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Goblin

Goblin is a library and utility for interacting with filesystems in Go, including filesystems embedded in Go binaries. It's designed around the proposed io/fs interfaces. At some point it will likely also support the proposed embedded static assets support.

Warning: Since the interfaces this library is based on are not stable, neither is this API! It will evolve with the proposal and thus should be considered unstable. The goal is to avoid a lot of API churn but sometimes it's inevitable!

Installation

If you'd only like to use Goblin as a library you can install it with:

$ go get github.com/aphistic/goblin

If you'd like to make use of Goblin's capability to embed files in a Go binary, you'll want to install the goblin utility to create those files.

go get github.com/aphistic/goblin/cmd/goblin

General Usage

The representation of a filesystem in Goblin is known as a vault (get it? goblins? vaults? 😁). The Vault interface in Goblin implements at least a few of the io/fs interfaces and adds a few additional utility methods (some hopefully having io/fs interfaces in the future).

// Create a new memory vault
mVault := goblin.NewMemoryVault()

// Create a reader to write the file from with
// some file contents.
fileData := bytes.NewReader([]byte("I'm a file!"))

// Write the file contents to your/file/here.txt with
// a file modified time of April 8, 2020 at Midnight UTC.
_ = mVault.WriteFile(
    "your/file/here.txt", fileData,
    goblin.FileModTime(time.Date(2020, 4, 8, 0, 0, 0, 0, time.UTC)),
)

// Read all the files in the root of the memory vault. In
// our case it's only the "your" directory.
infos, _ := mVault.ReadDir(".")
fmt.Printf("Root Files:\n")
for _, info := range infos {
    fmt.Printf("  - %s\n", info.Name())
}

// Read the contents of the file we previously wrote.
readData, _ := mVault.ReadFile("your/file/here.txt")
fmt.Printf("File Data: %s\n", readData)

// Output:
// Root Files:
//   - your
// File Data: I'm a file!

Mixing Vaults at Runtime

It's sometimes desired to be able to choose between one or more vaults at runtime. Since this is a common pattern, Goblin provides a way to do it for you with a VaultSelector. The VaultSelector is a Vault, so it can be used anywhere a Vault would be, and provides a few options for selecting a Vault by default but also supports creating custom selectors.

// Use a FilesystemVault if a path is provided as an environment variable,
// but fall back to using a MemoryVault by default. This, for example,
// could be useful during development when you are iterating on embedded
// files and don't want to have to rebuild for every change.
const assetVaultPathKey = "ASSET_VAULT_PATH"

_ = os.Setenv(assetVaultPathKey, "/")

// Create a filesystem vault and a memory vault to use.
fsysAssetVault := goblin.NewFilesystemVault(os.Getenv(assetVaultPathKey))
memAssetVault := goblin.NewMemoryVault() // Loaded from an embedded vault

// Create a vault selector that will use the filesystem asset vault
// if the environment variable ASSET_VAULT_PATH has a non-empty vault,
// use the embedded asset vault if not.
assetVaultSelector := goblin.NewVaultSelector(
    goblin.SelectEnvNotEmpty(assetVaultPathKey, fsysAssetVault),
    goblin.SelectDefault(memAssetVault),
)

// Since ASSET_VAULT_PATH is not empty, we use the filesystem vault.
v, _ := assetVaultSelector.GetVault()
fmt.Printf("Vault: %s\n", v)

// Output:
// Vault: Filesystem Vault (/)

Embedding Files

To embed files in your binary using Goblin, you'll use the goblin utility to generate a Go code file with the contents of the file and a method to load the contents at runtime.

Note: The public interface for the goblin utility will be changing and is not stabilized. It'll be changing to hopefully be cleaner and more intuitive.

There are two common command line arguments that are used when create an embedded vault:

  • --name or -n: The name of the vault to embed. This will be used for any package, vault, and file names in the generated code.
  • --include-root or -r: The root path of any included files. Any file paths in the vault will be relative to this path. Defaults to the current working directory.
  • --include or -i: A glob path to include files for. Can be provided more than once.

To include all .html files in your project's web directory or a directory below it in a vault, for example, you would use:

$ goblin create --name assets --include-root /src/web --include *.html --include **/*.html 

This would result in a file called goblin_assets.go in the current directory to be created with contents similar to the following:

package assets

import goblin "github.com/aphistic/goblin"

func loadVaultAssets() (goblin.Vault, error) {
	return goblin.LoadMemoryVault(goblinMemoryVaultXassets)
}

var goblinMemoryVaultXassets = []byte{ /* lots of bytes */ }

If you need to specify a package name other than the default (assets in our example), you can use the --package or -p command line option to provide a different one.

What's With the Name?

When I was trying to come up with a project name for a utility to embed binary files in Go binaries one of the names I was working with included gobin for Go Binaries and when I read it I misread it as goblin at one point and thought that would be a fun name since goblins love treasure (your files!) and keeping things in vaults.

About

Goblin is a library and utility for working with filesystems in Go. It includes support for the proposed FS interfaces in the Go standard library.

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