Open your terminal and type:
nano ~/.bashrc Add the following line to the bottom of the file: xk6 command not found
go install go.k6.io/xk6/cmd/xk6@latest Once this process completes without errors, xk6 has been compiled. However, this is the precise moment where the "xk6 command not found" error usually strikes. The binary is created, but your shell doesn't know where to look for it. By default, Go places compiled binaries in a specific directory. You must add this directory to your system PATH. Open your terminal and type: nano ~/
While there isn't always an official Scoop manifest for xk6 specifically, ensuring your Go environment is managed by Scoop ( scoop install go ) often fixes PATH issues automatically for subsequent go install commands. Troubleshooting: Why is it Still Not Working? You have installed Go, ran the install command, and updated your PATH, yet xk6 still returns "command not found". Here is a troubleshooting checklist. 1. Check Where the Binary Actually Is Sometimes Go puts the binary in a different location than expected. Run this command to see where Go is putting executables: By default, Go places compiled binaries in a
Run the following command:
Open your shell configuration file. This is usually .bashrc , .zshrc , or .profile located in your home directory.
The modern landscape of load testing has been revolutionized by k6, a developer-centric performance testing tool written in Go. As testing requirements grow more complex, users often turn to xk6 —a powerful extension builder for k6—to integrate custom functionality. However, a common stumbling block halts many developers before they even begin: the dreaded "xk6 command not found" error.