#!/bin/bash #========================================================================= # vcs-version.sh [options] [src-dir] #========================================================================= # # -h Display this message # -v Verbose mode # # This script will create a version string by querying a version control # system. The string is appropriate for use in installations and # distributions. Currently this script assumes we are using git as our # version control system but it would be possible to check and see if we # are using an alternative version control system and create a version # string appropriately. # # The script uses git describe plus a few other git commands to create a # version strings in the following format: # # X.Y[-Z-gN][-dirty] # # where X is the major release, Y is the minor release, Z is the number # of commits since the X.Y release, N is an eight digit abbreviated SHA # hash of the most recent commit and the dirty suffix is appended when # the working directory used to create the installation or distribution # is not a pristine checkout. Here are some example version strings: # # 0.0 : initial import # 0.0-3-g99ef6933 : 3rd commit since initial import (N=99ef6933) # 1.0 : release 1.0 # 1.1-12-g3487ab12 : 12th commit since release 1.1 (N=3487ab12) # 1.1-12-g3487ab12-dirty : 12th commit since release 1.1 (N=3487ab12) # # The last example is from a dirty working directory. To find the last # release, the script looks for the last tag (does not need to be an # annotated tag, but probably should be) which matches the format rel-*. # If there is no such tag in the history, then the script uses 0.0 as # the release number and counts the total number of commits since the # original import for the commit count. # # If the current directory is not within the working directory, then the # path to the source directory should be supplied on the command line. # # Author : Christopher Batten # Date : August 5, 2009 set -e #------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Command line parsing #------------------------------------------------------------------------- if ( test "$1" = "-h" ); then echo "" sed -n '3p' $0 | sed -e 's/#//' sed -n '5,/^$/p' $0 | sed -e 's/#//' exit 1 fi # Source directory command line option src_dir="." if ( test -n "$1" ); then src_dir="$1" fi #------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Verify source directory #------------------------------------------------------------------------- # If the source directory is not a git working directory output a # question mark. A distribution will not be in a working directory, but # the build system should be structured such that this script is not # executed (and instead the version information should probably come # from configure). If the user does not specify a source directory use # the current directory. if !( git rev-parse --is-inside-work-tree &> /dev/null ); then echo "?" exit 1; fi top_dir=`git rev-parse --show-cdup` cd ./${top_dir} #------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Create the version string #------------------------------------------------------------------------- # See if we can do a describe based on a tag and if not use a default # release number of 0.0 so that we always get canonical version number if ( git describe --tags --match "rel-*" &> /dev/null ); then ver_str=`git describe --tags --match "rel-*" | sed 's/rel-//'` else ver_num="0.0" ver_commits=`git rev-list --all | wc -l | tr -d " "` ver_sha=`git describe --tags --match "rel-*" --always` ver_str="${ver_num}-${ver_commits}-g${ver_sha}" fi # Add a dirty suffix if working directory is dirty if !( git diff --quiet ); then ver_str="${ver_str}-dirty" else untracked=`git ls-files --directory --exclude-standard --others -t` if ( test -n "${untracked}" ); then ver_str="${ver_str}-dirty" fi fi # Output the final version string echo "${ver_str}" # Final exit status exit 0;