View Source Version (Elixir v1.10.3)

Functions for parsing and matching versions against requirements.

A version is a string in a specific format or a Version generated after parsing via Version.parse/1.

Although Elixir projects are not required to follow SemVer, they must follow the format outlined on SemVer 2.0 schema.

Versions

In a nutshell, a version is represented by three numbers:

MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH

Pre-releases are supported by optionally appending a hyphen and a series of period-separated identifiers immediately following the patch version. Identifiers consist of only ASCII alphanumeric characters and hyphens ([0-9A-Za-z-]):

"1.0.0-alpha.3"

Build information can be added by appending a plus sign and a series of dot-separated identifiers immediately following the patch or pre-release version. Identifiers consist of only ASCII alphanumeric characters and hyphens ([0-9A-Za-z-]):

"1.0.0-alpha.3+20130417140000.amd64"

Struct

The version is represented by the Version struct and fields are named according to SemVer 2.0: :major, :minor, :patch, :pre, and :build.

Requirements

Requirements allow you to specify which versions of a given dependency you are willing to work against. Requirements support the common comparison operators such as >, >=, <, <=, ==, != that work as one would expect, and additionally the special operator ~> described in detail further below.

# Only version 2.0.0
"== 2.0.0"

# Anything later than 2.0.0
"> 2.0.0"

Requirements also support and and or for complex conditions:

# 2.0.0 and later until 2.1.0
">= 2.0.0 and < 2.1.0"

Since the example above is such a common requirement, it can be expressed as:

"~> 2.0.0"

~> will never include pre-release versions of its upper bound, regardless of the usage of the :allow_pre option, or whether the operand is a pre-release version. It can also be used to set an upper bound on only the major version part. See the table below for ~> requirements and their corresponding translations.

~>Translation
~> 2.0.0>= 2.0.0 and < 2.1.0
~> 2.1.2>= 2.1.2 and < 2.2.0
~> 2.1.3-dev>= 2.1.3-dev and < 2.2.0
~> 2.0>= 2.0.0 and < 3.0.0
~> 2.1>= 2.1.0 and < 3.0.0

The requirement operand after the ~> is allowed to omit the patch version, allowing us to express ~> 2.1 or ~> 2.1-dev, something that wouldn't be allowed when using the common comparison operators.

When the :allow_pre option is set false in Version.match?/3, the requirement will not match a pre-release version unless the operand is a pre-release version. The default is to always allow pre-releases but note that in Hex :allow_pre is set to false. See the table below for examples.

RequirementVersion:allow_preMatches
~> 2.02.1.0true or falsetrue
~> 2.03.0.0true or falsefalse
~> 2.0.02.0.5true or falsetrue
~> 2.0.02.1.0true or falsefalse
~> 2.1.22.1.6-devtruetrue
~> 2.1.22.1.6-devfalsefalse
~> 2.1-dev2.2.0-devtrue or falsetrue
~> 2.1.2-dev2.1.6-devtrue or falsetrue
>= 2.1.02.2.0-devtruetrue
>= 2.1.02.2.0-devfalsefalse
>= 2.1.0-dev2.2.6-devtrue or falsetrue

Link to this section Summary

Functions

Compares two versions.

Compiles a requirement to its internal representation with :ets.match_spec_compile/1 for faster matching.

Checks if the given version matches the specification.

Parses a version string into a Version struct.

Parses a version string into a Version.

Parses a version requirement string into a Version.Requirement struct.

Parses a version requirement string into a Version.Requirement struct.

Link to this section Types

@type build() :: String.t() | nil
@type major() :: non_neg_integer()
@type minor() :: non_neg_integer()
@type patch() :: non_neg_integer()
@type pre() :: [String.t() | non_neg_integer()]
@type requirement() :: String.t() | Version.Requirement.t()
@type t() :: %Version{
  build: build(),
  major: major(),
  minor: minor(),
  patch: patch(),
  pre: pre()
}
@type version() :: String.t() | t()

Link to this section Functions

Link to this function

compare(version1, version2)

View Source
@spec compare(version(), version()) :: :gt | :eq | :lt

Compares two versions.

Returns :gt if the first version is greater than the second one, and :lt for vice versa. If the two versions are equal, :eq is returned.

Pre-releases are strictly less than their corresponding release versions.

Patch segments are compared lexicographically if they are alphanumeric, and numerically otherwise.

Build segments are ignored: if two versions differ only in their build segment they are considered to be equal.

Raises a Version.InvalidVersionError exception if any of the two given versions are not parsable. If given an already parsed version this function won't raise.

Examples

iex> Version.compare("2.0.1-alpha1", "2.0.0")
:gt

iex> Version.compare("1.0.0-beta", "1.0.0-rc1")
:lt

iex> Version.compare("1.0.0-10", "1.0.0-2")
:gt

iex> Version.compare("2.0.1+build0", "2.0.1")
:eq

iex> Version.compare("invalid", "2.0.1")
** (Version.InvalidVersionError) invalid version: "invalid"
Link to this function

compile_requirement(requirement)

View Source
@spec compile_requirement(Version.Requirement.t()) :: Version.Requirement.t()

Compiles a requirement to its internal representation with :ets.match_spec_compile/1 for faster matching.

The internal representation is opaque and cannot be converted to external term format and then back again without losing its properties (meaning it can not be sent to a process on another node and still remain a valid compiled match_spec, nor can it be stored on disk).

Link to this function

match?(version, requirement, opts \\ [])

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@spec match?(version(), requirement(), keyword()) :: boolean()

Checks if the given version matches the specification.

Returns true if version satisfies requirement, false otherwise. Raises a Version.InvalidRequirementError exception if requirement is not parsable, or a Version.InvalidVersionError exception if version is not parsable. If given an already parsed version and requirement this function won't raise.

Options

  • :allow_pre (boolean) - when false, pre-release versions will not match unless the operand is a pre-release version. Defaults to true. For examples, please refer to the table above under the "Requirements" section.

Examples

iex> Version.match?("2.0.0", "> 1.0.0")
true

iex> Version.match?("2.0.0", "== 1.0.0")
false

iex> Version.match?("2.1.6-dev", "~> 2.1.2")
true

iex> Version.match?("2.1.6-dev", "~> 2.1.2", allow_pre: false)
false

iex> Version.match?("foo", "== 1.0.0")
** (Version.InvalidVersionError) invalid version: "foo"

iex> Version.match?("2.0.0", "== == 1.0.0")
** (Version.InvalidRequirementError) invalid requirement: "== == 1.0.0"
@spec parse(String.t()) :: {:ok, t()} | :error

Parses a version string into a Version struct.

Examples

iex> {:ok, version} = Version.parse("2.0.1-alpha1")
iex> version
#Version<2.0.1-alpha1>

iex> Version.parse("2.0-alpha1")
:error
@spec parse!(String.t()) :: t()

Parses a version string into a Version.

If string is an invalid version, a Version.InvalidVersionError is raised.

Examples

iex> Version.parse!("2.0.1-alpha1")
#Version<2.0.1-alpha1>

iex> Version.parse!("2.0-alpha1")
** (Version.InvalidVersionError) invalid version: "2.0-alpha1"
Link to this function

parse_requirement(string)

View Source
@spec parse_requirement(String.t()) :: {:ok, Version.Requirement.t()} | :error

Parses a version requirement string into a Version.Requirement struct.

Examples

iex> {:ok, requirement} = Version.parse_requirement("== 2.0.1")
iex> requirement
#Version.Requirement<== 2.0.1>

iex> Version.parse_requirement("== == 2.0.1")
:error
Link to this function

parse_requirement!(string)

View Source (since 1.8.0)
@spec parse_requirement!(String.t()) :: Version.Requirement.t()

Parses a version requirement string into a Version.Requirement struct.

If string is an invalid requirement, a Version.InvalidRequirementError is raised.

Examples

iex> Version.parse_requirement!("== 2.0.1")
#Version.Requirement<== 2.0.1>

iex> Version.parse_requirement!("== == 2.0.1")
** (Version.InvalidRequirementError) invalid requirement: "== == 2.0.1"