Microsoft Windows File Properties/Version Info and Icon Resource Generator for the Go Language
Package creates a syso file which contains Microsoft Windows Version Information and an optional icon. When you run "go build", Go will embed the version information and an optional icon and an optional manifest in the executable. Go will automatically use the syso file if it's in the same directory as the main() function.
Example of the file properties you can set using this package:
To install, run the following command:
go get github.com/josephspurrier/goversioninfo/cmd/goversioninfo
Copy testdata/resource/versioninfo.json into your working directory and then modify the file with your own settings.
Add a similar text to the top of your Go source code (-icon and -manifest are optional, but can also be specified in the versioninfo.json file):
//go:generate goversioninfo -icon=testdata/resource/icon.ico -manifest=testdata/resource/goversioninfo.exe.manifest
Run the Go commands in this order so goversioninfo will create a file called resource.syso in the same directory as the Go source code.
go generate
go build
Complete list of the flags for goversioninfo:
-charset=0: charset ID
-comment="": StringFileInfo.Comments
-company="": StringFileInfo.CompanyName
-copyright="": StringFileInfo.LegalCopyright
-description="": StringFileInfo.FileDescription
-example=false: dump out an example versioninfo.json to stdout
-file-version="": StringFileInfo.FileVersion
-icon="": icon file name
-internal-name="": StringFileInfo.InternalName
-manifest="": manifest file name
-skip-versioninfo=false: skip version info reading on true, allows setting just icon
-o="resource.syso": output file name
-gofile="": Go output file name (optional) - generates a Go file to access version information internally
-gofilepackage="main": Go output package name (optional, requires parameter: 'gofile')
-platform-specific=false: output i386 and amd64 named resource.syso, ignores -o
-original-name="": StringFileInfo.OriginalFilename
-private-build="": StringFileInfo.PrivateBuild
-product-name="": StringFileInfo.ProductName
-product-version="": StringFileInfo.ProductVersion
-special-build="": StringFileInfo.SpecialBuild
-trademark="": StringFileInfo.LegalTrademarks
-translation=0: translation ID
-64:false: generate 64-bit binaries on true
-arm:false: generate ARM binaries on true
-ver-major=-1: FileVersion.Major
-ver-minor=-1: FileVersion.Minor
-ver-patch=-1: FileVersion.Patch
-ver-build=-1: FileVersion.Build
-product-ver-major=-1: ProductVersion.Major
-product-ver-minor=-1: ProductVersion.Minor
-product-ver-patch=-1: ProductVersion.Patch
-product-ver-build=-1: ProductVersion.Build
You can look over the Microsoft Resource Information: VERSIONINFO resource
You can look through the Microsoft Version Information structures: Version Information Structures
In PowerShell, the version components are named differently than the fields in the versioninfo.json file:
PowerShell: versioninfo.json:
----------- -----------------
FileMajorPart = FileVersion.Major
FileMinorPart = FileVersion.Minor
FileBuildPart = FileVersion.Patch
FilePrivatePart = FileVersion.Build
ProductMajorPart = ProductVersion.Major
ProductMinorPart = ProductVersion.Minor
ProductBuildPart = ProductVersion.Patch
ProductPrivatePart = ProductVersion.Build
If you find any other differences, let me know.
You can also use windres to create the syso file. The windres executable is available in either MinGW or tdm-gcc.
Below is a sample batch file you can use to create a .syso file from a .rc file. There are sample .rc files in the testdata/rc folder.
@ECHO OFF
SET PATH=C:\TDM-GCC-64\bin;%PATH%
REM SET PATH=C:\mingw64\bin;%PATH%
windres -i testdata/rc/versioninfo.rc -O coff -o versioninfo.syso
PAUSE
The information on how to create a .rc file is available here. You can use the testdata/rc/versioninfo.rc file to create a .syso file that contains version info, icon, and manifest.
The majority of the code for the creation of the syso file is from this package: https://github.com/akavel/rsrc
There is an issue with adding the icon resource that prevents your application from being compressed or modified with a resource editor. Please use with caution.
Thanks to Tamás Gulácsi for his superb code additions, refactoring, and optimization to make this a solid package.
Thanks to Mateusz Czaplinski for his embedded binary resource package with icon and manifest functionality.