Files correlati : Commento : Spostamento in libraries delle librerie esterne di Campo per una maggiore pulizia e organizzazione git-svn-id: svn://10.65.10.50/branches/R_10_00@24150 c028cbd2-c16b-5b4b-a496-9718f37d4682
		
			
				
	
	
		
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			57 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
Version Numbers and Releases
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============================
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 Curl is not only curl. Curl is also libcurl. They're actually individually
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 versioned, but they mostly follow each other rather closely.
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 The version numbering is always built up using the same system:
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        X.Y.Z
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  - X is main version number
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  - Y is release number
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  - Z is patch number
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## Bumping numbers
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 One of these numbers will get bumped in each new release. The numbers to the
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 right of a bumped number will be reset to zero. If Z is zero, it may not be
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 included in the version number.
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 The main version number will get bumped when *really* big, world colliding
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 changes are made. The release number is bumped when changes are performed or
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 things/features are added. The patch number is bumped when the changes are
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 mere bugfixes.
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 It means that after release 1.2.3, we can release 2.0 if something really big
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 has been made, 1.3 if not that big changes were made or 1.2.4 if mostly bugs
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 were fixed.
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 Bumping, as in increasing the number with 1, is unconditionally only
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 affecting one of the numbers (except the ones to the right of it, that may be
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 set to zero). 1 becomes 2, 3 becomes 4, 9 becomes 10, 88 becomes 89 and 99
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 becomes 100. So, after 1.2.9 comes 1.2.10. After 3.99.3, 3.100 might come.
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 All original curl source release archives are named according to the libcurl
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 version (not according to the curl client version that, as said before, might
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 differ).
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 As a service to any application that might want to support new libcurl
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 features while still being able to build with older versions, all releases
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 have the libcurl version stored in the curl/curlver.h file using a static
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 numbering scheme that can be used for comparison. The version number is
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 defined as:
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        #define LIBCURL_VERSION_NUM 0xXXYYZZ
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 Where XX, YY and ZZ are the main version, release and patch numbers in
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 hexadecimal. All three number fields are always represented using two digits
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 (eight bits each). 1.2 would appear as "0x010200" while version 9.11.7
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 appears as "0x090b07".
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 This 6-digit hexadecimal number is always a greater number in a more recent
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 release. It makes comparisons with greater than and less than work.
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 This number is also available as three separate defines:
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 `LIBCURL_VERSION_MAJOR`, `LIBCURL_VERSION_MINOR` and `LIBCURL_VERSION_PATCH`.
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