diff options
author | Boris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com> | 2017-08-25 10:18:29 +0200 |
---|---|---|
committer | Boris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com> | 2017-08-25 10:18:29 +0200 |
commit | 1c4d0bab8ad9973077d231fd4fabfb76f4645a3f (patch) | |
tree | a13f20c898be0d8c73b55cc7ee6e2bd30a3779f0 /doc | |
parent | 10a80c808c4d17c477c9aadd6d91431f1bc7bcd5 (diff) |
Move package version specification to manual
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/manual.cli | 149 |
1 files changed, 143 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/doc/manual.cli b/doc/manual.cli index 01e688f..b52cb52 100644 --- a/doc/manual.cli +++ b/doc/manual.cli @@ -15,11 +15,148 @@ \h0#preface|Preface| This is the preface. -" -/* -" -\h Installation +\h1#package-version|Package Version| + +The \c{bpkg} package version format tries to balance the need of accommodating +existing software versions on one hand and providing a reasonably +straightforward comparison semantics on another. For some background on this +problem see \cb{deb-version(1)} and the \l{http://semver.org Semantic +Versioning} specification. + +Note also that if you are strating a new project that will use the \c{build2} +toolchain, then it is strongly recommended that you use the \i{standard +versioning} scheme which is a more strictly defined subset of semanic +versioning and that allows automation of many version management tasks. See +\l{https://build2.org/build2/doc/build2-build-system-manual.xhtml#module-version +Version Module} for details. + +The \c{bpkg} package version has the following form: + +\ +[<epoch>~]<upstream>[-<prerel>][+<revision>] +\ + +The \i{epoch} part should be an integer. It can be used to change to a new +versioning scheme that would be incompatible with the old one. If not +specified, then \i{epoch} defaults to \c{0}. + +The \i{upstream} part is the upstream software version that this package +is based on. It can only contain alpha-numeric characters and \c{'.'}. The +\c{'.'} character is used to separate the version into \i{components}. + +The \i{prerel} part is the upstream software pre-release marker, for example, +alpha, beta, candidate, etc. Its format is the same as for \i{upstream} except +for two special values: the absent \i{prerel} (for example, \c{1.2.3}) +signifies the maximum or final release while the empty \i{prerel} (for +example, \c{1.2.3-}) signifies the minimum or earliest possible +release. [Note: the minimum release is intended to be used for version +constraints (for example, \c{libfoo < 1.2.3-}) rather than actual releases.] + +The \i{revision} part should be an integer. It is used to version package +releases that are based on the same upstream versions. If not specified, then +\i{revision} defaults to \c{0}. + +Version \c{0-} (least possible version) is reserved and specifying it +explicitly is illegal. [Note: explicitly specifying this version does not make +much sense since \c{libfoo < 0-} is always false and \c{libfoo > 0-} is always +true. In the implementation this value is used as a special empty version.] + +Version \c{0} (with a potential revision, for example, \c{0+1}, \c{0+2}) is +used to signify a \i{stub package}. A stub is a package that does not contain +source code and can only be \"obtained\" from other sources, for example, a +system package manager. Note that at some point a stub may be converted into a +full-fledged package at which point it will be assigned a \"real\" version. +It is assumed that this version will always be greater than the stub version. + +When displaying the package version or when using the version to derive the +file name, zero \i{epoch} and \i{revision} are omitted (even if they were +explicitly specified, for instance, in the package manifest). For example, +\c{0~1.2.3+0} will be used as \c{libfoo-1.2.3}. + +[Note: this versioning scheme and the choice of delimiter characters (\c{~-+}) +is meant to align with semantic versioning.] + +Some examples of versions: + +\ +1.2.3 +1.2.3-a1 +1.2.3-b2 +1.2.3-rc1 +1.2.3-alpha1 +1.2.3-alpha.1 +1.2.3-beta.1 +1.2.3+1 +1~1.2.3 +1~1.2.3-alpha.1+3 +\ + +The version sorting order is \i{epoch}, \i{upstream}, \i{prerel}, and, +finally, \i{revision}. The \i{upstream} and \i{prerel} parts are compared from +left to right, one component at a time, as described next. + +To compare two components, first the component types are determined. A +component that only consists of digits is an integer. Otherwise, it is a +string. If both components are integers, then they are compared as +integers. Otherwise, they are compared lexicographically and case- +insensitively. [Note: the reason for case-insensitive comparsion is Windows +file names.] + +A non-existent component is considered 0 if the other component is an integer +and an empty string if the other component is a string. For example, in +\c{1.2} vs \c{1.2.0}, the third component in the first version is 0 and the +two versions are therefore equal. As a special exception to this rule, an +absent \i{prerel} part is always greater than any non-absent part. [Note: and +thus making the final release always older than any pre-release.] + +This algorithm gives correct results for most commonly-used versioning +schemes, for example: + +\ +1.2.3 < 12.2 +1.alpha < 1.beta +20151128 < 20151228 +2015.11.28 < 2015.12.28 +\ + +One notable versioning scheme where this approach gives an incorrect result is +hex numbers (consider \c{A} vs \c{1A}). The simplest work around is to convert +such numbers to decimal. Alternatively, one can fix the width of the hex +number and pad all the values with leading zeros, for example: \c{00A} vs +\c{01A}. + +It is also possible to convert the \i{upstream} and \i{prerel} parts into a +\i{canonical representation} that will produce the correct comparison result +when always compared lexicographically and as a whole. [Note: this can be +useful, for example, when storing versions in the database which would +otherwise require a custom collation implementation to obtain the correct sort +order.] + +To convert one of these parts to its canonical representation, all its string +components are converted to the lower case while all its integer components +are padded with leading zeros to the fixed length of \c{8} characters, with +all trailing zero-only components removed. Note that this places an +implementation limit on the length of integer components which should be +checked by the implementation when converting to the canonical +representation. [Note: the \c{8} characters limit was chosen to still be able +to represent components in the \c{20151128} (date) form while not (visually) +bloating the database too much.] As a special case, the absent \i{prerel} part +is represented as \c{'~'}. [Note: since the ASCII code for \c{'~'} is greater +than any other character that could appear in \i{prerel}, such a string will +always be greater than any other representation.] The empty \i{prerel} part is +represented as an empty string. + +Note that because it is no possible to perform a reverse conversion without +the possibility of loss (consider \c{01.AA.BB}), the original parts may also +have to be stored, for example, for display, to derive package archive names, +etc. + +[Note: in quite a few contexts the implementation needs to ignore the +\i{revision} part. For example, this is needed to implement the semantics of +newer revisions of packages replacing their old ones since we do not keep +multiple revisions of the same upstream version in the same respository. As a +result, in the package object model, we have a version key as just {\i{epoch}, +\i{upstream}, \i{prerel}} but also store the package revision so that it can +be shown it to the user, etc.] " -source "../INSTALL.cli"; -*/ |