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I want to write a shell script in bash to deploy websites from an svn repository. When I deploy a website, I name the exported directory website_name-Rrevision_number. I'd like the bash script to automatically rename the exported directory, so it needs to learn the current revision number from the export directory. If I run

$> svn info http://svn-repository/trunk

Path: trunk
URL: http://svn-repository/mystery/trunk
Repository Root: http://svn-repository/mystery
Repository UUID: b809e6ab-5153-0410-a985-ac99030dffe6
Revision: 624
Node Kind: directory
Last Changed Author: author
Last Changed Rev: 624
Last Changed Date: 2010-02-19 15:48:16 -0500 (Fri, 19 Feb 2010)

The number after the string Revision: is what I want. How do I get that into a bash variable? Do I do string parsing of the output from the svn info command?

9 Answers 9

32

Use svnversion. This will output the revision number/range with minimal additional cruft

2
  • 1
    This only seems to work with local working copies. When I try with a remote URL (as in the original question), I get an error that says it doesn't exist. See also stackoverflow.com/questions/623378/…
    – JeffB
    Dec 23, 2016 at 2:39
  • it is server side, not client side
    – Sandburg
    Dec 7, 2018 at 9:19
26
REVISION=`svn info http://svn-repository/trunk |grep '^Revision:' | sed -e 's/^Revision: //'`

It's simple, if inelegant.

5
  • 12
    More succinctly put as: REVISION=svn info http://svn-repository/trunk | sed -ne 's/^Revision: //p' Feb 19, 2010 at 21:18
  • Yeah, I always forget about the -n option to sed. Feb 19, 2010 at 21:21
  • This is useful for more than just the revision number; I just used it to grab the repository URL. Jul 21, 2010 at 8:33
  • 3
    REVISION=`svn info http://svn-repository/trunk | sed -ne 's/^Revision: //p'` - You need to escape the literal backticks with a backspace.
    – l0b0
    Aug 22, 2012 at 9:02
  • Remeber to set output language before this command: LANG=C LC_MESSAGES=C
    – Nux
    Feb 17, 2016 at 14:17
6

Parsing the 'Revision' string is not portable across different locales. Eg. with my locale it is like:

...
Wersja: 6583
Rodzaj obiektu: katalog
Zlecenie: normalne
Autor ostatniej zmiany: ...
Ostatnio zmieniona wersja: 6583
Data ostatniej zmiany: 2013-03-21 11:33:44 +0100 (czw)
...

You don't wanna parse that :)

So, the best approach is to use 'svnversion' as oefe suggested. This is the tool mentioned for this purpose.

5

just use one awk command. much simpler as well.

var=$(svn info http://svn-repository/trunk | awk '/^Revision:/{print $2}')
1
  • Using awk for a search in line... bazooka style
    – Sandburg
    Dec 7, 2018 at 9:21
5

Without using sed, grep or awk:

REVISION=`svn info --show-item=revision --no-newline`
2
  • REVISION=svn info --show-item=revision --no-newline -r HEAD to get latest version on server
    – AndreyP
    Apr 29, 2021 at 11:24
  • Note that this is a revision that you checked out. When you checkout head this might include versions from other branches. So this is not a revision for the path you checkout.
    – Nux
    Jul 19, 2021 at 16:02
1
svn info http://svn-repository/trunk | grep Revision | tr -d 'Revison: '

Spits out the revision Use backticks in your shell script to execute this and assign the results to a variable:

REVISION=`svn info http://svn-repository/trunk | grep Revision | tr -d 'Revison: '`
0

There are probably a dozen different ways to do this, but I'd go with something simple like:

revision="$(svn info http://svn-repository/trunk | grep "^Revision:" | cut -c 11-)"
0

This will give you the head revision number

svn info -r 'HEAD' | grep Revision | egrep -o "[0-9]+"

egrep is extended grep.

0
REVISION=$(svn info http://svn-repository/trunk |grep '^Revision:' | sed -e 's/^Revision: //p')
echo $REVISION

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