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Self-Update Mechanism for Go Commands Using GitHub

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go-github-selfupdate is a Go library to provide a self-update mechanism to command line tools.

Go does not provide a way to install/update the stable version of tools. By default, Go command line tools are updated:

  1. using go get -u, but it is not stable because HEAD of the repository is built
  2. using system's package manager, but it is harder to release because of depending on the platform
  3. downloading executables from GitHub release page, but it requires users to download and put it in an executable path manually

go-github-selfupdate resolves the problem of 3 by detecting the latest release, downloading it and putting it in $GOPATH/bin automatically.

go-github-selfupdate detects the information of the latest release via GitHub Releases API and checks the current version. If a newer version than itself is detected, it downloads the released binary from GitHub and replaces itself.

  • Automatically detect the latest version of released binary on GitHub
  • Retrieve the proper binary for the OS and arch where the binary is running
  • Update the binary with rollback support on failure
  • Tested on Linux, macOS and Windows (using Travis CI and AppVeyor)
  • Many archive and compression formats are supported (zip, tar, gzip, xzip)
  • Support private repositories
  • Support GitHub Enterprise
  • Support hash, signature validation (thanks to @tobiaskohlbau)

And small wrapper CLIs are provided:

Slide at GoCon 2018 Spring (Japanese)

Try Out Example

Example to understand what this library does is prepared as CLI.

Install it at first.

$ go get -u github.com/rhysd/go-github-selfupdate/cmd/selfupdate-example

And check the version by -version. -help flag is also available to know all flags.

$ selfupdate-example -version

It should show v1.2.3.

Then run -selfupdate

$ selfupdate-example -selfupdate

It should replace itself and finally show a message containing release notes.

Please check the binary version is updated to v1.2.4 with -version. The binary is up-to-date. So running -selfupdate again only shows 'Current binary is the latest version'.

Real World Examples

Following tools are using this library.

Usage

Code Usage

It provides selfupdate package.

  • selfupdate.UpdateSelf(): Detect the latest version of itself and run self update.
  • selfupdate.UpdateCommand(): Detect the latest version of given repository and update given command.
  • selfupdate.DetectLatest(): Detect the latest version of given repository.
  • selfupdate.DetectVersion(): Detect the user defined version of given repository.
  • selfupdate.UpdateTo(): Update given command to the binary hosted on given URL.
  • selfupdate.Updater: Context manager of self-update process. If you want to customize some behavior of self-update (e.g. specify API token, use GitHub Enterprise, ...), please make an instance of Updater and use its methods.

Following is the easiest way to use this package.

import (
    "log"
    "github.com/blang/semver"
    "github.com/rhysd/go-github-selfupdate/selfupdate"
)

const version = "1.2.3"

func doSelfUpdate() {
    v := semver.MustParse(version)
    latest, err := selfupdate.UpdateSelf(v, "myname/myrepo")
    if err != nil {
        log.Println("Binary update failed:", err)
        return
    }
    if latest.Version.Equals(v) {
        // latest version is the same as current version. It means current binary is up to date.
        log.Println("Current binary is the latest version", version)
    } else {
        log.Println("Successfully updated to version", latest.Version)
        log.Println("Release note:\n", latest.ReleaseNotes)
    }
}

Following asks user to update or not.

import (
    "bufio"
    "github.com/blang/semver"
    "github.com/rhysd/go-github-selfupdate/selfupdate"
    "log"
    "os"
)

const version = "1.2.3"

func confirmAndSelfUpdate() {
    latest, found, err := selfupdate.DetectLatest("owner/repo")
    if err != nil {
        log.Println("Error occurred while detecting version:", err)
        return
    }

    v := semver.MustParse(version)
    if !found || latest.Version.LTE(v) {
        log.Println("Current version is the latest")
        return
    }

    fmt.Print("Do you want to update to", latest.Version, "? (y/n): ")
    input, err := bufio.NewReader(os.Stdin).ReadString('\n')
    if err != nil || (input != "y\n" && input != "n\n") {
        log.Println("Invalid input")
        return
    }
    if input == "n\n" {
        return
    }

    exe, err := os.Executable()
    if err != nil {
        log.Println("Could not locate executable path")
        return
    }
    if err := selfupdate.UpdateTo(latest.AssetURL, exe); err != nil {
        log.Println("Error occurred while updating binary:", err)
        return
    }
    log.Println("Successfully updated to version", latest.Version)
}

If GitHub API token is set to [token] section in gitconfig or $GITHUB_TOKEN environment variable, this library will use it to call GitHub REST API. It's useful when reaching rate limits or when using this library with private repositories.

Note that os.Args[0] is not available since it does not provide a full path to executable. Instead, please use os.Executable().

Please see the documentation page for more detail.

This library should work with GitHub Enterprise. To configure API base URL, please setup Updater instance and use its methods instead (actually all functions above are just a shortcuts of methods of an Updater instance).

Following is an example of usage with GitHub Enterprise.

import (
    "log"
    "github.com/blang/semver"
    "github.com/rhysd/go-github-selfupdate/selfupdate"
)

const version = "1.2.3"

func doSelfUpdate(token string) {
    v := semver.MustParse(version)
    up, err := selfupdate.NewUpdater(selfupdate.Config{
        APIToken: token,
        EnterpriseBaseURL: "https://github.your.company.com/api/v3",
    })
    latest, err := up.UpdateSelf(v, "myname/myrepo")
    if err != nil {
        log.Println("Binary update failed:", err)
        return
    }
    if latest.Version.Equals(v) {
        // latest version is the same as current version. It means current binary is up to date.
        log.Println("Current binary is the latest version", version)
    } else {
        log.Println("Successfully updated to version", latest.Version)
        log.Println("Release note:\n", latest.ReleaseNotes)
    }
}

If APIToken field is not given, it tries to retrieve API token from [token] section of .gitconfig or $GITHUB_TOKEN environment variable. If no token is found, it raises an error because GitHub Enterprise API does not work without authentication.

If your GitHub Enterprise instance's upload URL is different from the base URL, please also set the EnterpriseUploadURL field.

Naming Rules of Released Binaries

go-github-selfupdate assumes that released binaries are put for each combination of platforms and archs. Binaries for each platform can be easily built using tools like gox

You need to put the binaries with the following format.

{cmd}_{goos}_{goarch}{.ext}

{cmd} is a name of command. {goos} and {goarch} are the platform and the arch type of the binary. {.ext} is a file extension. go-github-selfupdate supports .zip, .gzip, .tar.gz and .tar.xz. You can also use blank and it means binary is not compressed.

If you compress binary, uncompressed directory or file must contain the executable named {cmd}.

And you can also use - for separator instead of _ if you like.

For example, if your command name is foo-bar, one of followings is expected to be put in release page on GitHub as binary for platform linux and arch amd64.

  • foo-bar_linux_amd64 (executable)
  • foo-bar_linux_amd64.zip (zip file)
  • foo-bar_linux_amd64.tar.gz (tar file)
  • foo-bar_linux_amd64.xz (xzip file)
  • foo-bar-linux-amd64.tar.gz (- is also ok for separator)

If you compress and/or archive your release asset, it must contain an executable named one of followings:

  • foo-bar (only command name)
  • foo-bar_linux_amd64 (full name)
  • foo-bar-linux-amd64 (- is also ok for separator)

To archive the executable directly on Windows, .exe can be added before file extension like foo-bar_windows_amd64.exe.zip.

Naming Rules of Versions (=Git Tags)

go-github-selfupdate searches binaries' versions via Git tag names (not a release title). When your tool's version is 1.2.3, you should use the version number for tag of the Git repository (i.e. 1.2.3 or v1.2.3).

This library assumes you adopt semantic versioning. It is necessary for comparing versions systematically.

Prefix before version number \d+\.\d+\.\d+ is automatically omitted. For example, ver1.2.3 or release-1.2.3 are also ok.

Tags which don't contain a version number are ignored (i.e. nightly). And releases marked as pre-release are also ignored.

Structure of Releases

In summary, structure of releases on GitHub looks like:

  • v1.2.0
    • foo-bar-linux-amd64.tar.gz
    • foo-bar-linux-386.tar.gz
    • foo-bar-darwin-amd64.tar.gz
    • foo-bar-windows-amd64.zip
    • ... (Other binaries for v1.2.0)
  • v1.1.3
    • foo-bar-linux-amd64.tar.gz
    • foo-bar-linux-386.tar.gz
    • foo-bar-darwin-amd64.tar.gz
    • foo-bar-windows-amd64.zip
    • ... (Other binaries for v1.1.3)
  • ... (older versions)

Hash or Signature Validation

go-github-selfupdate supports hash or signature validatiom of the downloaded files. It comes with support for sha256 hashes or ECDSA signatures. In addition to internal functions the user can implement the Validator interface for own validation mechanisms.

// Validator represents an interface which enables additional validation of releases.
type Validator interface {
	// Validate validates release bytes against an additional asset bytes.
	// See SHA2Validator or ECDSAValidator for more information.
	Validate(release, asset []byte) error
	// Suffix describes the additional file ending which is used for finding the
	// additional asset.
	Suffix() string
}

SHA256

To verify the integrity by SHA256 generate a hash sum and save it within a file which has the same naming as original file with the suffix .sha256. For e.g. use sha256sum, the file selfupdate/testdata/foo.zip.sha256 is generated with:

sha256sum foo.zip > foo.zip.sha256

ECDSA

To verify the signature by ECDSA generate a signature and save it within a file which has the same naming as original file with the suffix .sig. For e.g. use openssl, the file selfupdate/testdata/foo.zip.sig is generated with:

openssl dgst -sha256 -sign Test.pem -out foo.zip.sig foo.zip

go-github-selfupdate makes use of go internal crypto package. Therefore the used private key has to be compatbile with FIPS 186-3.

Development

Running tests

All library sources are put in /selfupdate directory. So you can run tests as following at the top of the repository:

$ go test -v ./selfupdate

Some tests are not run without setting a GitHub API token because they call GitHub API too many times. To run them, please generate an API token and set it to an environment variable.

$ export GITHUB_TOKEN="{token generated by you}"
$ go test -v ./selfupdate

The above command runs almost all tests and it's enough to check the behavior before creating a pull request. Some tests are still not tested because they depend on my personal API access token, though; for repositories on GitHub Enterprise or private repositories on GitHub.

Debugging

This library can output logs for debugging. By default, logger is disabled. You can enable the logger by the following and can know the details of the self update.

selfupdate.EnableLog()

CI

Tests run on CIs (Travis CI, Appveyor) are run with the token I generated. However, because of security reasons, it is not used for the tests for pull requests. In the tests, a GitHub API token is not set and API rate limit is often exceeding. So please ignore the test failures on creating a pull request.

Dependencies

This library utilizes

  • go-github to retrieve the information of releases
  • go-update to replace current binary
  • semver to compare versions
  • xz to support XZ compress format

Copyright (c) 2013 The go-github AUTHORS. All rights reserved.

Copyright 2015 Alan Shreve

Copyright (c) 2014 Benedikt Lang

Copyright (c) 2014-2016 Ulrich Kunitz

What is different from tj/go-update?

This library's goal is the same as tj/go-update, but it's different in following points.

tj/go-update:

  • does not support Windows
  • only allows v for version prefix
  • does not ignore pre-release
  • has only a few tests
  • supports Apex store for putting releases

License

Distributed under the MIT License

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Binary self-update mechanism for Go commands using GitHub

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