How to dynamically define the name and version of a package

The name and version fields are used to define constant values. The set_name() and set_version() methods can be used to dynamically define those values, for example if we want to extract the version from a text file or from the git repository.

The version of a recipe is stored in the package metadata when it is exported (or created) and always taken from the metadata later on. This means that the set_name() and set_version() methods will not be executed once the recipe is in the cache, or when it is installed from a server. Both methods will use the current folder as the current working directory to resolve relative paths. To define paths relative to the location of the conanfile.py use the self.recipe_folder attribute.

How to capture package version from SCM: git

The Git() helper from tools can be used to capture data from the Git repo in which the conanfile.py recipe resides, and use it to define the version of the Conan package.

from conans import ConanFile, tools

class HelloConan(ConanFile):
    name = "hello"

    def set_version(self):
        git = tools.Git(folder=self.recipe_folder)
        self.version = "%s_%s" % (git.get_branch(), git.get_revision())

    def build(self):
        ...

In this example, the package created with conan create will be called hello/branch_commit@user/channel.

How to capture package version from SCM: svn

The SVN() helper from tools can be used to capture data from the subversion repo in which the conanfile.py recipe resides, and use it to define the version of the Conan package.

from conans import ConanFile, tools

class HelloLibrary(ConanFile):
    name = "hello"
    def set_version(self):
        scm = tools.SVN(folder=self.recipe_folder)
        revision = scm.get_revision()
        branch = scm.get_branch() # Delivers e.g trunk, tags/v1.0.0, branches/my_branch
        branch = branch.replace("/","_")
        if scm.is_pristine():
            dirty = ""
        else:
            dirty = ".dirty"
        self.version = "%s-%s+%s%s" % (version, revision, branch, dirty) # e.g. 1.2.0-1234+trunk.dirty

    def build(self):
        ...

In this example, the package created with conan create will be called hello/generated_version@user/channel. Note: this function should never raise, see the section about when the version is computed and saved above.

How to capture package version from text or build files

It is common that a library version number would be already encoded in a text file, build scripts, etc. As an example, let’s assume we have the following library layout, and that we want to create a package from it:

conanfile.py
CMakeLists.txt
src
   hello.cpp
   ...

The CMakeLists.txt will have some variables to define the library version number. For simplicity, let’s also assume that it includes a line such as the following:

cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.8)
set(MY_LIBRARY_VERSION 1.2.3) # This is the version we want
add_library(hello src/hello.cpp)

You can extract the version dynamically using:

from conans import ConanFile
from conans.tools import load
import re, os

class HelloConan(ConanFile):
    name = "hello"
    def set_version(self):
        content = load(os.path.join(self.recipe_folder, "CMakeLists.txt"))
        version = re.search(r"set\(MY_LIBRARY_VERSION (.*)\)", content).group(1)
        self.version = version.strip()