Live reloading in Go

Stefan Alfbo - Mar 19 - - Dev Community

When writing code you want a fast feedback loop on your changes in the code. Live reloading is one feature that can enable that in your coding process.

The purpose of live reloading is to have an automatic reload of your application when a source file of the application is being changed. This is a common tool if you are working with web front-end development, but still useful for other types of applications.

To enable live reloading in Go we will checkout the command tool, Air - Live reload for Go apps.

Air is yet another live-reloading command line utility for developing Go applications. Run air in your project root directory, leave it alone, and focus on your code.

We start with the installation.



go version
// go version go1.22.0 linux/amd64

go install github.com/cosmtrek/air@latest 


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Next up is to create an example application to play with.



mkdir air-example && cd $_
go mod init example/air
touch main.go

code .


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Enter this simple application into the main.go file.



package main

import (
    "fmt"
)

func main() {
    fmt.Println("Hello Air!")
}


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Now we can start air by just typing air in the terminal, be sure that you are in the root directory of the application.

This will start the application and prompt you with the text, Hello Air.

Starting air

If we now change the text in the given Println argument to, Hello, Air!!, and save the file, Air will automatically restart the application and print the new text.

updating air

So that is how it basically works. There is one problem when it comes to running CLI applications in Air, and that is when you want to use IO operations like Scanf. Air do not support that now (at least in v1.51.0), but it has plans for that in a future release. However developing web applications and services work great with Air right now.

There is also possible to configure Air with a .air.toml file, which can be created like this.



air init


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More details about the file can be found here.

As you might have noticed, Air creates a tmp folder that holds the compiled version of the application. This is one of several things you can configure in the toml file.

Overall Air is an easy tool to get started with and it's convenient to have your application restarted automatically, so give it a try.

Happy coding!

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