To build Elvish from source, you need
-
A supported OS: Linux, {Free,Net,Open}BSD, macOS, or Windows 10. Windows 10 support is experimental.
-
Go >= 1.21.0.
To build Elvish from source, run one of the following commands:
go install src.elv.sh/cmd/elvish@master # Install latest commit
go install src.elv.sh/cmd/elvish@latest # Install latest released version
go install src.elv.sh/cmd/[email protected] # Install a specific version
The
go install
command installs Elvish to $GOBIN
; the binary name is elvish
. You can
control the installation location by overriding $GOBIN
, for example by
prepending env GOBIN=...
to the go install
command.
If $GOBIN
is not set, the installation location defaults to $GOPATH/bin
,
which in turn defaults to ~/go/bin
if $GOPATH
is also not set.
The installation directory is probably not in your OS's default $PATH
. You
should either either add it to $PATH
, or manually copy the Elvish binary to a
directory already in $PATH
.
In additional to src.elv.sh/cmd/elvish
(which corresponds to the
cmd/elvish
directory in the repo), there are a few alternative
entrypoints, all named liked cmd/*/elvish
, with slightly different feature
sets. (From the perspective of Go, these are just different main
packages.)
For example, install the cmd/withpprof/elvish
entrypoint to get
profiling support (change the part after @
to get different versions):
go install src.elv.sh/cmd/withpprof/elvish@master
If you are modifying Elvish's source code, you will want to clone Elvish's Git repository and build Elvish from the local source tree instead. To do this, run the following from the root of the source tree:
go install ./cmd/elvish
There is no need to specify a version like @master
; when inside a source tree,
go install
will always use the whatever source code is present.
See contributing.md for more notes for contributors.
Elvish has experimental support for building and importing plugins, modules written in Go. It relies on Go's plugin support, which is only available on a few platforms.
Plugin support requires building Elvish with cgo. The official prebuilt binaries are built without cgo for compatibility and reproducibility, but by default the Go toolchain builds with cgo enabled.
If you have built Elvish from source on a platform with plugin support, your Elvish build probably already supports plugins. To force cgo to be used when building Elvish, you can do the following:
env CGO_ENABLED=1 go install ./cmd/elvish
To build a plugin, see this example.