL parameter; it accepts a comma-separated list of flag names as value:

all	show documentation for all declarations, not just the exported ones
methods	show all embedded methods, not just those of unexported anonymous fields
src	show the original source code rather than the extracted documentation
flat	present flat (not indented) directory listings using full paths

For instance, https://golang.org/pkg/math/big/?m=all shows the documentation for all (not just the exported) declarations of package big.

By default, godoc serves files from the file system of the underlying OS. Instead, a .zip file may be provided via the -zip flag, which contains the file system to serve. The file paths stored in the .zip file must use slash ('/') as path separator; and they must be unrooted. $GOROOT (or -goroot) must be set to the .zip file directory path containing the Go root directory. For instance, for a .zip file created by the command:

zip -r go.zip $HOME/go

one may run godoc as follows:

godoc -http=:6060 -zip=go.zip -goroot=$HOME/go

Godoc documentation is converted to HTML or to text using the go/doc package; see https://golang.org/pkg/go/doc/#ToHTML for the exact rules. Godoc also shows example code that is runnable by the testing package; see https://golang.org/pkg/testing/#hdr-Examples for the conventions. See "Godoc: documenting Go code" for how to write good comments for godoc: https://golang.org/doc/articles/godoc_documenting_go_code.html

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