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author | David A. Holland |
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date | Tue, 31 May 2022 02:06:45 -0400 |
parents | 12171da8943f |
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Theory of AG version numbers (as of 20060806, updated 20070603, 20070613) - Any version of AG has a "base version number". This is 2.01 for 2.01, 2.40 for the first public open source version, 2.50 for the stable open source version, and 3.00 for the first GTK version, whenever that appears. This version goes into the Windows registry. - Development snapshots leading up to the first release with a particular base version number are numbered with the new base version, a dash, and the date or a release candidate number. Examples: 2.40-20070610; 2.40-RC2. - Stable versions have the base version followed by a dot and the build number, aka patchlevel. For example: 2.40.01. - Every changeset committed to the stable branch causes a new build and increments the build number. Needless to say, you don't commit to the stable branch lightly. - A development version built directly from a Mercurial or Git working directory will be numbered 2.40-current, because it's difficult or impossible to ascertain the proper date. Assuming the proper date is even well defined; after all, most such builds happen while coding and include uncommitted changes. - A stable version built directly from a Mercurial or Git working directory will be numbered 2.40.01-current. - Note that while injecting the last committed change hash in these circumstances is possible, it isn't worthwhile.