A minimalist .NET package for versioning .NET SDK-style projects using Git tags.
Platform support: all platforms supported by .NET SDK-style projects.
Also available as a command-line tool for use in any Git repository.
Your project will be versioned according to the latest tag found in the commit history.
To build with GitHub Actions, set the fetch depth appropriately.
When you want to release a version of your software, whether it's a pre-release, RTM, patch, or anything else, simply create a tag on the commit you want to release with a name which is a valid SemVer 2.x version. For example:
git tag 1.2.3
git push --tags
When you build your software from the commit with that tag, MinVer will apply the version to the assemblies and packages. (If you like to prefix your tag names, see the FAQ.)
Bear in mind that MinVer is unaware of the branches which contain the commit, nor your release process, so it is compatible with any branching or release strategy you choose.
NOTE: The MinVer package reference should normally include PrivateAssets="All"
. See NuGet docs for more info. If you install MinVer using an IDE or tool, this should be done for you automatically.
alpha.0
, but this can be customised.1.0.0
, the current version is 1.0.1-alpha.0
.0.0.0-alpha.0
is used, with height added.If the current commit does not have a version tag, another number is added to the pre-release identifiers. This is the number of commits since the latest commit with a version tag or, if no commits have a version tag, since the root commit. This is known as "height". For example, if the latest version tag found is 1.0.0-beta.1
, at a height of 42 commits, the calculated version is 1.0.0-beta.1.42
.
This behaviour can be disabled.
MinVer sets the following custom properties:
MinVerVersion
MinVerMajor
MinVerMinor
MinVerPatch
MinVerPreRelease
MinVerBuildMetadata
Those properties are used to set the following .NET SDK properties, satisfying the official open-source library guidance for version numbers:
Property | Value |
---|---|
AssemblyVersion |
{MinVerMajor}.0.0.0 |
FileVersion |
{MinVerMajor}.{MinVerMinor}.{MinVerPatch}.0 |
PackageVersion |
{MinVerVersion} |
Version |
{MinVerVersion} |
This behaviour can be customised.
Options may be specified as either MSBuild properties (for the MinVer package), command-line options (for the minver-cli package), or environment variables (for both the MinVer and minver-cli packages).
MSBuild property or environment variable | Command-line option |
---|---|
MinVerAutoIncrement |
-a|--auto-increment |
MinVerBuildMetadata |
-b|--build-metadata |
MinVerDefaultPreReleaseIdentifiers |
-p|--default-pre-release-identifiers |
MinVerIgnoreHeight |
-i|--ignore-height |
MinVerMinimumMajorMinor |
-m|--minimum-major-minor |
MinVerSkip |
n/a (environment variable not supported) |
MinVerTagPrefix |
-t|--tag-prefix |
MinVerVerbosity |
-v|--verbosity |
MinVerVersionOverride |
n/a (environment variable supported) |
Note that the names of the MSBuild properties and environment variables are case-insensitive.
(With TL;DR answers inline.)
alpha.0
to something else? (yes)
Before starting MinVer, Adam Ralph evaluated both GitVersion and Nerdbank.GitVersioning, but neither of them worked in the way he wanted for his projects.
The TL;DR is that MinVer is simpler. "How it works" pretty much captures everything.
To some degree, MinVer is a subset of what GitVersion is. It's much simpler and doesn't do nearly as much. Some of the differences:
AssemblyInfo.cs
.MinVer is a different approach and, again, simpler. Some of the differences are already listed under the comparison with GitVersion above.
Essentially, Nerdbank.GitVersioning encapsulates the injection of the version into the build process from a config file. That means versions are controlled by commits to that config file. MinVer works purely on tags. That means MinVer doesn't need some of the types of things that come with Nerdbank.GitVersioning such as the config file bootstrapper, and it means the version is controlled independently of the commits. For example, you can tag a commit as a release candidate, build it, and release it. After some time, if the release candidate has no bugs, you can tag the same commit as RTM, build it, and release it.
Also, Nerdbank.GitVersioning uses the git height for the patch version, which is undesirable. Either every patch commit has to be released, or there will be gaps in the patch versions released.
Yes! You probably want to do this because at a point in time, on a given branch, you are working on a specific MAJOR.MINOR
range, e.g. 1.0
, 1.1
, or 2.0
. The branch could be main
, develop
, a special release branch, a support branch, or anything else.
Before you create the first version tag on your branch, interim builds will use the latest version tag found in the commit history, which may not match the MAJOR.MINOR
range you are working on. Or if no version tag is found in the commit history, interim builds will have the default version 0.0.0-alpha.0
. If you prefer those interim builds to have a version in the range you are working on, you have two options:
Tag a commit in your branch with a version matching your MAJOR.MINOR
range, using your preferred default pre-release identifiers. For example:
git tag 1.0.0-alpha.0
This is not a version you will release, since the first "alpha" version will be 1.0.0-alpha.1
. The only purpose of this tag is to force MinVer to start versioning commits in your branch in the 1.0
range.
If you begin to release versions in the 1.0
range from another branch (e.g. a special release branch), tag a commit in your branch with 1.1.0-alpha.0
, 2.0.0-alpha.0
, or whatever MAJOR.MINOR
range your branch now represents.
Specify your range with MinVerMinimumMajorMinor
. For example:
<PropertyGroup>
<MinVerMinimumMajorMinor>1.0</MinVerMinimumMajorMinor>
</PropertyGroup>
MinVer will now use a default version of 1.0.0-alpha.0
.
If you begin to release versions in the 1.0
range from another branch (e.g. a special release branch), set MinVerMinimumMajorMinor to 1.1
, 2.0
, or whatever MAJOR.MINOR
range your branch now represents.
Note that MinVerMinimumMajorMinor
will be redundant after you create the first tag in your branch with same MAJOR.MINOR
. If you don't care that the versions of interim builds before that first tag will have a lower MAJOR.MINOR
, then simply don't specify MinVerMinimumMajorMinor
.
Also note that if the latest version tag found in the commit history has a higher MAJOR.MINOR
than MinVerMinimumMajorMinor
, then MinVerMinimumMajorMinor
will be ignored.
Yes! MinVer doesn't care what your pre-release versioning scheme is. The default pre-release identifiers are alpha.0
, but you can use whatever you like in your tags. If your versioning scheme is valid SemVer 2.x, it will work with MinVer.
For example, all these versions work with MinVer:
1.0.0-beta.1
1.0.0-pre.1
1.0.0-preview-20181104
1.0.0-rc.1
Yes! Specify the prefix with MinVerTagPrefix
.
For example, if you prefix your tag names with "v", e.g. v1.2.3
:
<PropertyGroup>
<MinVerTagPrefix>v</MinVerTagPrefix>
</PropertyGroup>
Note that the prefix is case-insensitivein this example, both v1.2.3
and V1.2.3
would work.
Yes! MinVer doesn't care about branches. It's all about the tags!
That means MinVer is compatible with Git Flow, GitHub Flow, Release Flow, and any other exotic flow.
Yes! Specify build metadata with MinVerBuildMetadata
.
For example, in appveyor.yml
:
environment:
MINVERBUILDMETADATA: build.%APPVEYOR_BUILD_NUMBER%
You can also specify build metadata in a version tag. If the tag is on the current commit, its build metadata will be used. If the tag is on an older commit, its build metadata will be ignored. Build metadata in MinVerBuildMetadata
will be appended to build metadata in the tag.
Yes! Specify which part of the version to auto-increment with MinVerAutoIncrement
. By default, MinVer will auto-increment the patch version, but you can specify minor
or major
to increment the minor or major version instead.
alpha.0
to something else?Yes! Specify the default pre-release identifiers with MinVerDefaultPreReleaseIdentifiers
. For example, if you prefer to name your pre-releases as "preview":
<PropertyGroup>
<MinVerDefaultPreReleaseIdentifiers>preview.0</MinVerDefaultPreReleaseIdentifiers>
</PropertyGroup>
This will result in a post-RTM version of {major}.{minor}.{patch+1}-preview.0.{height}
, e.g. 1.0.1-preview.0.1
.
Note that the numeric part(s) of the default pre-release identifiers should usually be 0
(meaning "alpha 0", "preview 0", etc.), since any versions produced between an RTM tag and the next tag are not tagged for release, they are just versions produced between the RTM and the next RTM or pre-release. When you tag your first pre-release, you will typically increment the 0
to 1
, meaning "alpha 1", "preview 1", etc.
Yes! You can use any of the properties set by MinVer, or override their values, in a target which runs after MinVer.
For example, for pull requests, you may want to inject the pull request number and a variable which uniquely identifies the build into the version. E.g. using Appveyor:
<Target Name="MyTarget" AfterTargets="MinVer" Condition="'$(APPVEYOR_PULL_REQUEST_NUMBER)' != ''" >
<PropertyGroup>
<PackageVersion>$(MinVerMajor).$(MinVerMinor).$(MinVerPatch)-pr.$(APPVEYOR_PULL_REQUEST_NUMBER).build-id.$(APPVEYOR_BUILD_ID).$(MinVerPreRelease)</PackageVersion>
<PackageVersion Condition="'$(MinVerBuildMetadata)' != ''">$(PackageVersion)+$(MinVerBuildMetadata)</PackageVersion>
<Version>$(PackageVersion)</Version>
</PropertyGroup>
</Target>
Or for projects which do not create NuGet packages, you may want to populate all four parts of AssemblyVersion
. E.g. using Appveyor:
<Target Name="MyTarget" AfterTargets="MinVer">
<PropertyGroup>
<APPVEYOR_BUILD_NUMBER Condition="'$(APPVEYOR_BUILD_NUMBER)' == ''">0</APPVEYOR_BUILD_NUMBER>
<AssemblyVersion>$(MinVerMajor).$(MinVerMinor).$(APPVEYOR_BUILD_NUMBER).$(MinVerPatch)</AssemblyVersion>
</PropertyGroup>
</Target>
Or for projects which do create NuGet packages, you may want to adjust the assembly file version to include the build number, as recommended in the official guidance. E.g. when using Appveyor:
<Target Name="MyTarget" AfterTargets="MinVer">
<PropertyGroup>
<APPVEYOR_BUILD_NUMBER Condition="'$(APPVEYOR_BUILD_NUMBER)' == ''">0</APPVEYOR_BUILD_NUMBER>
<FileVersion>$(MinVerMajor).$(MinVerMinor).$(MinVerPatch).$(APPVEYOR_BUILD_NUMBER)</FileVersion>
</PropertyGroup>
</Target>
Yes! You can do this by using a specific tag prefix for each project. For example, if you have a "main" project and an "extension" project, you could specify <MinVerTagPrefix>main-</MinVerTagPrefix>
in the main project and <MinVerTagPrefix>ext-</MinVerTagPrefix>
in the extension project. To release version 1.0.0
of the main project you'd tag the repository with main-1.0.0
. To release version 1.1.0
of the extension project you'd tag the repository with ext-1.1.0
.
Note that changes committed to a given project will affect the versions of all other projects because every commit affects height. To prevent this, you can ignore the height of the latest tag or root commit.
Yes! Set MinVerIgnoreHeight
to true
:
<PropertyGroup>
<MinVerIgnoreHeight>true</MinVerIgnoreHeight>
</PropertyGroup>
This is often useful if you are versioning multiple projects in a single repository independently.
Yes! MinVerVerbosity
may be set to:
quiet
minimal
(default)normal
detailed
diagnostic
.These verbosity levels match those in MSBuild and therefore dotnet build
, dotnet pack
, etc. The default is minimal
, which matches the default in MSBuild.
The equivalent levels for the minver-cli -v|--verbosity
option are:
e[rror]
w[arn]
i[nfo]
(default)d[ebug]
t[race]
These verbosity levels match those typically used in console applications.
At the quiet
/error
and minimal
/warn
levels, you will see only warnings and errors. At the normal
/info
level you will see which commit is being used to calculate the version, and the calculated version. At the detailed
/debug
level you will see how many commits were examined, which version tags were found but ignored, which version was calculated, etc. At the diagnostic
/trace
level you will see how MinVer walks the commit history, in excruciating detail.
In a future version of MinVer, the verbosity level may be inherited from MSBuild, in which case MinVerVerbosity
will be deprecated.
Yes! MinVer is also available as a command-line tool. Run minver --help
for usage. The calculated version is printed to standard output (stdout).
Sometimes you may want to version both .NET projects and other outputs, such as non-.NET projects, or a container image, in the same build. In those scenarios, you should use both the command-line tool and the regular MinVer package. Before building any .NET projects, your build script should run the command-line tool and set the MINVERVERSIONOVERRIDE
environment variable to the calculated version. The MinVer package will then use that value rather than calculating the version a second time. This ensures that the command-line tool and the MinVer package produce the same version.
If the components of the version are required outside the context of a .NET project, they can easily be extracted from the version which is returned by the command-line tool. The major, minor, and patch numbers can be separated from the pre-release identifiers by splitting the version by the first instance of -
. The major, minor, and patch numbers and the pre-release identifiers can then be separated by splitting by .
.
Yes! Set MinVerSkip
to true
. For example, MinVer can be disabled for debug builds:
<PropertyGroup>
<MinVerSkip Condition="'$(Configuration)' == 'Debug'">true</MinVerSkip>
</PropertyGroup>
MinVer will use the tag with the higher version, or the tag or root commit on the first path followed where the history diverges. The paths are followed in the same order that the parents of the commit are stored in git. The first parent is the commit on the branch that was the current branch when the merge was performed. The remaining parents are stored in the order that their branches were specified in the merge command.
MinVer will use the height on the first path followed where the history diverges. The paths are followed in the same order that the parents of the commit are stored in git. The first parent is the commit on the branch that was the current branch when the merge was performed. The remaining parents are stored in the order that their branches were specified in the merge command.
By default, GitHub Actions, Azure Pipelines, and Travis CI use shallow clones. The GitHub Actions checkout action and Azure Pipelines default checkout step both clone with a depth of only a single commit, and Travis CI clones with a depth of 50 commits. In GitHub Actions and Azure Pipelines, if the latest version tag in the history is not on the current commit, it will not be found. In Travis CI, if the latest version tag in the history is at a height of more than 50 commits, it will not be found.
To build in GitHub Actions, Azure Pipelines, or Travis CI, configure them to fetch a sufficient number of commits.
For GitHub Actions, set the fetch-depth
of the checkout action to an appropriate number, or to zero for all commits. For example:
- uses: actions/checkout@v2
with:
fetch-depth: 0
For Azure Pipelines, include an explicit checkout step and set the fetchDepth
to an appropriate number, or to zero for all commits:
steps:
- checkout: self
fetchDepth: 0
For Travis CI, set the --depth
flag to an appropriate number, or to false
for all commits:
git:
depth: false
Things to check:
MinVerSkip
set?MinVerVersionOverride
set?MinVerMinimumMajorMinor
set to a higher major and minor?MinVerTagPrefix
?If you still can't figure it out, increase MinVerVerbosity
to detailed
to see which tags are explicitly ignored.
Tag by Ananth from the Noun Project.