Categorygithub.com/tinygo-org/tinygo
modulepackage
0.36.0
Repository: https://github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo.git
Documentation: pkg.go.dev

# README

TinyGo - Go compiler for small places

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TinyGo is a Go compiler intended for use in small places such as microcontrollers, WebAssembly (wasm/wasi), and command-line tools.

It reuses libraries used by the Go language tools alongside LLVM to provide an alternative way to compile programs written in the Go programming language.

Embedded

Here is an example program that blinks the built-in LED when run directly on any supported board with onboard LED:

package main

import (
    "machine"
    "time"
)

func main() {
    led := machine.LED
    led.Configure(machine.PinConfig{Mode: machine.PinOutput})
    for {
        led.Low()
        time.Sleep(time.Millisecond * 1000)

        led.High()
        time.Sleep(time.Millisecond * 1000)
    }
}

The above program can be compiled and run without modification on an Arduino Uno, an Adafruit ItsyBitsy M0, or any of the supported boards that have a built-in LED, just by setting the correct TinyGo compiler target. For example, this compiles and flashes an Arduino Uno:

tinygo flash -target arduino examples/blinky1

WebAssembly

TinyGo is very useful for compiling programs both for use in browsers (WASM) as well as for use on servers and other edge devices (WASI).

TinyGo programs can run in Fastly Compute, Fermyon Spin, wazero and many other WebAssembly runtimes.

Here is a small TinyGo program for use by a WASI host application:

package main

//go:wasmexport add
func add(x, y uint32) uint32 {
	return x + y
}

This compiles the above TinyGo program for use on any WASI Preview 1 runtime:

tinygo build -buildmode=c-shared -o add.wasm -target=wasip1 add.go

You can also use the same syntax as Go 1.24+:

GOARCH=wasip1 GOOS=wasm tinygo build -buildmode=c-shared -o add.wasm add.go

Installation

See the getting started instructions for information on how to install TinyGo, as well as how to run the TinyGo compiler using our Docker container.

Supported targets

Embedded

You can compile TinyGo programs for over 94 different microcontroller boards.

For more information, please see https://tinygo.org/docs/reference/microcontrollers/

WebAssembly

TinyGo programs can be compiled for both WASM and WASI targets.

For more information, see https://tinygo.org/docs/guides/webassembly/

Operating Systems

You can also compile programs for Linux, macOS, and Windows targets.

For more information:

Currently supported features:

For a description of currently supported Go language features, please see https://tinygo.org/lang-support/.

Documentation

Documentation is located on our web site at https://tinygo.org/.

You can find the web site code at https://github.com/tinygo-org/tinygo-site.

Getting help

If you're looking for a more interactive way to discuss TinyGo usage or development, we have a #TinyGo channel on the Gophers Slack.

If you need an invitation for the Gophers Slack, you can generate one here which should arrive fairly quickly (under 1 min): https://invite.slack.golangbridge.org

Contributing

Your contributions are welcome!

Please take a look at our Contributing page on our web site for details.

Project Scope

Goals:

  • Have very small binary sizes. Don't pay for what you don't use.
  • Support for most common microcontroller boards.
  • Be usable on the web using WebAssembly.
  • Good CGo support, with no more overhead than a regular function call.
  • Support most standard library packages and compile most Go code without modification.

Non-goals:

  • Be efficient while using zillions of goroutines. However, good goroutine support is certainly a goal.
  • Be as fast as gc. However, LLVM will probably be better at optimizing certain things so TinyGo might actually turn out to be faster for number crunching.
  • Be able to compile every Go program out there.

Why this project exists

We never expected Go to be an embedded language and so its got serious problems...

-- Rob Pike, GopherCon 2014 Opening Keynote

TinyGo is a project to bring Go to microcontrollers and small systems with a single processor core. It is similar to emgo but a major difference is that we want to keep the Go memory model (which implies garbage collection of some sort). Another difference is that TinyGo uses LLVM internally instead of emitting C, which hopefully leads to smaller and more efficient code and certainly leads to more flexibility.

The original reasoning was: if Python can run on microcontrollers, then certainly Go should be able to run on even lower level micros.

License

This project is licensed under the BSD 3-clause license, just like the Go project itself.

Some code has been copied from the LLVM project and is therefore licensed under a variant of the Apache 2.0 license. This has been clearly indicated in the header of these files.

Some code has been copied and/or ported from Paul Stoffregen's Teensy libraries and is therefore licensed under PJRC's license. This has been clearly indicated in the header of these files.

# Packages

Package builder is the compiler driver of TinyGo.
Package cgo implements CGo by modifying a loaded AST.
Package compileopts contains the configuration for a single to-be-built binary.
No description provided by the author
Package diagnostics formats compiler errors and prints them in a consistent way.
Package goenv returns environment variables that are used in various parts of the compiler.
Package interp is a partial evaluator of code run at package init time.
No description provided by the author
No description provided by the author
Package stacksize tries to determine the call graph for ELF binaries and tries to parse stack size information from DWARF call frame information.
No description provided by the author
No description provided by the author
Package transform contains transformation passes for the TinyGo compiler.

# Functions

Build compiles and links the given package and writes it to outpath.
Debug compiles and flashes a program to a microcontroller (just like Flash) but instead of resetting the target, it will drop into a debug shell like GDB or LLDB.
Diff returns an anchored diff of the two texts old and new in the “unified diff” format.
Flash builds and flashes the built binary to the given serial port.
ListSerialPort returns serial port information and any detected TinyGo target.
Monitor connects to the given port and reads/writes the serial port.
Run compiles and runs the given program.
Test runs the tests in the given package.

# Constants

ANSI escape codes for terminal colors.
ANSI escape codes for terminal colors.

# Structs

ColorWriter wraps an io.Writer but adds a prefix and a terminal color.
SerialPortInfo is a structure that holds information about the port and its associated TargetSpec.