170

Is there a quick way to determine the version of the Boost C++ libraries on a system?

15 Answers 15

106

Boost Informational Macros. You need: BOOST_VERSION

4
  • 85
    If you want to figure it out manually (rather than in-code), the go to the include directory, and open up version.hpp. BOOST_VERSION takes a bit of deciphering, but BOOST_LIB_VERSION is pretty clear. The value of mine is currently "1_42"
    – T.E.D.
    Commented Sep 14, 2010 at 12:44
  • 4
    In linux, using "ldd yourprogramname" will often show you which version of boost was linked to your program (which has the possibility of indicating a difference from the header, though it's unlikely to be different).
    – Homer6
    Commented Aug 21, 2013 at 21:36
  • 12
    Also in linux, dpkg -S /usr/include/boost/version.hpp
    – Efreeto
    Commented Apr 29, 2016 at 17:13
  • 13
    You can quickly look up the current value via e.g. echo -e '#include <boost/version.hpp>\nBOOST_VERSION' | gcc -x c++ -E - - for example on Fedora 26: 106300 (i.e. 1.63) Commented Jul 22, 2017 at 14:07
92

Include #include <boost/version.hpp>

std::cout << "Using Boost "     
          << BOOST_VERSION / 100000     << "."  // major version
          << BOOST_VERSION / 100 % 1000 << "."  // minor version
          << BOOST_VERSION % 100                // patch level
          << std::endl;

Possible output: Using Boost 1.75.0

Tested with Boost 1.51.0 to 1.63, 1.71.0 and 1.76.0 to 1.83.0

4
  • 5
    what a dedication sir @Vertexwahn Commented Jul 16, 2015 at 7:30
  • 4
    To break @Vertexwahn 's streak: Works also with 1.60.0 and 1.61.0.
    – m8mble
    Commented Jul 7, 2016 at 11:48
  • 4
    @Vertexwahn They should hire you for any kind of release changes. Commented Dec 27, 2016 at 23:48
  • 16
    Why don't you just update your answer with something like: 'Works with all Boost versions (tested version 1.51 to 1.63 ).' - instead of overflowing the comment section ... Commented Jul 22, 2017 at 14:00
77

If you only need to know for your own information, just look in /usr/include/boost/version.hpp (Ubuntu 13.10) and read the information directly

47
#include <boost/version.hpp>
#include <iostream>

int main()
{
    std::cout << "Boost version: " 
          << BOOST_VERSION / 100000
          << "."
          << BOOST_VERSION / 100 % 1000
          << "."
          << BOOST_VERSION % 100 
          << std::endl;
    return 0;
}

Update: the answer has been fixed.

6
  • 24
    Why not just: std::cout << "Boost version: " << BOOST_LIB_VERSION;?
    – T.E.D.
    Commented Sep 14, 2010 at 12:46
  • 6
    Running this code outputted "Boost version: 0.199.60" whereas T.E.D.'s version outputted "Boost version: 1_48"
    – Homer6
    Commented Aug 21, 2013 at 21:20
  • 5
    This doesn't work. Why would any one upvote this? Has anybody actually run this code and gotten useful output? I guess people see "hex" and figure it must be correct.
    – JDiMatteo
    Commented Oct 9, 2014 at 22:24
  • 1
    This is not correct. Boost version is stored decimally, not hexagonally.
    – Maciek D.
    Commented Oct 30, 2015 at 9:30
  • 2
    Except now it's just the same thing as the other answer...
    – eis
    Commented May 12, 2016 at 13:53
25

Depending on how you have installed boost and what OS you are running you could also try the following:

dpkg -s libboost-dev | grep 'Version'
1
  • Is libboost-dev the same as "boost"? Because I have a lot in /usr/include/boost but your command gives is not installed.
    – bomben
    Commented Sep 4, 2019 at 8:12
9

Boost installed on OS X using homebrew has desired version.hpp file in /usr/local/Cellar/boost/<version>/include/boost/version.hpp (note, that the version is already mentioned in path).

I guess the fastest way to determine version on any UNIX-like system will be to search for boost in /usr:

find /usr -name "boost"

1
  • My include was empty so I used the version at the end of the lib files: find / -name *boost*.so* 2>/dev/null
    – theSparky
    Commented Mar 22 at 15:57
6

As to me, you can first(find version.hpp the version variable is in it, if you know where it is(in ubuntu it usually in /usr/include/boost/version.hpp by default install)):

 locate `boost/version.hpp`

Second show it's version by:

 grep BOOST_LIB_VERSION /usr/include/boost/version.hpp

or

  grep BOOST_VERSION /usr/include/boost/version.hpp.

As to me, I have two version boost installed in my system. Output as below:

xy@xy:~$ locate boost/version.hpp |grep boost

/home/xy/boost_install/boost_1_61_0/boost/version.hpp
/home/xy/boost_install/lib/include/boost/version.hpp
/usr/include/boost/version.hpp

xy@xy:~$ grep BOOST_VERSION /usr/include/boost/version.hpp
#ifndef BOOST_VERSION_HPP
#define BOOST_VERSION_HPP
//  BOOST_VERSION % 100 is the patch level
//  BOOST_VERSION / 100 % 1000 is the minor version
//  BOOST_VERSION / 100000 is the major version
#define BOOST_VERSION 105800
//  BOOST_LIB_VERSION must be defined to be the same as BOOST_VERSION

# or this way more readable
xy@xy:~$ grep BOOST_LIB_VERSION /usr/include/boost/version.hpp
//  BOOST_LIB_VERSION must be defined to be the same as BOOST_VERSION
#define BOOST_LIB_VERSION "1_58"

Show local installed version:

xy@xy:~$ grep BOOST_LIB_VERSION /home/xy/boost_install/lib/include/boost/version.hpp
//  BOOST_LIB_VERSION must be defined to be the same as BOOST_VERSION
#define BOOST_LIB_VERSION "1_61"
6

I stugeled to find out the boost version number in bash.

Ended up doing following, which stores the version code in a variable, supressing the errors. This uses the example from maxschlepzig in the comments of the accepted answer. (Can not comment, don't have 50 Rep)

I know this has been answered long time ago. But I couldn't find how to do it in bash anywhere. So I thought this might help someone with the same problem. Also this should work no matter where boost is installed, as long as the comiler can find it. And it will give you the version number that is acutally used by the comiler, when you have multiple versions installed.

{
VERS=$(echo -e '#include <boost/version.hpp>\nBOOST_VERSION' | gcc -s -x c++ -E - | grep "^[^#;]")
} &> /dev/null
1
  • 2
    Nice approach and like that it uses <boost/version.hpp> rather than explicit path.
    – hashlock
    Commented Sep 23, 2019 at 8:41
6

@Vertexwahns answer, but written in bash. For the people who are lazy:

boost_version=$(cat /usr/include/boost/version.hpp | grep define | grep "BOOST_VERSION " | cut -d' ' -f3)
echo "installed boost version: $(echo "$boost_version / 100000" | bc).$(echo "$boost_version / 100 % 1000" | bc).$(echo "$boost_version % 100 " | bc)"

Gives me installed boost version: 1.71.0

4

Another way to get current boost version (Linux Ubuntu):

~$ dpkg -s libboost-dev | grep Version
Version: 1.58.0.1ubuntu1

Ref: https://www.osetc.com/en/how-to-install-boost-on-ubuntu-16-04-18-04-linux.html

3

cat /usr/local/include/boost/version.hpp | grep BOOST_LIB_VERSION

1
  • please elaborate Commented Jan 21, 2021 at 5:53
1

If one installed boost on macOS via Homebrew, one is likely to see the installed boost version(s) with:

ls /usr/local/Cellar/boost*
0

Might be already answered, but you can try this simple program to determine if and what installation of boost you have :

#include<boost/version.hpp>
#include<iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
cout<<BOOST_VERSION<<endl;
return 0;
}
1
  • 10
    It has already been answered, almost a decade ago, and you can plainly see that by simply reading this page. Commented Mar 20, 2018 at 16:09
0

All the answers above are pretty good. However, I wondered if I can type in my terminal simple command boost --version just like I usually do for any other tool. So I implemented it in C++:

#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <boost/version.hpp>

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    if (argc >= 2) {
        if (std::string arg(argv[1]); arg == "--version" || arg == "-v") {
            auto major_version = BOOST_VERSION / 100000;
            auto minor_version = BOOST_VERSION / 100 % 1000;
            auto patch_version = BOOST_VERSION % 100;

            std::cout   
                << "Boost library version: "
                << major_version << '.'
                << minor_version << '.'
                << patch_version << '\n';
        }
        else if (arg == "--help" || arg == "-h") {
            std::cout
                << "This is small helper utility to figure out installed Boost version.\n"
                << "Use --version parameter to print installed Boost library version.\n\n"
                << "Boost is a set of libraries for the C++ programming language that provides\n"
                << "support for tasks and structures such as linear algebra, pseudorandom number\n"
                << "generation, multithreading, image processing, regular expressions, and unit testing.\n"
                << "If you want to know more about Boost please visit https://www.boost.org\n";
        }
        else {
            std::cout
                << "Unknown parameter " << arg 
                << ". Use --version or --help as a parameter instead.\n";
        }
    }
}

Then I built it using following command:
g++ -Wextra -Wall -pedantic -std=c++20 main.cpp -o boost
to get executable named just "boost". When it has been done I copied this executable to my /usr/bin using following command:
sudo cp -r ./boost /usr/bin
Since then I'm able to type in my terminal boost --version to figure out installed Boost version.

0

Can it really be that no one has suggested that, at least from the advent of Boost Predef with Boost 1.55.0, we can:

#include <boost/predef.h>
#include <boost/version.hpp>
...
#if BOOST_VERSION < BOOST_VERSION_NUMBER(1, 67, 0)

... if we wanted, for example, to know whether a work around was needed for this ~2038 problem in Boost DateTime? Perhaps it's a minority-interest reading of the question, but it's the one that brought me here.

No, and it's as well they shouldn't, because it doesn't work. The BOOST_VERSION_NUMBER macro from Boost Predef is incompatible with Boost's own version number! I don't see that documented as recently as Boost 1.84.0. I like the two stage idea, though, so I'll use:

#include <boost/version.hpp>
...
#define BOOSTS_OWN_VERSION_NUMBER(major, minor, patch) ((major) * 100 * 1000 + (minor) * 100 + (patch))
#if BOOST_VERSION < BOOSTS_OWN_VERSION_NUMBER(1, 67, 0)

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