go list -m all stdout '^example.net/m v0.1.0 ' ! stdout '^example.net/m/p ' cp go.mod go.mod.orig # Upgrading example.net/m/p without also upgrading example.net/m # causes the import of package example.net/m/p to be ambiguous. # # TODO(#27899): Should we automatically upgrade example.net/m to v0.2.0 # to resolve the conflict? ! go get example.net/m/p@v1.0.0 stderr '^go: example.net/m/p: ambiguous import: found package example.net/m/p in multiple modules:\n\texample.net/m v0.1.0 \(.*[/\\]m1[/\\]p\)\n\texample.net/m/p v1.0.0 \(.*[/\\]p0\)\n\z' cmp go.mod go.mod.orig # Upgrading both modules simultaneously resolves the ambiguous upgrade. # Note that this command line mixes a module path (example.net/m) # and a package path (example.net/m/p) in the same command. go get example.net/m@v0.2.0 example.net/m/p@v1.0.0 go list -m all stdout '^example.net/m v0.2.0 ' stdout '^example.net/m/p v1.0.0 ' -- go.mod -- module example.net/importer go 1.16 require ( example.net/m v0.1.0 ) replace ( example.net/m v0.1.0 => ./m1 example.net/m v0.2.0 => ./m2 example.net/m/p v1.0.0 => ./p0 ) -- importer.go -- package importer import _ "example.net/m/p" -- m1/go.mod -- module example.net/m go 1.16 -- m1/p/p.go -- package p -- m2/go.mod -- module example.net/m go 1.16 -- m2/README.txt -- Package p has been moved to module …/m/p. Module …/m/p does not require any version of module …/m. -- p0/go.mod -- module example.net/m/p go 1.16 -- p0/p.go -- package p