You are a Go architect setting up dependency injection. You keep the container at the composition root, depend on interfaces not concrete types, and treat provider errors as first-class failures.
Using samber/do for Dependency Injection in Go
Type-safe dependency injection toolkit for Go based on Go 1.18+ generics.
Official Resources:
pkg.go.dev/github.com/samber/do/v2
do.samber.dev
github.com/samber/do/v2
This skill is not exhaustive. Please refer to library documentation and code examples for more information. Context7 can help as a discoverability platform.
DO NOT USE v1 OF THIS LIBRARY. INSTALL v2 INSTEAD:
go get
-u
github.com/samber/do/v2
Core Concepts
The Injector (Container)
import
"github.com/samber/do/v2"
injector
:=
do
.
New
(
)
Service Types
Lazy
(default): Created when first requested
Eager
Created immediately when the container starts
Transient
New instance created on every request
Value
Pre-created value, no instantiation
Provider Functions
Services MUST be registered via provider functions:
type
Provider
[
T any
]
func
(
i Injector
)
(
T
,
error
)
Basic Usage
1. Define and Register Services
Follow "Accept Interfaces, Return Structs":
// Register a service (lazy by default)
do
.
Provide
(
injector
,
func
(
i do
.
Injector
)
(
Database
,
error
)
{
return
&
PostgreSQLDatabase
{
connString
:
"postgres://..."
}
,
nil
}
)
// Register a pre-created value
do
.
ProvideValue
(
injector
,
&
Config
{
Port
:
8080
}
)
// Register a transient service (new instance each time)
do
.
ProvideTransient
(
injector
,
func
(
i do
.
Injector
)
(
*
Logger
,
error
)
{
return
&
Logger
{
}
,
nil
}
)
// Register an eager service (created immediately)
do
.
Provide
(
injector
,
do
.
Eager
(
&
Config
{
Port
:
8080
}
)
)
2. Invoke Services
The container MUST only be accessed at the composition root:
// Invoke with error handling
db
,
err
:=
do
.
Invoke
[
Database
]
(
injector
)
// MustInvoke panics on error (use when confident service exists)
db
:=
do
.
MustInvoke
[
Database
]
(
injector
)
3. Service Dependencies
func
NewUserService
(
i do
.
Injector
)
(
UserService
,
error
)
{
db
:=
do
.
MustInvoke
[
Database
]
(
i
)
cache
:=
do
.
MustInvoke
[
Cache
]
(
i
)
return
&
userService
{
db
:
db
,
cache
:
cache
}
,
nil
}
do
.
Provide
(
injector
,
NewUserService
)
4. Implicit Aliasing (Preferred)
Register a concrete type and invoke as an interface without explicit aliasing:
// Register concrete type
do
.
Provide
(
injector
,
func
(
i do
.
Injector
)
(
*
PostgreSQLDatabase
,
error
)
{
return
&
PostgreSQLDatabase
{
}
,
nil
}
)
// Invoke directly as interface (implicit aliasing)
db
:=
do
.
MustInvokeAs
[
Database
]
(
injector
)
5. Named Services
Register multiple services of the same type:
do
.
ProvideNamed
(
injector
,
"primary-db"
,
func
(
i do
.
Injector
)
(
*
Database
,
error
)
{
return
&
Database
{
URL
:
"postgres://primary..."
}
,
nil
}
)
mainDB
:=
do
.
MustInvokeNamed
[
*
Database
]
(
injector
,
"primary-db"
)
Package Organization
Use
do.Package()
to organize service registration by module:
// infrastructure/package.go
var
Package
=
do
.
Package
(
do
.
Lazy
(
func
(
i do
.
Injector
)
(
*
postgres
.
DB
,
error
)
{
cfg
:=
do
.
MustInvoke
[
*
Config
]
(
i
)
return
postgres
.
Connect
(
cfg
.
DatabaseURL
)
}
)
,
do
.
Lazy
(
func
(
i do
.
Injector
)
(
*
redis
.
Client
,
error
)
{
cfg
:=
do
.
MustInvoke
[
*
Config
]
(
i
)
return
redis
.
NewClient
(
cfg
.
RedisURL
)
,
nil
}
)
,
)
// main.go
injector
:=
do
.
New
(
infrastructure
.
Package
,
service
.
Package
)
Full Application Setup
func
main
(
)
{
injector
:=
do
.
New
(
infrastructure
.
Package
,
repository
.
Package
,
service
.
Package
,
transport
.
Package
,
)
server
:=
do
.
MustInvoke
[
*
http
.
Server
]
(
injector
)
go
server
.
ListenAndServe
(
)
_
=
injector
.
ShutdownOnSignalsWithContext
(
context
.
Background
(
)
,
os
.
Interrupt
)
}
Best Practices
Depend on interfaces, not concrete types — lets you swap implementations in tests without touching production code
Each service should have one job — services with multiple responsibilities are harder to test and harder to replace
Keep dependency trees shallow — chains beyond 3-4 levels make initialization order fragile and errors harder to trace
Handle errors in provider functions — a silently failing provider creates a broken service that crashes later in unexpected places
Use scopes to organize services by lifecycle — request-scoped services prevent leaks, global services prevent redundant initialization
For scopes, lifecycle management, struct injection, and debugging, see
Advanced Usage
.
For testing patterns (cloning, overrides, mocks), see
Testing
.
Quick Reference
Registration
Function
Purpose
do.ProvideT
Register lazy service (default)
do.ProvideNamedT
Register named lazy service
do.ProvideValueT
Register pre-created value
do.ProvideNamedValueT
Register named value
do.ProvideTransientT
Register new instance each time
do.ProvideNamedTransientT
Register named transient service
do.Package()
Group service registrations
Invocation
Function
Purpose
do.InvokeT
Get service (with error)
do.InvokeNamedT
Get named service
do.InvokeAsT
Get first service matching interface
do.InvokeStructT
Inject into struct fields using tags
do.MustInvokeT
Get service (panic on error)
do.MustInvokeNamedT
Get named service (panic on error)
do.MustInvokeAsT
Get service by interface (panic on error)
do.MustInvokeStructT
Inject into struct (panic on error)
Cross-References
→ See
samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-dependency-injection
skill for DI concepts, comparison, and when to adopt a DI library
→ See
samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-structs-interfaces
skill for interface design patterns
→ See
samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-testing
skill for general testing patterns