I've seen a lot of projects using v1.2.3
as the naming convention for tags in git. I've also seen some use 1.2.3
. Is there an officially endorsed style, or are there any good arguments for using either?
8 Answers
Version 1.0.0 of Semantic Versioning, by Tom Preston-Werner of GitHub fame, had a sub-specification addressing this:
Tagging Specification (SemVerTag)
This sub-specification SHOULD be used if you use a version control system (Git, Mercurial, SVN, etc) to store your code. Using this system allows automated tools to inspect your package and determine SemVer compliance and released versions.
- When tagging releases in a version control system, the tag for a version MUST be "vX.Y.Z" e.g. "v3.1.0".
However, after discussion this was removed, and is no longer present in the latest version of the SemVer spec (2.0.0 at the time of writing). A later discussion thread in the same place went into greater depth, and resulted in a new Is "v1.2.3" a semantic version? being added to the FAQ in SemVer's master
branch, although at the time of writing (over 2 years later) this change is still not present in the officially released spec.
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10Thanks - That's very close. I wish he would have qualified why the
v
should be there though.– troelsknJan 6, 2010 at 9:25 -
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4
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44Semantic Versioning 1.0.0 uses format "v1.2.3". Semantic Versioning 2.0.0-rc.1 probably uses format "1.2.3". Tagging Specification (SemVerTag) article was removed from specs. More here: semver.org Jan 29, 2013 at 10:34
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10This answer is done when existed old semver (version 1.0). Nowadays the prefix 'v' removed from semver v2.0. For details see post below.– vitaliiMay 19, 2015 at 9:17
There appear to be two dominating conventions (assuming you also abide by some reasonable standard for numbering the releases themselves):
v1.2.3
1.2.3
The advantages of v1.2.3
are that the Git documentation (and also the Mercurial documentation) uses that format in its examples, and that several "authorities" such as the Linux kernel and Git itself use it. (The mentioned Semantic Versioning used to use it but doesn't any more.)
The advantages of 1.2.3
are that gitweb or GitHub can automatically offer a tarball or zip download of the form packagename-$tag.tar.gz
(and I think it's quite established that a tarball should not be named package-v1.2.3.tar.gz
). Alternatively, you can use git describe
directly to generate tarball version numbers. For lightweight projects without a formal release process, these possibilities can be quite convenient. It should also be noted that Semantic Versioning is by no means the only or a universally accepted standard for version numbering. And notable projects such as GNOME as well as countless other projects do use the 1.2.3
tag naming.
I think it's probably too late to consolidate these positions. As always, be consistent and make sense.
Update: As mentioned in this comment, GitHub now offers a tarball name with the 'v' stripped off of the tag.
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13Regarding GitHub and tarball generation: it is not relevant anymore. They strip the 'v' off of the tag.– GermanSep 8, 2016 at 16:22
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7Prefixing 'v' is also quite useful when sorting tags in alphabetical order. Other tags may also exist; whether officially in a master repository or to track a developer's work locally. With 'v' prefixes the release tags form their own group, instead of being scattered all over the rest of the namespace. Mar 29, 2017 at 23:51
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1
The reason for the preceding 'v' is historical. Older SCCS (cvs,rcs) could not distinguish between a tag identifier and a revision number. Tag identifiers were restricted to not begin with a numeric value so that revision numbers could be detected.
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5+1: Good first answer and a name from one of my favourite books :-) Perhaps your next answer will be on a more current question, though. Jun 8, 2011 at 12:58
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1... but if this is only true for older SVCS, what if the point of this answer for a question about modern Git? May 12, 2012 at 12:09
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3this is still useful in git, so you can easily distinguish version tags, from other type of tags (tags are useful for many other things)– BenjaMar 5, 2013 at 13:01
Not that I know of.
But Git will not allow a tag and a branch of the same name at the same time, so if you have a branch "1.1
" for 1.1
works, do not put a tag "1.1
", use for instance "v1.1
"
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11
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1
New package managers advice to tag versions without prefix v
(like composer for PHP projects).
SemVer 2.0 has nothing about tag specification. It's done intentionally due avoiding conflicts. However it's advised to add prefix v
in documentation and text references. As example format v1.0.4
instead of full version 1.0.4
or ver. 1.0.4
is enough verbose and elegant in documentation.
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22“it's advised to …” Advised by who, and where can we see that advice in its original context?– bignoseDec 17, 2015 at 6:03
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@bignose Look how packagist or maven central parses the git repose. Preferable way is numbers only, however with v1.xx 'v' gets stripped off. I believe there are many more including debian/ubuntu. Packagist had article that they prever number tag in git and 'v' prefixed in documentation, however I can't find it now.– vitaliiMay 23 at 6:28
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“Packagist had article that they prever number tag in git and 'v' prefixed in documentation […]” — So that's a preference for those projects; not advice anyone need pay much attention, it seems.– bignoseMay 24 at 23:31
I don't know of any standards. I simply choose my tag names such that I can stick a
VERSION = `git describe --tags`
in my build scripts. So, the tag naming convention actually depends on the version naming convention of the project.
We use branches and tags for release-specific work followed by the actual release, respectively:
o---o-----o---o---o--- ... master
\ / /
\ / /
o-------o--- ... 1.6 branch
Every developer makes a mental decision about whether the work they're about to commit is applicable just to master or if it's also relevant to the branch. You can see that changes that are made to the branch are merged back on master, but some changes on master will never go on the branch (that is, those not intended for the 1.6 release, in this example).
When we're ready to release, we tag it and then merge back one last time, and we name the tag with the same name as the branch, but with an extra identifier about what particular version it is, e.g. "1.6-release" or "1.6-beta" or "1.6-rc2", et cetera.
... ------o---o---o--o---o--- ... master
/ /
/ /
... ---o------(*)--- ... 1.6 branch
1.6-release
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Thanks - that's a good answer for describing how you do branching, but I actually just meant if there were some specific (technical) reason for using a certain naming scheme in git. Still giving you an upvote for the nice diagrams though ;)– troelsknJan 5, 2010 at 18:52
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Ah, gotcha! Sorry for misunderstanding your question. No, there's no specific technical reason for using a particular name, other than human communication. You can name your branches and tags pretty much whatever you like. Jan 5, 2010 at 19:37
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Your release-1.6 branch is named "1.6 branch"? I thought spaces weren't supported in branch names. Jun 26, 2017 at 10:32
There is no one best practice I'm aware of. Here are some links:
- http://web.elctech.com/?p=79
- http://reinh.com/blog/2009/03/02/a-git-workflow-for-agile-teams.html#production-tagging
Generally, versioning (0.0.1
, v0.2.1
, ...) maybe hand in hand with some issue-tracking could be considered a plausible approach. (.. although I usually use v
-prefixed tag names .. see also @VonC answer)
v/
as this groups tags in a namespace. 2. ideally, a tag should also contain an acronym that uniquely identifies the app. e.g.v/myapp/1.0
. This makes git repository merging easier: in case apps would be merged, tags will not collide in the tag namespace.