Michal Nazarewicz <mina86@xxxxxxx> writes: > Hello, > > as probably many of you know CVS supported some magic tags which were > replaced in committed files to a predefined value. For instance, if > there was a "$Revision$" string in a file it would get replaced with > "$Revision: x.y $" (or "$Revision: x.y.z.w $" and so on) where "x.y" is > file's revision number. > > Now, what I need is such feature in GIT. Upon committing I would like > some magic string (say "$Date$") to be replaced with some value > identifying uniquely given version of a file (a date of the commit would > be sufficient). > > I tried using some hooks for it but couldn't came up with anything that > would actually work. Well, there is `ident` attribute which you can set in .gitattributes file which would make git do $Id$ keyword expansion. However the $Id$ git uses is not something you are familiar with: it is 40-character hexadecimal blob object name. With it you can find (try to find) relevant commit. The reason why git doesn't support keywords like $Revision$ or $Date$ is performance: the $Revision$ and $Date$ are keywords related to _commit_ data, not blob data. You can have the same contents of the file in two different branches, thus two different commits, thus two different $Revision$ or $Date$. If contents of file didn't change between branches, git doesn't touch the file, which results in much faster branch switching, for example (and also faster committing). What you can do is one of the following things: 1. You can try to use either hooks (post-commit, post-update I think) or smudge / clean filters (via gitattributes) to do keyword expansion. This hits performance, and you probably would have the problems CVS ad with keyword expansion. 2. You can use `export-subst` gitattribute and make git-archive do keyword expansion, which can include things like '$Format:%aD$' for commit date (equivalent of $Date:$?). 3. You can run some local equivalent of GIT-VERSION-GEN script git and Linux kernel uses, and make your build system (Makefile) replace '@@VERSION@@' or '++VERSION++' keywords / placeholders as part of compiling process. HTH -- Jakub Narębski Poland ShadeHawk on #git -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html