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Automated Git Versioning Tool

The git-auto-version tool sets git's version tags and generates the ChangeLog file, all automatically, only from the content of commit messages. You just need to write your commit messages in a syntax similar to conventional commits. No other commands are needed and everything is updated automatically whenever you commit you changes using git --commit.

How does it work?

Each commit message should be prefixed with a commit type like fix, feat, docs, chore, etc., that describes the content and the purpose of the commit. For example:

fix: Fixed bug with planes crashing

With git-auto-version, you can choose type names freely and you don't even need to use the types unless you want to increase the version number. Only the type chore has a special meaning for the ChangeLog below.

Version control

Version is a triple of numbers (major, minor, patch), for example, 1.2.0. To increase the patch version, you just put ! after the type in your commit message. Similarly, to increase the minor (and reset patch to zero), you use !!, and to increase the major, you use !!!. For example, if the current version is 1.2.23 and you commit changes with the message

release!!: New version released

the version becomes 1.3.0. Git commits are automatically tagged with git's version tags, like v1.3.2, after every commit.

ChangeLog generation

The file ChangeLog.md is automatically generated and updated with every commit. Basically, every commit message becomes one line in the ChangeLog and the commits are grouped by versions. So, you should write your commit messages with this in mind.

The change log is formatted in MarkDown and it might look like this:

v0.0.2 (2024-08-10)

  • feat!: Support for wing flips [details]
  • refactor: Converted code to modules [details]
  • docs: Added documentation [details]

v0.0.1 (2024-08-09)

  • fix!: Fixed bug with planes crashing [details]
  • init: Initial version [details]

If you want to hide some commit from the ChangeLog, use the commit type chore.

Installation

  1. Copy gitautoversion.py from this repository to the hooks directory .git/hooks within your git project.
  2. Set up the git's post-commit hook by copying the file post-commit from this repository to .git/hooks and making it executable.

Optionally:

  • If you want to automatically push the tags to the remote, set followTags to true as follows:

    $ git config push.followTags true
  • If you want to adjust commits ignored for the ChangeLog, edit the variables SKIP_TYPE or SKIP_MSG at the top of gitautoversion.py.

How is it implemented?

All the stuff is done in the git's post-commit hook. First, ChangeLog.md is updated based on the current commit message. The commit is then updated with the up-to-date ChangeLog using the git commit --amend command. After that, missing version tags are set.

A technical "tail-chasing" problem here is that you need to know the current commit message to generate the ChangeLog. Hence, you can not (at least easily) generate the ChangeLog in the pre-commit hook because the message is not yet known. In later commit hooks, you can no longer update the content of the commit since its hash is already computed. Hence, we wait for post-commit and amend it. Note that there is still a problem because amending the commit changes its hash code, which is used in the ChangeLog as a GitHub link. Hence, the hash code of the last commit is excluded from the ChangeLog. Luckily, the GitHub link without any hash automatically opens the latest commit, so the desired functionality is preserved (at least for GitHub).