I'm trying to run this couple of lines to get the git commit in a makefile, outside of any recipe
GIT_VERSION := $(shell cd "C:\Users\made\up\filepath" && git describe --always)
$(info GIT_VERSION is '$(GIT_VERSION)')
But it always prints GIT_VERSION is ''
However, if I run
PWD := $(shell cd "C:\Users\made\up\filepath" && pwd)
$(info PWD is $(PWD))
it prints out PWD is /cygdrive/c/Users/made/up/filepath
as I might expect.
This led me to think there was something wrong with the shell the makefile was using. SHELL := $(shell echo $$SHELL)
gives /bin/bash
, which I note is different from the /usr/bin/bash
that opening a git-bash shell gives me, although I'm not sure how to interpret this, being on Windows. Any clue how I can start getting some output from the git
call?
update: still struggling with this. Have tried the -C
git option as reccommended in comments, wrapping in eval, still getting nothing in GIT_VERSION
PWD
is dangerous, becausePWD
is reset every time you usecd
.git
's-C
option to tell it where to look?GIT_VERSION := $(shell git -C "C:\Users\made\up\filepath" describe --always)
. Aside from minimizing use ofcd
being a good practice, that has the advantage that it will induce an error message instead of failing silently if the target directory does not exist or is inaccessible.git
always fails silently in this shellset +x
inside your shell command, to make it print the commands it runs to stderr (or other chosen bash file descriptor, if using bash, where-x
is fancy and configurable). Meanwhile, note that it's a good idea to use forward slashes so that you don't have to quote some of your backslashes.git describe
in a directory that's not in any repository Git can recognize.