prometheus-adapter/vendor/github.com/elazarl/go-bindata-assetfs/README.md
Solly Ross a293b2bf94 Check in the vendor directory
Travis seems to be having issues pulling deps, so we'll have to check in
the vendor directory and prevent the makefile from trying to regenerate
it normally.
2018-07-13 17:32:49 -04:00

46 lines
1.3 KiB
Markdown

# go-bindata-assetfs
Serve embedded files from [jteeuwen/go-bindata](https://github.com/jteeuwen/go-bindata) with `net/http`.
[GoDoc](http://godoc.org/github.com/elazarl/go-bindata-assetfs)
### Installation
Install with
$ go get github.com/jteeuwen/go-bindata/...
$ go get github.com/elazarl/go-bindata-assetfs/...
### Creating embedded data
Usage is identical to [jteeuwen/go-bindata](https://github.com/jteeuwen/go-bindata) usage,
instead of running `go-bindata` run `go-bindata-assetfs`.
The tool will create a `bindata_assetfs.go` file, which contains the embedded data.
A typical use case is
$ go-bindata-assetfs data/...
### Using assetFS in your code
The generated file provides an `assetFS()` function that returns a `http.Filesystem`
wrapping the embedded files. What you usually want to do is:
http.Handle("/", http.FileServer(assetFS()))
This would run an HTTP server serving the embedded files.
## Without running binary tool
You can always just run the `go-bindata` tool, and then
use
import "github.com/elazarl/go-bindata-assetfs"
...
http.Handle("/",
http.FileServer(
&assetfs.AssetFS{Asset: Asset, AssetDir: AssetDir, AssetInfo: AssetInfo, Prefix: "data"}))
to serve files embedded from the `data` directory.