64

is there a way to auto-increment the version code each time you build an Android application in Eclipse?

According to http://developer.android.com/guide/publishing/versioning.html, you have to manually increment your version code in AndroidManifest.xml.

I understand, you have to run a script before each build which would, e.g. parse AndroidManifest.xml file, find the version number, increment it and save the file before the build itself starts. However, i couldn't find out how and if Eclipse supports runnings scripts before/after builds.

I have found this article about configuring ant builder, but this is not exactly about Android and I fear this will mess up too much the predefined building steps for Android?

Should be a common problem, how did you solve it?

Well, one can do this manually, but as soon as you forget to do this chore, you get different versions with the same number and the whole versioning makes little sense.

4
  • just thought, one could use commit hooks in the version control system to increment version code in the manifest or even just replace the version code with revision number. This might be also acceptable
    – iseeall
    Jul 20, 2011 at 7:58
  • looks like using SVN/CVS revision number would be the only way. Because if the script just increments the number in the manifest, builds done by different developers would have arbitrary increasing, unsynched numbers. Revision number is global.
    – iseeall
    Jul 20, 2011 at 8:45
  • you could do it with the custom_rules.xml in ant. see stackoverflow.com/a/20584169/1523910 on doing it in git
    – Avinash R
    Dec 14, 2013 at 16:47

15 Answers 15

113

I accomplished this. And here's how I did it for the next guy (using Eclipse):

1) Create an external console executable that is going to write a new version code to the AndroidManifest.xml: (mine is in C#)

using System.IO;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

namespace AndroidAutoIncrementVersionCode
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            try
            {
                string FILE = @"AndroidManifest.xml";
                string text = File.ReadAllText(FILE);
                Regex regex = new Regex(@"(?<A>android:versionCode="")(?<VER>\d+)(?<B>"")", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
                Match match = regex.Match(text);
                int verCode = int.Parse(match.Groups["VER"].Value) + 1;
                string newText = regex.Replace(text, "${A}" + verCode + "${B}", 1);

                File.WriteAllText(FILE, newText);
            }
            catch { }
        }
    }
}

aside: any c-sharp compiler can build this app, you don't need Visual Studio or even Windows

  1. if you don't have it already, install .NET runtime (Mono will work, link) (link to MS's .NET framework 2.0, 2.0 is the smallest download, any version >= 2.0 is fine)
  2. copy this code to a *.cs file (i named mine: AndroidAutoIncrementVersionCode.cs)
  3. open a command prompt and navigate over to where you made your *.cs file
  4. build the file using this command (on Windows, similar for Mono but change path to compiler): c:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v2.0.50727\csc AndroidAutoIncrementVersionCode.cs (see: .NET or Mono for more info)
  5. congrats, you just built a C# app without any tools, it should have generated AndroidAutoIncrementVersionCode.exe in the same directory automatically

    **mileage may vary, paths might be different, no purchase required, void where prohibited, i added this because C# is awesome, and people mistakenly think it has MS lock-in, you could just as easily translate this to another language (but i'm not going to do that for you ;). incidentally any version of any .NET compiler will work, i adapted the code for the least common denominator...*

end aside

2) Run the executable during the build process: a) Go to the project properties

go to project properties

b) In the properties, Go to "Builders" -> "New..."

Eclipse properties screen

c) Choose "Program"

choose program

d) In the "Main" tab select the program location (I also set the working directory to be safe) and give it a name if you wish.

edit configuration - main

e) In the "Refresh" tab select the "Refresh resources upon completion" and "The selected resource" option - this will refresh the manifest after we write it.

edit configuration - refresh

f) In the "Build Options" tab you can turn off "Allocate Console" as you have no input and output and then select only "During manual builds" and "During auto builds" deselect "After a Clean" if it is checked. Then select "Specify a working set of relevant resources" and click the "Specify Resources..." button. In the "Edit Working Set" dialog, locate your "AndroidManifest.xml" file in the dialog and check it, then hit "Finish"

edit configuration - build options edit working set

f) Now hit "OK" inside the "Edit Configuration Dialog" and in the properties for your App, select the newly created builder, and keep clicking "Up" until it is at the top of the list, this way the auto increment runs first, and doesn't trigger accidental out-of-sync states or rebuilds. Once the new builder you made is at the top of the list, click "OK" and you're finished.

edit configuration - hit ok enter image description here

12
  • 4
    great answer ! Works great for me. I enhanced it to also increase the "android:versionName" and also uploaded the executable itself for those less versed in C#.
    – thedrs
    Feb 6, 2012 at 22:40
  • 3
    Note the version name must be in the form of X.Y.Z, and Z is increased each time. Put the exe in the same location as the manifest.
    – thedrs
    Feb 6, 2012 at 22:50
  • Thanks, I was able to get this working on my Linux box using mono Jun 15, 2012 at 1:15
  • 1
    Like @thedrs, I tweaked this example to also update the versionName value (in the form of X.Y.Z). Source available at: gist.github.com/3131675
    – Jim Geurts
    Jul 17, 2012 at 20:06
  • 3
    That is great answer, HOWEVER I have a problem on Eclipse 4.2.2. Looks like every time the AndroidManifest.xml is changed, the project gets rebuilt. Because of auto increment program that causes an infinitive loop... I solved it by unchecking "during auto build"....
    – Tine M.
    Oct 28, 2013 at 9:51
9

This shell script, suitable for *nix systems, sets the versionCode and the last component of versionName to the current subversion revision. I'm using Netbeans with NBAndroid and I call this script from the target -pre-compile in custom_rules.xml.

Save this script in a file called incVersion in the same directory as AndroidManifest.xml, make it executable: chmod +x incVersion

manf=AndroidManifest.xml
newverfull=`svnversion`
newvers=`echo $newverfull | sed 's/[^0-9].*$//'`
vers=`sed -n '/versionCode=/s/.*"\([0-9][0-9]*\)".*/\1/p' $manf`
vername=`sed -n '/versionName=/s/.*"\([^"]*\)".*/\1/p' $manf`
verbase=`echo $vername | sed 's/\(.*\.\)\([0-9][0-9]*\).*$/\1/'`
newvername=$verbase$newverfull
sed /versionCode=/s/'"'$vers'"'/'"'$newvers'"'/ $manf | sed /versionName=/s/'"'$vername'"'/'"'$newvername'"'/  >new$manf && cp new$manf $manf && rm -f new$manf
echo versionCode=$newvers versionName=$newvername

Create or edit custom_rules.xml and add this:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project name="custom_rules">
    <xmlproperty file="AndroidManifest.xml" prefix="mymanifest" collapseAttributes="true"/>
    <target name="-pre-compile">
        <exec executable="./incVersion" failonerror="true"/>
    </target>
</project>

So if my current svn revision is 82, I end up with this in AndroidManifest.xml:

android:versionCode="82"
android:versionName="2.1.82">

When I want to release a new version I'll typically update the first parts of versionName, but even if I forget, the last part of versionName (which is exposed in my About activity) will always tell me what svn revision it was built from. Also, if I have not checked in changes, the revision number will be 82M and versionName will be something like 2.1.82M.

The advantage over simply incrementing the version number each time a build is done is that the number stays under control, and can be directly related to a specific svn revision. Very helpful when investigating bugs in other than the latest release.

7

FWIW, I was able to update the build version value in six lines of python:

#!/bin/env python
import os
from xml.dom.minidom import parse
dom1 = parse("AndroidManifest.xml")
dom1.documentElement.setAttribute("android:versionName","%build.number%")
f = os.open("AndroidManifest.xml", os.O_RDWR)
os.write( f, dom1.toxml() )
3
  • Thank you! And for me it is more self-explanatory and easier on the eyes than a dozen of screenshots.
    – ccpizza
    Aug 2, 2012 at 19:54
  • 9
    ... but doesn't tell anything about how to make it work in Eclipse, which was the question. May 16, 2013 at 16:09
  • I also want know how it run.
    – zszen
    Dec 12, 2014 at 9:09
6

Building on Charles' answer, the following increments the existing build version:

#!/usr/bin/python
from xml.dom.minidom import parse

dom1 = parse("AndroidManifest.xml")
oldVersion = dom1.documentElement.getAttribute("android:versionName")
versionNumbers = oldVersion.split('.')

versionNumbers[-1] = unicode(int(versionNumbers[-1]) + 1)
dom1.documentElement.setAttribute("android:versionName", u'.'.join(versionNumbers))

with open("AndroidManifest.xml", 'wb') as f:
    for line in dom1.toxml("utf-8"):
        f.write(line)
1
  • 2
    This is great, thank you so much! If running as a shell script, don't forget to add #!/usr/bin/python as the first line and make it executable: chmod +x buildincrease.py.
    – sulai
    Feb 6, 2013 at 8:50
4

So, I see it like this:

Depending on article that you present, use ant for this tasks (targets?).

  1. parse Manifest (parse XML)
  2. get old version form manifest and increase it/get version from repo
  3. store new version in manifest
  4. build android app.

But im my case I usually fill this field by value based on Tag's revision when I deploy or distribute application.

5
  • Yes, those are the steps the script should be. Unfortunately I can't find out where the script call should be. Building Android app from Eclipse doesn't use build.xml file. So, my question boils down to: where (in what file? in what Eclipse project setting?) to place the call of the script
    – iseeall
    Jul 20, 2011 at 9:05
  • Actually, if one uses CVS, such a script won't make versioning automatic. CVS doesn't support project-wide revision numers, that's why you used italic on Tag. But you then first have to create a CVS tag manually. Which means, if you forget to create a CVS tag, you end up with incorrect build number. This is essentially the same as just manually updating versionCode in AndroidManifest.xml, with the only advantage that the build number is also in synch with tag visible to other developers (well, it's in code anyway). Looks like real automation is not achievable if CVS is used.
    – iseeall
    Jul 20, 2011 at 9:44
  • 1
    Sorry, I don't directly use ant for build android apps. But that what I saw had a lot of code. Look at this link.
    – æ-ra-code
    Jul 20, 2011 at 10:27
  • You are right about CVS. Similar question
    – æ-ra-code
    Jul 20, 2011 at 10:36
  • Building and Running from the Command Line - not very informative.
    – æ-ra-code
    Jul 20, 2011 at 10:44
3

Receipe:

To automatically have the android:versionCode attribute of manifest element in AndroidManifest.xml set to the current time (from epoch in seconds, obtained from unix shell) everytime you run a build, add this to your -pre-build target in custom_rules.xml Android file.

<target name="-pre-build">
  <exec executable="date" outputproperty="CURRENT_TIMESTAMP">
    <arg value="+%s"/>
  </exec>
  <replaceregex file="AndroidMainfest.xml" match="android:versionCode=.*"
    replace='android:versionCode="${CURRENT_TIMESTAMP}"' />
</target>

Confirmation Test:

Obtain the versionCode attribute of the generated apk file, using the following shell command from your Android project directory :

$ANDROID_SDK/build-tools/20.0.0/aapt dump badging bin/<YourProjectName>.apk | grep versionCode

and compare it to the current date returned from the shell command: date +%s The difference should equal the period of time in seconds between the two confirmation steps above.

Advantages of this approach:

  1. Regardless of whether the build is started from command line or Eclipse, it will update the versionCode.
  2. The versionCode is guaranteed to be unique and increasing for each build
  3. The versionCode can be reverse-engineered into an approximate build time if you need it
  4. The above script replaces any present value of versionCode, even 0 and doesn't require a macro place holder (such as -build_id-).
  5. Because the value is updated in the AndroidManifest.xml file, you can check it in to version control and it will retain the actual value, not some macro (such as -build_id-).
0
2

Building on Rocky's answer I enhanced that python script a bit to increase also versionCode, works for me on Eclipse (integrated as per ckozl great tutorial) & Mac OSX

#!/usr/bin/python
from xml.dom.minidom import parse

dom1 = parse("AndroidManifest.xml")
oldVersion = dom1.documentElement.getAttribute("android:versionName")
oldVersionCode = dom1.documentElement.getAttribute("android:versionCode")
versionNumbers = oldVersion.split('.')

versionNumbers[-1] = unicode(int(versionNumbers[-1]) + 1)
dom1.documentElement.setAttribute("android:versionName", u'.'.join(versionNumbers))
dom1.documentElement.setAttribute("android:versionCode", str(int(oldVersionCode)+1))
with open("AndroidManifest.xml", 'wb') as f:
    for line in dom1.toxml("utf-8"):
        f.write(line)

also don't forget to chmod +x autoincrement.py and make sure you have correct path to python on the first line (depending on your environment) as sulai pointed out

1

I've done something similar but written it as a Desktop AIR app instead of some external C# (didn't feel installing another build system). Build this Flex/ActionScript app and change the path to your file, the build it as a standalone desktop app. It rewrites the 1.2.3 part of your file.

    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<s:WindowedApplication xmlns:fx="http://ns.adobe.com/mxml/2009"
                       xmlns:s="library://ns.adobe.com/flex/spark"
                       xmlns:mx="library://ns.adobe.com/flex/mx"
                       width="371" height="255" applicationComplete="Init();">
    <fx:Declarations>
        <!-- Place non-visual elements (e.g., services, value objects) here -->
    </fx:Declarations>

    <fx:Script>
        <![CDATA[

            public function Init():void
            {
                import flash.filesystem.File;
                import flash.filesystem.FileMode;
                import flash.filesystem.FileStream;

                var myFile:File = new File("D:\\Dropbox\\Projects\\My App\\src\\Main-app.xml");

                var fileStream:FileStream = new FileStream();
                fileStream.open(myFile, FileMode.READ);

                var fileContents:String = fileStream.readUTFBytes(fileStream.bytesAvailable);

                var startIndex:Number = fileContents.indexOf("<versionNumber>");
                var numberIndex:Number = startIndex + 15;
                var endIndex:Number = fileContents.indexOf("</versionNumber>");

                if (startIndex == -1 || endIndex == -1)
                    return;

                var versionNumber:String = fileContents.substr(numberIndex, endIndex - numberIndex);
                var versionArr:Array = versionNumber.split(".");
                var newSub:Number = Number(versionArr[2]);
                newSub++;
                versionArr[2] = newSub.toString();
                versionNumber = versionArr.join(".");

                var newContents:String = fileContents.substr(0, startIndex) + "<versionNumber>" + versionNumber + "</versionNumber>" +
                                fileContents.substr(endIndex + 16);
                fileStream.close(); 


                fileStream = new FileStream();
                fileStream.open(myFile, FileMode.WRITE);
                fileStream.writeUTFBytes(newContents);
                fileStream.close(); 

                close();
            }
        ]]>
    </fx:Script>
    <s:Label x="10" y="116" width="351" height="20" fontSize="17"
             text="Updating My App Version Number" textAlign="center"/>

</s:WindowedApplication>
1

I was able to work out my own solution from the information given. In case it is useful for someone here is my bash script for updating the versionCode and versionName attributes when using the GIT VCS on Linux.

My script to edit the AndroidManifest.xml file looks like this:

#/bin/bash

CODE=`git tag | grep -c ^v`
NAME=`git describe --dirty`
COMMITS=`echo ${NAME} | sed -e 's/v[0-9\.]*//'`

if [ "x${COMMITS}x" = "xx" ] ; then
    VERSION="${NAME}"
else
    BRANCH=" (`git branch | grep "^\*" | sed -e 's/^..//'`)"
    VERSION="${NAME}${BRANCH}"
fi

cat AndroidManifest.template.xml \\
    | sed -e "s/__CODE__/${CODE}/" \\
          -e   "s/__VERSION__/${VERSION}/" > AndroidManifest.xml

exit 0

It parses the template file (AndroidManifest.template.xml) and replaces the strings "__VERSION__" and "__CODE__" with more appropriate values:

  • "__CODE__" is replaced with a count of the number of tags in the Git repo which starts with a single lowercase V and is followed by a sequence of digits and dots. This looks like most version string like: "v0.5", "v1.1.4" and so on.
  • "__VERSION__" is replaced with a combination of the output from the "git describe" command and, if not a "clean" build, the branch on which it was built.

By a "clean" build I mean one where all the components are under version control and their is latest commit is tagged. "git describe --dirty" will report a version number based upon the last reachable annotated tag in your latest commit on the current branch. If there are commits since that tag a count of those commits is reported as is the abbreviated object name of your last commit. The "--dirty" option will append "-dirty" to the above information if any files are modified that are under version control have been modified.

So AndroidManifest.xml should not be under version control any more, and you should only edit the AndroidManifest.template.xml file. The start of your AndroidManifest.template.xml file looks something like this:

<manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android"
    package="com.example.packagename"
    android:versionCode="__CODE__"
    android:versionName="__VERSION__" >

Hope this is useful to someone

1
  • I use eclipse juno on windows for android development. I have copied the script shared above in a ".bat" file in my project folder and followed the steps mentioned to create a builder. Also created a AndroidManifest.template.xml with android:versionCode="CODE" android:versionName="VERSION" I change some value in my manifest and run the app, but i dont see any change in the version number/version code in my manifest; Please help me in understanding the problem :( Also, i use Sourcetree for GIT operations.
    – O__O
    Mar 28, 2015 at 2:00
1

All credit goes to ckoz, but I writed my own implementation in c#. I think it's a little faster and doesn't eat errors because If something goes wrong probably something is wrongly configured and I should know about it.

namespace AndroidVersionCodeAutoIncrement
{
    using System.IO;
    using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

    public class Program
    {
        private static readonly Regex VersionCodeRegex = new Regex("android:versionCode=\"(?<version>.*)\"", RegexOptions.Compiled);

        public static void Main()
        {
            using (var manifestFileStream = File.Open("AndroidManifest.xml", FileMode.Open, FileAccess.ReadWrite))
            using (var streamReader = new StreamReader(manifestFileStream))
            {
                var manifestFileText = streamReader.ReadToEnd();

                var firstMatch = VersionCodeRegex.Match(manifestFileText);
                if (firstMatch.Success)
                {
                    int versionCode;
                    var versionCodeValue = firstMatch.Groups["version"].Value;
                    if (int.TryParse(versionCodeValue, out versionCode))
                    {
                        manifestFileText = VersionCodeRegex.Replace(manifestFileText, "android:versionCode=\"" + (versionCode + 1) + "\"", 1);

                        using (var streamWriter = new StreamWriter(manifestFileStream))
                        {
                            manifestFileStream.Seek(0, SeekOrigin.Begin);
                            streamWriter.Write(manifestFileText);
                            manifestFileStream.SetLength(manifestFileText.Length);
                        }
                    }
                }
            }
        }
    }
}
1

For those that are on OSX and want to use Python, but not loose the XML formatting which when parsing is done by the python XML parser happens, here is a python script that will do the incremental based on regular expression, which keeps the formatting:

#!/usr/bin/python
import re

f = open('AndroidManifest.xml', 'r+')
text = f.read()

result = re.search(r'(?P<groupA>android:versionName=")(?P<version>.*)(?P<groupB>")',text)
version = str(float(result.group("version")) + 0.01)
newVersionString = result.group("groupA") + version + result.group("groupB")
newText = re.sub(r'android:versionName=".*"', newVersionString, text);
f.seek(0)
f.write(newText)
f.truncate()
f.close()

The code was based on @ckozl answer, just was done in python so you don't need to create an executable for this. Just name the script autoincrement.py, place it in the same folder with the manifest.xml file and then do the steps that ckozl did describe above!

0

If you want to update the AndroidManifest.xml to use a specific version number, perhaps from a build system, then you can use the project I just pushed to GitHub: https://github.com/bluebirdtech/AndroidManifestVersioner

It's a basic .NET command line app, usage:

AndroidManifestVersioner <path> <versionCode> <versionName>.

Thanks to other posters for their code.

0

Here is the Java version for what it's worth. Also handling multiple manifests.

String directory = "d:\\Android\\workspace\\";

String[] manifests = new String[] 
{
        "app-free\\AndroidManifest.xml",
        "app-donate\\AndroidManifest.xml",
};

public static void main(String[] args)
{
    new version_code().run();
}

public void run()
{
    int I = manifests.length;
    for(int i = 0; i < I; i++)
    {
        String path = directory + manifests[i];

        String content = readFile(path);
        Pattern         versionPattern = Pattern.compile( "(.*android:versionCode=\")([0-9]+)(\".*)", Pattern.DOTALL );
        Matcher m = versionPattern.matcher(content);

        if (m.matches())
        {
            int code = Integer.parseInt( m.group(2) ) + 1;

            System.out.println("Updating manifest " + path + " with versionCode=" + code);

            String newContent = m.replaceFirst("$1" + code + "$3");

            writeFile(path + ".original.txt", content);
            writeFile(path, newContent);
        }
        else
        {
            System.out.println("No match to update manifest " + path);
        }
    }
}
0

If you're using gradle then you can specific versionName and versionCode very easy in build.gradle. You can use git commit count as an increasing number to identify the build.

You can also use this library: https://github.com/rockerhieu/Versionberg.

0

There are two solutions I really like. The first depends on the Play Store and the other depends on Git.

Using the Play Store, you can increment the version code by looking at the highest available uploaded version code. The benefit of this solution is that an APK upload will never fail since your version code is always one higher than whatever is on the Play Store. The downside is that distributing your APK outside of the Play Store becomes more difficult. You can set this up using Gradle Play Publisher by following the quickstart guide and telling the plugin to resolve version codes automatically:

plugins {
    id 'com.android.application'
    id 'com.github.triplet.play' version 'x.x.x'
}

android {
    ...
}

play {
    serviceAccountCredentials = file("your-credentials.json")
    resolutionStrategy = "auto"
}

Using Git, you can increment the version code based on how many commits and tags your repository has. The benefit here is that your output is reproducible and doesn't depend on anything outside your repo. The downside is that you have to make a new commit or tag to bump your version code. You can set this up by adding the Version Master Gradle plugin:

plugins {
    id 'com.android.application'
    id 'com.supercilex.gradle.versions' version 'x.x.x'
}

android {
    ...
}

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