How To Install Go on Ubuntu 18.04
Table of Contents
Introduction #
Go is a modern programming language developed at Google. It is increasingly popular for many applications and at many companies, and offers a robust set of libraries. This tutorial will walk you through downloading and installing the latest version of Go (Go 1.10 at the time of this article’s publication), as well as building a simple Hello World application.
Prerequisites #
This tutorial assumes that you have access to an Ubuntu 18.04 system, configured with a non-root user with sudo
privileges as described in Initial Server Setup with Ubuntu 18.04.
Step 1 — Installing Go #
In this step, we’ll install Go on your server.
To begin, connect to your Ubuntu server via ssh
:
ssh sammy@your_server_ip
In order to install Go, you’ll need to grab the latest version from the official Go downloads page. On the site you can find the URL for the current binary release’s tarball, along with its SHA256 hash.
Visit the official Go downloads page and find the URL for the current binary release’s tarball, along with its SHA256 hash. Make sure you’re in your home directory, and use curl to retrieve the tarball:
cd ~
curl -O https://dl.google.com/go/go1.10.3.linux-amd64.tar.gz
Next, you can use sha256sum
to verify the tarball:
sha256sum go1.10.3.linux-amd64.tar.gz
Sample go1.10.3.linux-amd64.tar.gz
fa1b0e45d3b647c252f51f5e1204aba049cde4af177ef9f2181f43004f901035 go1.10.3.linux-amd64.tar.gz
You’ll get a hash like the one highlighted in the above output. Make sure it matches the one from the downloads page.
Next, use tar
to extract the tarball. The x
flag tells tar
to extract, v
tells it we want verbose output (a listing of the files being extracted), and f
tells it we’ll specify a filename:
tar xvf go1.10.3.linux-amd64.tar.gz
You should now have a directory called go
in your home directory. Recursively change go
’s owner and group to root, and move it to /usr/local
:
sudo chown -R root:root ./go
sudo mv go /usr/local
Note: Although /usr/local/go
is the officially-recommended location, some users may prefer or require different paths.
Step 2 — Setting Go Paths #
In this step, we’ll set some paths in your environment.
First, set Go’s root value, which tells Go where to look for its files.
sudo nano ~/.profile
At the end of the file, add this line:
export GOPATH=$HOME/work
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/go/bin:$GOPATH/bin
If you chose an alternate installation location for Go, add these lines instead to the same file. This example shows the commands if Go is installed in your home directory:
export GOROOT=$HOME/go
export GOPATH=$HOME/work
export PATH=$PATH:$GOROOT/bin:$GOPATH/bin
With the appropriate line pasted into your profile, save and close the file. Next, refresh your profile by running:
source ~/.profile
Step 3 — Testing Your Install #
Now that Go is installed and the paths are set for your server, you can test to ensure that Go is working as expected.
Create a new directory for your Go workspace, which is where Go will build its files:
mkdir $HOME/work
Then, create a directory hierarchy in this folder through this command in order for you to create your test file. You can replace the value user with your GitHub username if you plan to use Git to commit and store your Go code on GitHub. If you do not plan to use GitHub to store and manage your code, your folder structure could be something different, like ~/my_project
.
mkdir -p work/src/github.com/user/hello
Next, you can create a simple “Hello World” Go file.
nano ~/work/src/github.com/user/hello/hello.go
Inside your editor, paste the code below, which uses the main Go packages, imports the formatted IO content component, and sets a new function to print “Hello, World” when run.
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Printf("hello, worldn")
}
This program will print “hello, world” if it successfully runs, which will indicate that Go programs are compiling correctly. Save and close the file, then compile it by invoking the Go command install
:
go install github.com/user/hello
With the file compiled, you can run it by simply executing the command:
hello
If that command returns “hello, world”, then Go is successfully installed and functional. You can see where the compiled hello
binary is installed by using the which
command:
which hello
/home/user/work/bin/hello
Conclusion #
By downloading and installing the latest Go package and setting its paths, you now have a system to use for Go development. You can find and subscribe to additional articles on installing and using Go within our “Go” tag