golang-project-layout
Design reasonable Go project layouts based on project scale, avoiding over-layering; keeping simple scripts flat, and complex services layered as needed.
npx skills add samber/cc-skills-golang --skill golang-project-layoutBefore / After Comparison
1 组Manually planning the directory structure requires balancing maintainability and development efficiency. Excessive layering increases navigation costs, while insufficient layering leads to code coupling. Design takes 1-2 hours, and refactoring costs are high later on.
Automatically recommends the most suitable layout based on functional complexity and team size, generating clear module divisions and dependency diagrams. Obtain an extensible project structure in 10 minutes.
golang-project-layout
Persona: You are a Go project architect. You right-size structure to the problem — a script stays flat, a service gets layers only when justified by actual complexity.
Go Project Layout
Architecture Decision: Ask First
When starting a new project, ask the developer what software architecture they prefer (clean architecture, hexagonal, DDD, flat structure, etc.). NEVER over-structure small projects — a 100-line CLI tool does not need layers of abstractions or dependency injection.
→ See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-design-patterns skill for detailed architecture guides with file trees and code examples.
Dependency Injection: Ask Next
After settling on the architecture, ask the developer which dependency injection approach they want: manual constructor injection, or a DI library (samber/do, google/wire, uber-go/dig+fx), or none at all. The choice affects how services are wired, how lifecycle (health checks, graceful shutdown) is managed, and how the project is structured. See the samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-dependency-injection skill for a full comparison and decision table.
12-Factor App
For applications (services, APIs, workers), follow 12-Factor App conventions: config via environment variables, logs to stdout, stateless processes, graceful shutdown, backing services as attached resources, and admin tasks as one-off commands (e.g., cmd/migrate/).
Quick Start: Choose Your Project Type
Project Type Use When Key Directories
CLI Tool
Building a command-line application
cmd/{name}/, internal/, optional pkg/
Library
Creating reusable code for others
pkg/{name}/, internal/ for private code
Service
HTTP API, microservice, or web app
cmd/{service}/, internal/, api/, web/
Monorepo
Multiple related packages/modules
go.work, separate modules per package
Workspace
Developing multiple local modules
go.work, replace directives
Module Naming Conventions
Module Name (go.mod)
Your module path in go.mod should:
-
MUST match your repository URL:
github.com/username/project-name -
Use lowercase only:
github.com/you/my-app(notMyApp) -
Use hyphens for multi-word:
user-authnotuser_authoruserAuth -
Be semantic: Name should clearly express purpose
Examples:
// ✅ Good
module github.com/jdoe/payment-processor
module github.com/company/cli-tool
// ❌ Bad
module myproject
module github.com/jdoe/MyProject
module utils
Package Naming
Packages MUST be lowercase, singular, and match their directory name. → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-naming skill for complete package naming conventions and examples.
Directory Layout
All main packages must reside in cmd/ with minimal logic — parse flags, wire dependencies, call Run(). Business logic belongs in internal/ or pkg/. Use internal/ for non-exported packages, pkg/ only when code is useful to external consumers.
See directory layout examples for universal, small project, and library layouts, plus common mistakes.
Essential Configuration Files
Every Go project should include at the root:
-
Makefile — build automation. See Makefile template
-
.gitignore — git ignore patterns. See .gitignore template
-
.golangci.yml — linter config. See the
samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-linterskill for the recommended configuration
For application configuration with Cobra + Viper, see config reference.
Tests, Benchmarks, and Examples
Co-locate _test.go files with the code they test. Use testdata/ for fixtures. See testing layout for file naming, placement, and organization details.
Go Workspaces
Use go.work when developing multiple related modules in a monorepo. See workspaces for setup, structure, and commands.
Initialization Checklist
When starting a new Go project:
-
Ask the developer their preferred software architecture (clean, hexagonal, DDD, flat, etc.)
-
Ask the developer their preferred DI approach — see
samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-dependency-injectionskill -
Decide project type (CLI, library, service, monorepo)
-
Right-size the structure to the project scope
-
Choose module name (matches repo URL, lowercase, hyphens)
-
Run
go versionto detect the current go version -
Run
go mod init github.com/user/project-name -
Create
cmd/{name}/main.gofor entry point -
Create
internal/for private code -
Create
pkg/only if you have public libraries -
For monorepos: Initialize
go workand add modules -
Run
gofmt -s -w .to ensure formatting -
Add
.gitignorewith/vendor/and binary patterns
Related Skills
→ See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-cli skill for CLI tool structure and Cobra/Viper patterns. → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-dependency-injection skill for DI approach comparison and wiring. → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-linter skill for golangci-lint configuration. → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-continuous-integration skill for CI/CD pipeline setup. → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-design-patterns skill for architectural patterns.
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