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I want to add the current git revision number to the the binary built by go build so that I can do something like ./mybinary --revision to see which revision it is built from (usually for troubleshooting later on after deployment).

Obviously I cannot put the revision number into the source since that will change the source with a new revision.

I'm wondering if there is any other way to do this?
Or do you think this is just a bad idea? If so, what's the recommended way to establish the relation between built binaries and its source version?
Version numbers do not seem to be a good idea with a distributed version control system.

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5 Answers 5

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If you can get the git revision into $VERSION and have a variable named version (type string) in your main package, you can set it during the build with:

#!/bin/sh
VERSION=`git rev-parse --short HEAD`
go build -ldflags "-X main.version=$VERSION"  myfile.go
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  • That's pretty awesome. btw, git describe does great things (especially if you have tags)
    – Dustin
    Mar 31, 2013 at 3:34
  • I am getting error while building - -X flag requires argument of the form importpath.name=value
    – Vivek R
    Apr 6, 2017 at 11:16
  • @VivekR Thanks for the comment, I have fixed my answer.
    – topskip
    Apr 7, 2017 at 6:50
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The normal process should no longer involve any ldflags, starting with Go 1.18 (Q4 2021/Q1 2022).

See issue 37475 and CL 356013

The go command now embeds version control information in binaries including the currently checked-out revision and a flag indicating whether edited or untracked files are present.

Version control information is embedded if the go command is invoked in a directory within a Git or Mercurial repository, and the main package and its containing main module are in the same repository.
This information may be omitted using the flag -buildvcs=false.

Additionally, the go command embeds information about:

  • the build including build and tool tags (set with -tags),
  • compiler,
  • assembler, and
  • linker flags (like -gcflags),
  • whether cgo was enabled, and if it was, the values of the cgo environment variables (like CGO_CFLAGS).

This information may be omitted using the flag -buildinfo=false.

Both VCS and build information may be read together with module information using:

  • go version -m file or
  • runtime/debug.ReadBuildInfo (for the currently running binary) or
  • the new debug/buildinfo package.

CL 373875 adds

  • The BuildInfo struct has new fields with additional information about how the binary was built.
  • The new GoVersion field holds the version of Go used to build the binary.
  • The new Settings field is a slice of BuildSettings structs holding key/value pairs describing the build.
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I'd create a version.go file with a single var version string and then process that before a call to go build and reset it after. In other words, go doesn't support any type of code generation so you'll need to rely on something external to do this.

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  • This is useful to handle semantic versioning via git tags. One option to alter version.go is with sed: sed -i 's/var Version = .*/var Version = "'$(git describe --always)'"/' path/to/version.go
    – J. Pelaez
    Jan 13, 2023 at 14:01
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For all and any versioned in Git code most obvious way for getting identification-string for any changeset (while I leave to you task of displaying this string on --revision options) is

  • using (at least sporadically) tags
  • git describe (with relevant options) on build stage
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You would generally use tags (also known as labels in other version control systems) to note the files that make up a particular build. http://git-scm.com/book/en/Git-Basics-Tagging. I typically make tags that include the version and build date. For example v1.2_29Mar2013. If I have several products that can be built from the same code base I'll include something to identify which product.

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