GODOC(1) | General Commands Manual | GODOC(1) |
godoc - extracts and generates documentation for Go programs
godoc [flag] command [ name ... ]
Godoc extracts and generates documentation for Go programs.
It has two modes.
Without the -http flag, it runs in command-line mode and prints plain text documentation to standard output and exits. If both a library package and a command with the same name exists, using the prefix cmd/ will force documentation on the command rather than the library package. If the -src flag is specified, godoc prints the exported interface of a package in Go source form, or the implementation of a specific exported language entity:
godoc fmt # documentation for package fmt godoc fmt Printf # documentation for fmt.Printf godoc cmd/go # force documentation for the go command godoc -src fmt # fmt package interface in Go source form godoc -src fmt Printf # implementation of fmt.Printf
In command-line mode, the -q flag enables search queries against a godoc running as a webserver. If no explicit server address is specified with the -server flag, godoc first tries localhost:6060 and then http://golang.org.
godoc -q Reader godoc -q math.Sin godoc -server=:6060 -q sin
With the -http flag, it runs as a web server and presents the documentation as a web page.
godoc -http=:6060
By default, godoc looks at the packages it finds via $GOROOT and $GOPATH (if set). Additional directories may be specified via the -path flag which accepts a list of colon-separated paths; unrooted paths are relative to the current working directory. Each path is considered as an additional root for packages in order of appearance. The last (absolute) path element is the prefix for the package path. For instance, given the flag value:
path=".:/home/bar:/public"
for a godoc started in /home/user/godoc, absolute paths are mapped to package paths as follows:
/home/user/godoc/x -> godoc/x /home/bar/x -> bar/x /public/x -> public/x
When godoc runs as a web server and -index 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.
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:
For instance, http://golang.org/pkg/math/big/?m=all,text shows the documentation for all (not just the exported) declarations of package big, in textual form (as it would appear when using godoc from the command line: "godoc -src math/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 go.zip $HOME/go
one may run godoc as follows:
godoc -http=:6060 -zip=go.zip -goroot=$HOME/go
See "Godoc: documenting Go code" for how to write good comments for godoc: http://golang.org/doc/articles/godoc_documenting_go_code.html
This manual page was written by Michael Stapelberg <stapelberg@debian.org>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others).
2012-05-13 |