This is a little hack to use shallow clones for new git checkouts with go get
. Unfortunately for Gophers, this has been an open issue for three years counting without a workable solution aside from patching the go toolchain yourself. This solution utilizes a git wrapper that determines if a pull/clone is happening and then makes sure it is shallow.
To install it you do
$ go get github.com/schollz/git
The git-wrapper tool is named "git" on purpose so that your GOPATH can be prepended to the PATH and then the git-wrapper substituted for the real git (/usr/bin/git
). So then, to activate shallow cloning all you have to do is:
$ export PATH=$GOPATH/bin:$PATH
which you can add to your .bashrc
files if you want it to be permanent. This way, the wrapper will aways be used and the wrapper will force cloning to be shallow.
Here's a benchmark showing a 50% reduction in disk usage and thus a 50% reduction in time taken for a go get
. You'll not get that much for smaller repositories, but its not bad.
% docker run -it golang:1.10 /bin/bash
root@d9208178f1fa:/go# time go get github.com/juju/juju/...
real 7m35.631s
user 1m40.059s
sys 0m45.436s
root@d9208178f1fa:/go# du -sh .
1.1G
% docker run -it golang:1.10 /bin/bash
root@68135fb64a3e:/go# go get github.com/schollz/git
root@68135fb64a3e:/go# export PATH=$GOPATH/bin:$PATH
root@68135fb64a3e:/go# time go get github.com/juju/juju/...
real 3m0.335s
user 0m29.192s
sys 0m17.253s
root@d9208178f1fa:/go# du -sh .
499M .
Thanks tscholl2 for the idea.
MIT