Quickstart
These steps will get you up and going with using Pkl and Go.
1. Install dependencies
Your project will need to include pkl-go as a dependency:
go get github.com/apple/pkl-go
If you are using code generation, install the pkl-gen-go binary, either via go install
or with a direct download.
The binaries are available as assets on our GitHub release.
# via go install
go install github.com/apple/pkl-go/cmd/pkl-gen-go@v0.6.0
# via curl
curl -L -o pkl-gen-go github.com/apple/pkl-go/releases/download/v0.6.0/pkl-gen-go-macos.bin
chmod +x pkl-gen-go
Also, ensure that Pkl is installed on your machine.
2. Define a Pkl schema
Create a new Pkl file in the directory of your choice, and annotate it with the @go.Package
annotation.
The name
property in the annotation is the Go import path for the generated configuration file.
In this example, the file is placed into pkl/AppConfig.pkl
, and the Go package name for this Pkl module is
github.com/myorg/myteam/appconfig
.
@go.Package { name = "github.com/myorg/myteam/appconfig" }
module myorg.myteam.AppConfig
import "package://pkg.pkl-lang.org/pkl-go/pkl.golang@0.6.0#/go.pkl" (1)
/// The hostname of this application.
host: String
/// The port to listen on.
port: UInt16
1 | Used for the @go.Package annotation. |
3. Generate Go source code
With a schema defined, generate Go source code for it.
Code generation is done via the pkl-gen-go
CLI. To install:
go install github.com/apple/pkl-go/cmd/pkl-gen-go@latest
In our example, Go sources can be generated using the following command:
pkl-gen-go pkl/AppConfig.pkl --base-path github.com/myorg/myteam
The --base-path
causes the code generator to place the Go source files in a relative path.
If the --base-path
argument is omitted, the code generator will also look for a go.mod
file for the base path, as well as within the
settings file.
In this example, the Go package name of our Pkl module is github.com/myorg/myteam/appconfig
, and the base path
is github.com/myorg/myteam
. Therefore, the generated Go files will be placed into the appconfig
directory.
For more details on how to control code generation, consult pkl-gen-go --help
.
4. Evaluate Pkl configuration data in Go
With the above scaffolding set up, evaluate Pkl configuration data in Go.
First, define some configuration that uses the Pkl schema.
In our example, we create a file at path pkl/local/appConfig.pkl
. We imagine that we are defining configuration for a server running in a local environment, and would likewise place other environments in sibling directorys; e.g. pkl/int/appConfig.pkl
and pkl/prod/appConfig.pkl
.
amends "../AppConfig.pkl"
host = "localhost"
port = 5939
Once defined, evaluate the Pkl module into Go.
package main
import (
"context"
"fmt"
"github.com/myorg/myteam/appconfig"
)
func main() {
cfg, err := appconfig.LoadFromPath(context.Background(), "pkl/local/appConfig.pkl")
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
fmt.Printf("I'm running on host %s\n", cfg.Host)
}