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Shelley Xin edited this page May 15, 2020 · 88 revisions

The Go project's official download page is at https://golang.org/dl.

After downloading a binary release suitable for your system, you can install go by following the official installation instructions at https://golang.org/doc/install.

There are some other options for Debian based systems like Ubuntu. These packages were not created by the Go project, and we don't support them, but they may be useful for you.

If you're using Ubuntu 18.04 LTS or 19.10 on amd64, arm64, armhf or i386, then you can use the longsleep/golang-backports PPA and install Go 1.14.

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:longsleep/golang-backports
sudo apt update
sudo apt install golang-go

For Ubuntu 20.04 LTS, you can install Go 1.14 directly with sudo apt install golang-1.14-go.

Note that golang-go installs latest Go as default Go. If you do not want that, install golang-1.14 instead and use the binaries from /usr/lib/go-1.14/bin.

If that's too new for you, try: (Ubuntu 19.04 max, 19.10 not supported)

$ sudo add-apt-repository ppa:gophers/archive
$ sudo apt update
$ sudo apt install golang-1.11-go

Note that golang-1.11-go puts binaries in /usr/lib/go-1.11/bin. If you want them on your PATH, you need to make that change yourself.

Using snaps also works quite well:

$ sudo snap install --classic go

A restart may or may not be required for the command to be recognized depending on your system.

Using getgo (proof-of-concept command-line installer for Go):

curl -LO https://get.golang.org/$(uname)/go_installer && chmod +x go_installer && ./go_installer && rm go_installer

Getgo will install the Go distribution (tools & stdlib) to "/.go" inside your home directory.

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