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hashicorp/actions-go-build

Go Build Action Heimdall CI

Build and package a (reproducible) Go binary.

  • Define the build.
  • Assert that it is reproducible (optionally).
  • Use the resultant artifacts in your workflow.

This is intended for internal HashiCorp use only; Internal folks please refer to RFC ENGSRV-084 for more details.

Features

  • Results are zipped using standard HashiCorp naming conventions.
  • You can include additional files in the zip like licenses etc.
  • Convention over configuration means minimal config required.
  • Reproducibility is checked at build time.
  • Fast feedback if accidental nondeterminism is introduced.

Local Usage

The core functionality of this action is contained in a Go CLI, which you can also install and use locally. See the CLI docs for more.

Usage in GHA

This Action can run on both Ubuntu and macOS runners.

Examples

Minimal(ish) Example

This example shows building a single linux/amd64 binary.

See this simple example workflow running here.

name: Minimal Example (main)
on: push
jobs:
  example:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3
      - name: Build
        uses: hashicorp/actions-go-build@main
        with:
          go_version: 1.18
          os: linux
          arch: amd64
          work_dir: testdata/example-app
          debug: true
          instructions: |
            go build -o "$BIN_PATH" -trimpath -buildvcs=false

More Realistic Example

This example shows usage of the action inside a matrix configured to produce binaries for different platforms. It also injects the version, revision, and revision time into the binary via -ldflags, uses the netcgo tag for darwin, and disables CGO for linux and windows builds.

See this matrix example workflow running here.

name: Matrix Example (main)
on: push
jobs:
  example:
    runs-on: ${{ matrix.runner }}
    strategy:
      matrix:
        include:
          - { runner: macos-latest,  os: darwin,  arch: amd64, tags: netcgo        }
          - { runner: macos-latest,  os: darwin,  arch: arm64, tags: netcgo        }
          - { runner: ubuntu-latest, os: linux,   arch: amd64, env:  CGO_ENABLED=0 }
          - { runner: ubuntu-latest, os: linux,   arch: amd64, env:  CGO_ENABLED=0 }
          - { runner: ubuntu-latest, os: windows, arch: amd64, env:  CGO_ENABLED=0 }
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3
      - name: Build
        uses: hashicorp/actions-go-build@main
        with:
          product_name: example-app
          product_version: 1.2.3
          go_version: 1.18
          os: ${{ matrix.os }}
          arch: ${{ matrix.arch }}
          instructions: |-
            cd ./testdata/example-app && \
            ${{ matrix.env }} \
              go build \
                -o "$BIN_PATH" \
                -trimpath \
                -buildvcs=false \
                -tags="${{ matrix.tags }}" \
                -ldflags "
                  -X 'main.Version=$PRODUCT_VERSION'
                  -X 'main.Revision=$PRODUCT_REVISION'
                  -X 'main.RevisionTime=$PRODUCT_REVISION_TIME'
                "

Inputs

Name Description
product_name (optional) Used to calculate default bin_name and zip_name. Defaults to repository name.
product_version (optional) Full version of the product being built (including metadata).
product_version_meta (optional) The metadata field of the version.
go_version (required) Version of Go to use for this build.
os (required) Target product operating system.
arch (required) Target product architecture.
reproducible (optional) Assert that this build is reproducible. Options are assert (the default), report, or nope.
bin_name (optional) Name of the product binary generated. Defaults to product_name minus any -enterprise suffix.
zip_name (optional) Name of the product zip file. Defaults to <product_name>_<product_version>_<os>_<arch>.zip.
work_dir (optional) The working directory, to run the instructions in. Defaults to the current directory.
instructions (required) Build instructions to generate the binary. See Build Instructions for more info.
debug (optional) Enable debug-level logging.

Build Instructions

The instructions input is a bash script that builds the product binary. It should be kept as simple as possible. Typically this will be a simple go build invocation, but it could hit a make target, or call another script. See Example Build Instructions below for examples of valid instructions.

The instructions must use the environment variable $BIN_PATH because the minimal thing they can do is to write the compiled binary to $BIN_PATH.

In order to add other files like licenses etc to the zip file, you need to write them into $TARGET_DIR in your build instructions.

Build Environment

When the instructions are executed, there are a set of environment variables already exported that you can make use of (see Environment Variables below).

Environment Variables

Name Description
PRODUCT_NAME Same as the product_name input.
PRODUCT_VERSION Same as the product_version input.
PRODUCT_REVISION The git commit SHA of the product repo being built.
PRODUCT_REVISION_TIME UTC timestamp of the PRODUCT_REVISION commit in iso-8601 format.
OS Same as the os input.
ARCH Same as the arch input.
GOOS Same as OS.
GOARCH Same as ARCH.
WORKTREE_DIRTY Whether the workrtree is dirty (true or false).
WORKTREE_HASH Unique hash of the work tree. Same as PRODUCT_REVISION unless WORKTREE_DIRTY.
TARGET_DIR Absolute path to the zip contents directory.
BIN_PATH Absolute path to where instructions must write Go executable.

Reproducibility Assertions

The reproducible input has three options:

  • assert (the default) means perform a verification build and fail if it's not identical to the primary build.
  • report means perform a verification build, log the results, but do not fail.
  • nope means do not perform a verification build at all.

See Ensuring Reproducibility, below for tips on making your build reproducible.

Example Build Instructions

The examples below all illustrate valid build instructions using go build flags that give the build some chance at being reproducible.


Simplest Go 1.17 invocation. (Uses -trimpath to aid with reproducibility.)

instructions: go build -o "$BIN_PATH" -trimpath

Simplest Go 1.18+ invocation. (Additionally uses -buildvcs=false to aid with reproducibility.)

instructions: go build -o "$BIN_PATH" -trimpath -buildvcs=false

More complex build, including copying a license file into the zip and cding into a subdirectory to perform the go build.

instructions: |
	cp LICENSE "$TARGET_DIR/"
	cd sub/directory
	go build -o "$BIN_PATH" -trimpath -buildvcs=false

An example using make:

instructions: make build

With this Makefile:

build:
	go build -o "$BIN_PATH" -trimpath -buildvcs=false

See also the example workflow above, which injects info into the binary using -ldflags.

Ensuring Reproducibility

If you are aiming to create a reproducible build, you need to at a minimum ensure that your build is independent from the time it is run, and from the path that the module is at on the filesystem.

Build Time

Embedding the actual 'build time' into your binary will ensure that it isn't reproducible, because this time will be different for each build. Instead, you can use the PRODUCT_REVISION_TIME which is the time of the latest commit, which will be the same for each build of that commit.

Build Path

By default go build embeds the absolute path to the source files inside the binaries for use in stack traces and debugging. However, this reduces reproducibility because that path is likely to be different for different builds.

Use the -trimpath flag to remove the portion of the path that is dependent on the absolute module path to aid with reproducibility.

VCS information

Go 1.18+ embeds information about the current checkout directory of your code, including modified and new files. In some cases this interferes with reproducibility. You can turn this off using the -buildvcs=false flag.

Development

Development docs have moved to docs/development.md.

The core functionality of this action is contained in a Go CLI, which can also be installed and run locally. See the CLI docs for instructions on installing and using the CLI.