/usr/share/perl5/Git/Version/Compare.pm is in libgit-version-compare-perl 1.004-1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 | package Git::Version::Compare;
$Git::Version::Compare::VERSION = '1.004';
use strict;
use warnings;
use Exporter;
use Carp ();
my @ops = qw( lt gt le ge eq ne );
our @ISA = qw(Exporter);
our @EXPORT_OK = ( looks_like_git => map "${_}_git", cmp => @ops );
our %EXPORT_TAGS = ( ops => [ map "${_}_git", @ops ], all => \@EXPORT_OK );
# A few versions have two tags, or non-standard numbering:
# - the left-hand side is what `git --version` reports
# - the right-hand side is an internal canonical name
#
# We turn versions into strings, so we can use the fast `eq` and `gt`.
# The 6 elements are integers padded with 0:
# - the 4 parts of the dotted version (padded with as many .0 as needed)
# - '.000' if not an RC, or '-xxx' if an RC (- sorts before . in ascii)
# - the number of commits since the previous tag (for dev versions)
#
# The special cases are pre-computed below, the rest is computed as needed.
my %version_alias = (
'0.99.7a' => '00.99.07.01.00.0000',
'0.99.7b' => '00.99.07.02.00.0000',
'0.99.7c' => '00.99.07.03.00.0000',
'0.99.7d' => '00.99.07.04.00.0000',
'0.99.8a' => '00.99.08.01.00.0000',
'0.99.8b' => '00.99.08.02.00.0000',
'0.99.8c' => '00.99.08.03.00.0000',
'0.99.8d' => '00.99.08.04.00.0000',
'0.99.8e' => '00.99.08.05.00.0000',
'0.99.8f' => '00.99.08.06.00.0000',
'0.99.8g' => '00.99.08.07.00.0000',
'0.99.9a' => '00.99.09.01.00.0000',
'0.99.9b' => '00.99.09.02.00.0000',
'0.99.9c' => '00.99.09.03.00.0000',
'0.99.9d' => '00.99.09.04.00.0000',
'0.99.9e' => '00.99.09.05.00.0000',
'0.99.9f' => '00.99.09.06.00.0000',
'0.99.9g' => '00.99.09.07.00.0000',
'0.99.9h' => '00.99.09.08.00.0000', # 1.0.rc1
'1.0.rc1' => '00.99.09.08.00.0000',
'0.99.9i' => '00.99.09.09.00.0000', # 1.0.rc2
'1.0.rc2' => '00.99.09.09.00.0000',
'0.99.9j' => '00.99.09.10.00.0000', # 1.0.rc3
'1.0.rc3' => '00.99.09.10.00.0000',
'0.99.9k' => '00.99.09.11.00.0000',
'0.99.9l' => '00.99.09.12.00.0000', # 1.0.rc4
'1.0.rc4' => '00.99.09.12.00.0000',
'0.99.9m' => '00.99.09.13.00.0000', # 1.0.rc5
'1.0.rc5' => '00.99.09.13.00.0000',
'0.99.9n' => '00.99.09.14.00.0000', # 1.0.rc6
'1.0.rc6' => '00.99.09.14.00.0000',
'1.0.0a' => '01.00.01.00.00.0000',
'1.0.0b' => '01.00.02.00.00.0000',
);
sub looks_like_git {
return scalar $_[0] =~
/^(?:v|git\ version\ )? # prefix
[0-9]+(?:[.-](?:0[ab]?|[1-9][0-9a-z]*|[a-zA-Z]+))* # x.y.z.*
(?:[.-]?rc[0-9]+)? # rc
(?:[.-](GIT|[1-9][0-9]*[.-]g[A-Fa-f0-9]+))? # devel
(?:\ .*)? # comment
$/x;
}
sub _normalize {
my ($v) = @_;
return undef if !defined $v;
# minimal consistency check
Carp::croak "$v does not look like a Git version" if !looks_like_git($v);
# reformat git.git tag names, output of `git --version`
$v =~ s/^v|^git version |\.[a-zA-Z]+\..*|[\012\015]+\z//g;
$v =~ y/-/./;
$v =~ s/0rc/0.rc/;
($v) = split / /, $v; # drop anything after the version
# can't use exists() because the assignment in the @ops created the slot
return $version_alias{$v} if defined $version_alias{$v};
# split the dotted version string
my @v = split /\./, $v;
my ( $r, $c ) = ( 0, 0 );
# commit count since the previous tag
($c) = ( 1, splice @v, -1 ) if $v[-1] eq 'GIT'; # before 1.4
($c) = splice @v, -2 if substr( $v[-1], 0, 1 ) eq 'g'; # after 1.4
# release candidate number
($r) = splice @v, -1 if substr( $v[-1], 0, 2 ) eq 'rc';
$r &&= do { $r =~ s/rc//; sprintf '-%02d', $r };
# compute and cache normalized string
return $version_alias{$v} =
join( '.', map sprintf( '%02d', $_ ), ( @v, 0, 0, 0 )[ 0 .. 3 ] )
. ( $r || '.00' )
. sprintf( '.%04d', $c );
}
for my $op (@ops) {
no strict 'refs';
*{"${op}_git"} = eval << "OP";
sub {
my ( \$v1, \$v2 ) = \@_;
\$_ = \$version_alias{\$_} ||= _normalize( \$_ ) for \$v1, \$v2;
return \$v1 $op \$v2;
}
OP
}
sub cmp_git ($$) {
my ( $v1, $v2 ) = @_;
$_ = $version_alias{$_} ||= _normalize( $_ ) for $v1, $v2;
return $v1 cmp $v2;
}
1;
__END__
=head1 NAME
Git::Version::Compare - Functions to compare Git versions
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Git::Version::Compare qw( cmp_git );
# result: 1.2.3 1.7.0.rc0 1.7.4.rc1 1.8.3.4 1.9.3 2.0.0.rc2 2.0.3 2.3.0.rc1
my @versions = sort cmp_git qw(
1.7.4.rc1 1.9.3 1.7.0.rc0 2.0.0.rc2 1.2.3 1.8.3.4 2.3.0.rc1 2.0.3
);
=head1 DESCRIPTION
L<Git::Version::Compare> contains a selection of subroutines that make
dealing with Git-related things (like versions) a little bit easier.
The strings to compare can be version numbers, tags from C<git.git>
or the output of C<git version> or C<git describe>.
These routines collect the knowledge about Git versions that
was accumulated while developing L<Git::Repository>.
=head1 AVAILABLE FUNCTIONS
By default L<Git::Version::Compare> does not export any subroutines.
All the comparison version functions die when given strings that do not
look like Git version numbers (the check is done with L</looks_like_git>).
=head2 lt_git
if ( lt_git( $v1, $v2 ) ) { ... }
A Git-aware version of the C<lt> operator.
=head2 gt_git
if ( gt_git( $v1, $v2 ) ) { ... }
A Git-aware version of the C<gt> operator.
=head2 le_git
if ( le_git( $v1, $v2 ) ) { ... }
A Git-aware version of the C<le> operator.
=head2 ge_git
if ( ge_git( $v1, $v2 ) ) { ... }
A Git-aware version of the C<ge> operator.
=head2 eq_git
if ( eq_git( $v1, $v2 ) ) { ... }
A Git-aware version of the C<eq> operator.
=head2 ne_git
if ( ne_git( $v1, $v2 ) ) { ... }
A Git-aware version of the C<ne> operator.
=head2 cmp_git
@versions = sort cmp_git @versions;
A Git-aware version of the C<cmp> operator.
=head2 looks_like_git
# true
looks_like_git(`git version`); # duh
# false
looks_like_git('v1.7.3_02'); # no _ in git versions
Given a string, returns true if it looks like a Git version number
(and can therefore be parsed by C<Git::Version::Number>) and false
otherwise.
=head1 EXPORT TAGS
=head2 :ops
Exports C<lt_git>, C<gt_git>, C<le_git>, C<ge_git>, C<eq_git>, and C<ne_git>.
=head2 :all
Exports C<lt_git>, C<gt_git>, C<le_git>, C<ge_git>, C<eq_git>, C<ne_git>,
C<cmp_git>, and C<looks_like_git>.
=head1 EVERYTHING YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT GIT VERSION NUMBERS
=head1 Version numbers
Version numbers as returned by C<git version> are in the following
formats (since the C<1.4> series, in 2006):
# stable version
1.6.0
2.7.1
# maintenance release
1.8.5.6
# release candidate
1.6.0.rc2
# development version
# (the last two elements come from `git describe`)
1.7.1.209.gd60ad
1.8.5.1.21.gb2a0afd
2.3.0.rc0.36.g63a0e83
In the C<git.git> repository, several commits have multiple tags
(e.g. C<v1.0.1> and C<v1.0.2> point respectively to C<v1.0.0a>
and C<v1.0.0b>). Pre-1.0.0 versions also have non-standard formats
like C<0.99.9j> or C<1.0rc2>.
This explains why:
# this is true
eq_git( '0.99.9l', '1.0rc4' );
eq_git( '1.0.0a', '1.0.1' );
# this is false
ge_git( '1.0rc3', '0.99.9m' );
C<git version> appeared in version C<1.3.0>.
C<git --version> appeared in version C<0.99.7>. Before that, there is no
way to know which version of Git one is dealing with.
C<Git::Version::Compare> converts all version numbers to an internal
format before performing a simple string comparison.
=head2 Development versions
Prior to C<1.4.0-rc1> (June 2006), compiling a development version of Git
would lead C<git --version> to output C<1.x-GIT> (with C<x> in C<0 .. 3>),
which would make comparing versions that are very close a futile exercise.
Other issues exist when comparing development version numbers with one
another. For example, C<1.7.1.1> is greater than both C<1.7.1.1.gc8c07>
and C<1.7.1.1.g5f35a>, and C<1.7.1> is less than both. Obviously,
C<1.7.1.1.gc8c07> will compare as greater than C<1.7.1.1.g5f35a>
(asciibetically), but in fact these two version numbers cannot be
compared, as they are two siblings children of the commit tagged
C<v1.7.1>). For practical purposes, the version-comparison methods
declares them equal.
Therefore:
# this is true
lt_git( '1.8.5.4.8.g7c9b668', '1.8.5.4.19.g5032098' );
gt_git( '1.3.GIT', '1.3.0' );
# this is false
ne_git( '1.7.1.1.gc8c07', '1.7.1.1.g5f35a' );
gt_git( '1.3.GIT', '1.3.1' );
If one were to compute the set of all possible version numbers (as returned
by C<git --version>) for all git versions that can be compiled from each
commit in the F<git.git> repository, the result would not be a totally ordered
set. Big deal.
Also, don't be too precise when requiring the minimum version of Git that
supported a given feature. The precise commit in git.git at which a given
feature was added doesn't mean as much as the release branch in which that
commit was merged.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<Test::Requires::Git>, for defining Git version requirements in test
scripts that need B<git>.
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2016 Philippe Bruhat (BooK), all rights reserved.
=head1 LICENSE
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
=cut
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