godepgraph is a program for generating a dependency graph of Go packages.
go install github.com/kisielk/godepgraph@latest
For basic usage, just give the package path of interest as the first argument:
godepgraph github.com/kisielk/godepgraph
If you intent to graph a go mod project, your package should be passed as a relative path:
godepgraph ./pkg/api
The output is a graph in Graphviz dot format. If you have the graphviz tools installed you can render it by piping the output to dot:
godepgraph github.com/kisielk/godepgraph | dot -Tpng -o godepgraph.png
By default godepgraph will display packages in the standard library in the graph, though it will not delve in to their dependencies.
godepgraph uses a simple color scheme to denote different types of packages:
- green: a package that is part of the Go standard library, installed in
$GOROOT
. - blue: a regular Go package found in
$GOPATH
. - yellow: a vendored Go package found in
$GOPATH
. - orange: a package found in
$GOPATH
that uses cgo by importing the special package "C".
If you want to ignore standard library packages entirely, use the -s flag:
godepgraph -s github.com/kisielk/godepgraph
If you want to ignore vendored packages entirely, use the -novendor flag:
godepgraph -novendor github.com/something/else
Import paths can be ignored in a comma-separated list passed to the -i flag:
godepgraph -i github.com/foo/bar,github.com/baz/blah github.com/something/else
The packages and their imports will be excluded from the graph, unless the imports are also imported by another package which is not excluded.
Import paths can also be ignored by prefix. The -p flag takes a comma-separated list of prefixes:
godepgraph -p github.com,launchpad.net bitbucket.org/foo/bar
Here's some example output for a component of Gary Burd's gopkgdoc project: