Send crypto with a text message.
https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5724.txt
Main applications for this project.
The directory name for each application should match the name of the executable you want to have (e.g., /cmd/myapp).
Don't put a lot of code in the application directory. If you think the code can be imported and used in other projects, then it should live in the /pkg directory. If the code is not reusable or if you don't want others to reuse it, put that code in the /internal directory. You'll be surprised what others will do, so be explicit about your intentions!
It's common to have a small main function that imports and invokes the code from the /internal and /pkg directories and nothing else.
See the /cmd directory for examples.
Private application and library code. This is the code you don't want others importing in their applications or libraries.
Put your actual application code in the /internal/app directory (e.g., /internal/app/myapp) and the code shared by those apps in the /internal/pkg directory (e.g., /internal/pkg/myprivlib).
Library code that's ok to use by external applications (e.g., /pkg/mypubliclib). Other projects will import these libraries expecting them to work, so think twice before you put something here :-)
It's also a way to group Go code in one place when your root directory contains lots of non-Go components and directories making it easier to run various Go tool (as mentioned in the Best Practices for Industrial Programming from GopherCon EU 2018).
See the /pkg directory if you want to see which popular Go repos use this project layout pattern. This is a common layout pattern, but it's not universally accepted and some in the Go community don't recommend it.
Application dependencies (managed manually or by your favorite dependency management tool like dep).
Don't commit your application dependencies if you are building a library.
OpenAPI/Swagger specs, JSON schema files, protocol definition files.
See the /api directory for examples.
Web application specific components: static web assets, server side templates and SPAs.
Configuration file templates or default configs.
Put your confd or consul-template template files here.
System init (systemd, upstart, sysv) and process manager/supervisor (runit, supervisord) configs.
Scripts to perform various build, install, analysis, etc operations.
These scripts keep the root level Makefile small and simple (e.g., https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/blob/master/Makefile).
See the /scripts directory for examples.
Packaging and Continuous Integration.
Put your cloud (AMI), container (Docker), OS (deb, rpm, pkg) package configurations and scripts in the /build/package directory.
Put your CI (travis, circle, drone) configurations and scripts in the /build/ci directory. Note that some of the CI tools (e.g., Travis CI) are very picky about the location of their config files. Try putting the config files in the /build/ci directory linking them to the location where the CI tools expect them (when possible).
IaaS, PaaS, system and container orchestration deployment configurations and templates (docker-compose, kubernetes/helm, mesos, terraform, bosh).
Additional external test apps and test data. Feel free to structure the /test directory anyway you want. For bigger projects it makes sense to have a data subdirectory. For example, you can have /test/data or /test/testdata if you need Go to ignore what's in that directory. Note that Go will also ignore directories or files that begin with "." or "_", so you have more flexibility in terms of how you name your test data directory.
See the /test directory for examples.
Design and user documents (in addition to your godoc generated documentation).
See the /docs directory for examples.
Supporting tools for this project. Note that these tools can import code from the /pkg and /internal directories.
See the /tools directory for examples.
Examples for your applications and/or public libraries.
See the /examples directory for examples.
External helper tools, forked code and other 3rd party utilities (e.g., Swagger UI).
Git hooks.
Other assets to go along with your repository (images, logos, etc).
This is the place to put your project's website data if you are not using Github pages.
See the /website directory for examples.
Some Go projects do have a src folder, but it usually happens when the devs came from the Java world where it's a common pattern. If you can help yourself try not to adopt this Java pattern. You really don't want your Go code or Go projects to look like Java :-)
Don't confuse the project level /src directory with the /src directory Go uses for its workspaces as described in How to Write Go Code. The $GOPATH environment variable points to your (current) workspace (by default it points to $HOME/go on non-windows systems). This workspace includes the top level /pkg, /bin and /src directories. Your actual project ends up being a sub-directory under /src, so if you have the /src directory in your project the project path will look like this: /some/path/to/workspace/src/your_project/src/your_code.go. Note that with Go 1.11 it's possible to have your project outside of your GOPATH, but it still doesn't mean it's a good idea to use this layout pattern.
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Go Report Card - It will scan your code with
gofmt,go vet,gocyclo,golint,ineffassign,licenseandmisspell. Replacegithub.com/golang-standards/project-layoutwith your project reference. -
GoDoc - It will provide online version of your GoDoc generated documentation. Change the link to point to your project.
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Release - It will show the latest release number for your project. Change the github link to point to your project.
A more opinionated project template with sample/reusable configs, scripts and code is a WIP.