There are some subtleties to this because of the nature of Git. The way I've done this is by copying what the Git developers themselves do. First, you'll want to use annotated tags which is probably a good idea anyway. To review, you can create a new tag like this:
$ git tag -a -m "Version 0.2" v0.2 HEAD
Then (as suggested in Otto's post) you can use git describe
for a useful "version" string that will include the number of commits since the tag and the leading digits of the sha1 of the the current commit. Here's an example from one of my projects:
$ git describe
v1.0-3-gee47184
That is, this copy is 3 commits ahead of the "v1.0" tag and the commit sha1 begins with ee47184 (I'm not sure why they include that leading 'g').
The Git developers take it one step further and also include an extra bit if the working copy is modified (uncommitted). This requires a few more steps so it's all wrapped up in a script they name VERSION-GEN
. When run, it prints the version string to standard output and also creates a VERSION-FILE
file (the script is careful to not re-touch that file if the version hasn't changed -- so it's build-tool friendly). Then, you can include that VERSION-FILE
file in your source code, help files, etc.
Using my example VERSION-GEN
script (below), my version string for the above example is:
$ VERSION-GEN
version: 1.0-3-gee47
If I modify any of the tracked files it looks like this:
$ VERSION-GEN
version: 1.0-3-gee47-mod
Here's my slightly tweaked version of VERSION-GEN
. Note that it expects that the tags marking versions are of the form v[0-9]* (e.g., v1.0 or v0.2 or v12.3.4 or v12.2-4feb2009 etc.)
#!/bin/sh
# Tag revisions like this:
# $ git tag -a -m "Version 0.2" v0.2 HEAD
VF=VERSION-FILE
DEFAULT_VERSION=UKNOWN
LF='
'
# First see if there is a version file (included in release tarballs),
# then try git-describe, then default.
if test -d .git -o -f .git &&
VN=$(git describe --abbrev=4 HEAD 2>/dev/null) &&
case "$VN" in
*$LF*) (exit 1) ;;
v[0-9]*)
git update-index -q --refresh
test -z "$(git diff-index --name-only HEAD --)" ||
VN="$VN-mod" ;;
esac
then
continue
#VN=$(echo "$VN" | sed -e 's/-/./g');
else
VN="$DEFAULT_VERSION"
fi
VN=$(expr "$VN" : v*'\(.*\)')
# Show the version to the user via stderr
echo >&2 "version: $VN"
# Parse the existing VERSION-FILE
if test -r $VF
then
VC=$(sed -e 's/^version: //' <$VF)
else
VC=unset
fi
# If version has changed, update VERSION-FILE
test "$VN" = "$VC" || {
echo "version: $VN" >$VF
echo >&2 "($VF updated)"
}