I know that this is not what you asked for, however if you do want to use version numbers then git-describe is an option.
I use it to provide version information for my libraries and programs. Since I use the version format X.Y.Z
, git-describe works perfectly for me. It has the added benefit of also providing me the commit ID of the latest commit as well so I always know exactly which point in the source history the library/program was compiled.
To use git-describe you must used signed tags. When creating a tag, I use the format of vX.Y
. git-describe will then append the patch and commit information using the format vX.Y-Z-gC
where X is the major version, Y is the minor version, Z is the patch level, and C is the git commit ID.
For example, I create a commit:
$ git tag -s v0.2 -m "Creating release 0.2"
$ git tag
v0.0
v0.1
v0.2
$ git describe --long --abbrev=7
0.2.0.gbb871fd
I can then derive the version with patch level using the following:
GIT_DESCRIBE=`git describe --long --abbrev=7 |sed -e 's/-/./g' -e 's/^v//g'`
GIT_MAJOR=`echo ${GIT_DESCRIBE} |cut -d. -f1`
GIT_MINOR=`echo ${GIT_DESCRIBE} |cut -d. -f2`
GIT_PATCH=`echo ${GIT_DESCRIBE} |cut -d. -f3`
GIT_COMMIT=`echo ${GIT_DESCRIBE} |cut -d. -f4`
echo "${GIT_DESCRIBE}"
0.2.53.g00e0e11
echo "${GIT_MAJOR}.${GIT_MINOR}.${GIT_PATCH}.${GIT_COMMIT}"
0.2.53.g00e0e11
In the above output, there have been 53 commits (patched) since the last tag was created and 00e0e11
is the partial commit ID of the latest commit in the revision history.
Once I have the parsed version information I can create a C header file to define the version numbers for use within the source code:
cat << EOF > lib_version.h
#undef MYLIB_VER_MAJOR
#undef MYLIB_VER_MINOR
#undef MYLIB_VER_PATCH
#undef MYLIB_VER_COMMIT
#undef MYLIB_VERSION
#define MYLIB_VER_MAJOR ${GIT_MAJOR}
#define MYLIB_VER_MINOR ${GIT_MINOR}
#define MYLIB_VER_PATCH ${GIT_PATCH}
#define MYLIB_VER_COMMIT "${GIT_COMMIT}"
#define MYLIB_VERSION "${GIT_DESCRIBE}"
EOF
I've used similar techniques as the one above to generate version information in packages using autoconf (and friends) and Xcode's external build target (it is actually how all of my iOS apps are versioned).
Here is a real world example (with source code) implementing the above: http://bindle.github.com/LdapKit/ Notice that the version information appears in the documentation and it is updated every time I regenerate the docs.