UPX¶
Since: v1.18
Having small binary sizes are important, and Go is known for generating rather big binaries.
GoReleaser has had -s -w
as default ldflags
since the beginning, which help shaving off some bytes, but if you want to shave it even more, upx
is the de facto tool for the job.
GoReleaser has been able to integrate with it via custom build hooks, and now UPX has its own configuration section:
Compatibility
upx
does not support all platforms! Make sure to check their issues and to test your packed binaries.
Namely, macOS Ventura is not supported at the moment.
# .goreleaser.yaml
upx:
- # Whether to enable it or not.
#
# Templates: allowed (since v1.21)
enabled: true
# Filter by build ID.
ids: [build1, build2]
# Filter by GOOS.
#
# Since: v1.19
goos: [linux, darwin]
# Filter by GOARCH.
#
# Since: v1.19
goarch: [arm, amd64]
# Filter by GOARM.
#
# Since: v1.19
goarm: [8]
# Filter by GOAMD64.
#
# Since: v1.19
goamd64: [v1]
# Compress argument.
# Valid options are from '1' (faster) to '9' (better), and 'best'.
compress: best
# Whether to try LZMA (slower).
lzma: true
# Whether to try all methods and filters (slow).
brute: true
Info
If upx
is not in $PATH
, GoReleaser will automatically avoid running it.
Notice you can define multiple upx
definitions, filtering by various fields. You can use that to have different compression options depending on the target OS, for instance - or even to run it only on a few selected platforms.
Tip
Learn more about the name template engine.