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runtime/debug: document BuildInfo.Main.Version == "(devel)" #29228

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mark-rushakoff opened this issue Dec 13, 2018 · 26 comments
Open

runtime/debug: document BuildInfo.Main.Version == "(devel)" #29228

mark-rushakoff opened this issue Dec 13, 2018 · 26 comments
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@mark-rushakoff
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What version of Go are you using (go version)?

$ go version
go version devel +571d93e977 Thu Dec 13 15:08:48 2018 +0000 darwin/amd64

What operating system and processor architecture are you using (go env)?

go env Output
$ go env
GOARCH="amd64"
GOBIN=""
GOCACHE="/Users/mr/Library/Caches/go-build"
GOEXE=""
GOFLAGS=""
GOHOSTARCH="amd64"
GOHOSTOS="darwin"
GOOS="darwin"
GOPATH="/Users/mr/go"
GOPROXY=""
GORACE=""
GOROOT="/Users/mr/gotip/src/github.com/golang/go"
GOTMPDIR=""
GOTOOLDIR="/Users/mr/gotip/src/github.com/golang/go/pkg/tool/darwin_amd64"
GCCGO="gccgo"
CC="clang"
CXX="clang++"
CGO_ENABLED="1"
GOMOD="/Users/mr/gomod/debug-module-version-demo/go.mod"
CGO_CFLAGS="-g -O2"
CGO_CPPFLAGS=""
CGO_CXXFLAGS="-g -O2"
CGO_FFLAGS="-g -O2"
CGO_LDFLAGS="-g -O2"
PKG_CONFIG="pkg-config"
GOGCCFLAGS="-fPIC -m64 -pthread -fno-caret-diagnostics -Qunused-arguments -fmessage-length=0 -fdebug-prefix-map=/var/folders/ct/bl4_z3g51ks8239_r2k07v_40000gn/T/go-build638578617=/tmp/go-build -gno-record-gcc-switches -fno-common"

What did you do?

Repro case is https://github.com/mark-rushakoff/debug-module-version-demo. It's a module, and its main.go contents are a simple use of debug.ReadBuildInfo:

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"runtime/debug"

	_ "rsc.io/quote"
)

func main() {
	bi, ok := debug.ReadBuildInfo()
	if !ok {
		panic("couldn't read build info")
	}

	fmt.Printf("%s version %s\n", bi.Path, bi.Main.Version)

	for _, d := range bi.Deps {
		fmt.Printf("\tbuilt with %s version %s\n", d.Path, d.Version)
	}
}

What did you expect to see?

I expected to see the first line print github.com/mark-rushakoff/debug-module-version-demo version v0.0.0-20181213... when checked out at an arbitrary commit, or github.com/mark-rushakoff/debug-module-version-demo version v0.0.1 when checked out at tag v0.0.1. I tried both go run . and go build . && ./debug-module-version-demo but both cases printed (devel).

What did you see instead?

github.com/mark-rushakoff/debug-module-version-demo version (devel)
	built with golang.org/x/text version v0.0.0-20170915032832-14c0d48ead0c
	built with rsc.io/quote version v1.5.2
	built with rsc.io/sampler version v1.3.0

Based on the behavior I've observed, it looks as though the main module returned by debug.ReadBuildInfo is hardcoded to (devel) for the main module, which I assume is intended behavior. If so, that's unfortunate for use cases like mycmd version to easily print the module version of the software being built; but it should be documented.

The current documentation at https://tip.golang.org/pkg/runtime/debug/#ReadBuildInfo does not mention (devel) in any way, nor does it mention any special behavior of the Main module.

/cc @hyangah since you're on git blame for src/runtime/debug/mod.go.

@mark-rushakoff mark-rushakoff changed the title runtime/debug: document BuildInfo.Main.Version == "devel" runtime/debug: document BuildInfo.Main.Version == "(devel)" Dec 13, 2018
@bcmills
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bcmills commented Dec 13, 2018

We could perhaps detect the case where the main module happens to be a pristine checkout with a semantically-versioned tag, although that might be misleading if some other module has a cyclic requirement specifying a higher version than the tag.

@bcmills bcmills added this to the Go1.12 milestone Dec 13, 2018
@stapelberg
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+1.

I thought being able to print the program’s main module’s version was the whole point of embedding build information into the binary.

@mark-rushakoff
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#26404 (comment) is some separate uncertainty about when and why (devel) shows up. There are some linked issues there that seem to paint a fuller picture, but I don't have time to go through them right now.

I think this issue is still fully separate from #26404, as this is just about documenting (devel).

@mark-rushakoff
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It looks like one way to get the version to show up, is to make a new module referring to the one you actually want to build; and then build the target module.

bash-3.2$ gotip mod init ignore
go: creating new go.mod: module ignore

bash-3.2$ gotip get github.com/mark-rushakoff/debug-module-version-demo
go: finding github.com/mark-rushakoff/debug-module-version-demo v0.0.1
go: downloading github.com/mark-rushakoff/debug-module-version-demo v0.0.1
go: extracting github.com/mark-rushakoff/debug-module-version-demo v0.0.1

bash-3.2$ gotip build !$
gotip build github.com/mark-rushakoff/debug-module-version-demo

bash-3.2$ ./debug-module-version-demo
github.com/mark-rushakoff/debug-module-version-demo version v0.0.1
	built with golang.org/x/text version v0.0.0-20170915032832-14c0d48ead0c
	built with rsc.io/quote version v1.5.2
	built with rsc.io/sampler version v1.3.0

@mholt
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mholt commented Apr 19, 2019

@bcmills

We could perhaps detect the case where the main module happens to be a pristine checkout with a semantically-versioned tag,

Or even just any of the current VCS state. For Caddy's builds, we use tag if clean, or if not clean: nearest tag, commit SHA, and build date (although I can understand why build date is a bad idea if seeking reproducible builds).

For now, @mark-rushakoff's workaround is quite handy.

+1 to this though, some version info on the main module would be immensely helpful.

@hyangah
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hyangah commented Aug 29, 2019

As observed in #33926, currently it's possible to end up building a binary with the same main module version but with different dependency versions. People who intend to use the main module version as the binary version should be careful.

@bcmills
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bcmills commented Sep 3, 2019

People who intend to use the main module version as the binary version should be careful.

Using the “main module” version as the binary version (in the sense of https://tip.golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-The_main_module_and_the_build_list) should be fine as long as the module doesn't have filesystem-local replace directives.

Unfortunately, that is not the version that the Main field indicates today (see #33975).

So I agree that the BuildInfo.Main field itself is not really reliable as an indication of the overall configuration in use, even when that version is not (devel).

@mholt
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mholt commented Sep 13, 2019

Will this be a high priority for Go 1.14? It could really ease the burden of build-from-souce workflows. Like, a lot.

@bcmills
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bcmills commented Sep 16, 2019

@mholt, this is unlikely to happen in Go 1.14.

(We have a pretty full slate of issues already, and any time the git command is involved there are thorny security considerations that must be addressed with care.)

@mback2k
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mback2k commented Sep 16, 2019

Is using the git command really a requirement of this feature? Wouldn't it be possible to get the relevant metadata directly from .git/HEAD?

@bcmills
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bcmills commented Sep 16, 2019

@mback2k, .git/HEAD tells us the commit id of the HEAD revision. It does not tell us:

  1. Whether the working directory is even in a Git repo, or perhaps in some other VCS nested within one.
  2. Where to find the .git directory.
  3. Whether the working tree contains ignored files or other differences from the commit indicated by .git/HEAD.

@mark-rushakoff
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The original point of this issue was simply documenting what it means when BuildInfo.Main.Version returns the string (devel). Whether it can be correctly set to a particular git sha seems to be a different topic in my opinion -- perhaps that should be another issue?

@mholt
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mholt commented Sep 16, 2019

@mark-rushakoff

The original point of this issue was simply documenting what it means when BuildInfo.Main.Version returns the string (devel)

BuildInfo.Main.Version always returns "(devel)".

I oppose documenting this, because I believe this is a bug: BuildInfo.Main.Version always returns "(devel)" even when the main module is versioned at HEAD.

Documenting that it always returns "(devel)" makes it appear as correct behavior and makes it hard or impossible to change later.

Let's fix the actual problem, not document the bug as expected behavior.

@bcmills
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bcmills commented Sep 18, 2019

@mholt, we can document the current behavior in a way that does not promise that behavior for all time.

For example, we can document that Buildinfo.Main.Version is (devel) when the go command does not know the version of the main module, without promising that it will never be changed to discover that version.

@hyangah
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hyangah commented Sep 19, 2019

nit:

Buildinfo.Main.Version is (devel) when the go command does not know the version of the main module, without promising that it will never be changed to discover that version.

The intention was that the BuildInfo.Main is the module that contains the main package, not the main module described in https://golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-The_main_module_and_the_build_list
issue 33975.

I hope correcting the documentation error will help explaining this BuildInfo.Main.Version == "(devel)" case.

@mholt
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mholt commented Sep 19, 2019

Yeah, I think what we want is the version for the "main module" - the module that contains the main package.

james-rms added a commit to foxglove/mcap that referenced this issue Oct 13, 2022
**Public-Facing Changes**

None.

**Description**
With context from golang/go#29228, the result of runtime/debug.BuildInfo.Main.Version is not well defined. Here we use an internally-defined Version as our library version in all contexts. We also add a test when using a go library release tag `go/mcap/v1.2.3` that the Version string is correct.

This PR also changes the behaviour of `Writer` to only append the existing library version if it's different from the current version. This removes the awkward behaviour of `mcap filter` where the resulting mcap Library would be `mcap go #(devel); mcap go #(devel); mcap go #(devel)...`.

Fixes #591
mwhittaker added a commit to ServiceWeaver/weaver that referenced this issue Jun 15, 2023
`weaver version` is supposed to print out the weaver module version,
something like:

```
$ weaver version
weaver v0.15.0
```

Previously, we used [`runtime.ReadBuildInfo`][ReadBuildInfo] to read the
version of the main module. However, I realized that this version was
always the string `(devel)`. At first, I thought the version was
`(devel)` when on a non-tagged commit, but later realized that it is
literally always `(devel)`: golang/go#29228.

I did some Googling to figure out how to print out the current module
version, but it seems impossible? This PR gives up and sticks with
showing the git commit. It's not as clear, but you can look up the
commit in the repo history to find the module version.

[ReadBuildInfo]: https://pkg.go.dev/runtime/debug#ReadBuildInfo
mwhittaker added a commit to ServiceWeaver/weaver that referenced this issue Jun 23, 2023
`weaver version` is supposed to print out the weaver module version,
something like:

```
$ weaver version
weaver v0.15.0
```

Previously, we used [`runtime.ReadBuildInfo`][ReadBuildInfo] to read the
version of the main module. However, I realized that this version was
always the string `(devel)`. At first, I thought the version was
`(devel)` when on a non-tagged commit, but later realized that it is
literally always `(devel)`: golang/go#29228.

I did some Googling to figure out how to print out the current module
version, but it seems impossible? This PR gives up and sticks with
showing the git commit. It's not as clear, but you can look up the
commit in the repo history to find the module version.

[ReadBuildInfo]: https://pkg.go.dev/runtime/debug#ReadBuildInfo
mwhittaker added a commit to ServiceWeaver/weaver that referenced this issue Jun 23, 2023
`weaver version` is supposed to print out the weaver module version,
something like:

```
$ weaver version
weaver v0.15.0
```

Previously, we used [`runtime.ReadBuildInfo`][ReadBuildInfo] to read the
version of the main module. However, I realized that this version was
always the string `(devel)`. At first, I thought the version was
`(devel)` when on a non-tagged commit, but later realized that it is
literally always `(devel)`: golang/go#29228.

I did some Googling to figure out how to print out the current module
version, but it seems impossible? This PR gives up and sticks with
showing the git commit. It's not as clear, but you can look up the
commit in the repo history to find the module version.

[ReadBuildInfo]: https://pkg.go.dev/runtime/debug#ReadBuildInfo
mwhittaker added a commit to ServiceWeaver/weaver that referenced this issue Jun 27, 2023
> Module Version

We want a `weaver version` command that prints out the weaver module
version the `weaver` binary was built with, or failing that, the commit
at which the binary was built. Unfortunately, both of these things are
hard.

There is currently no nice way to automatically get the version of the
main module in a go program [1]. There is a way to get the git commit
using `debug.ReadBuildInfo()` [2], but when `go install`ing a binary,
the version control information is stripped.

Browsing existing open source projects, it seems the standard practice
is to hard code the module version in the code. This PR does that and
updates the `weaver version` command to use it:

```
$ weaver version
weaver v0.17.0 linux/amd64
```

> Other Versions

The weaver repo has two other versioned APIs: the deployer API version
and the codegen version. Currently, the deployer API version is the
latest module version where the deployer API changed (and the same for
the codegen version).

We discussed offline the idea of replacing the three versions (module,
deployer API, codegen) with just the module version. Then, we could
write additional code to check version compatibility. Is codegen v0.17.3
incompatible with v0.12.0, for example?

When trying to implement this, however, I ran into some problems. For
example, let's say a deployer is at version v0.10.0 and tries to deploy
an app at version v0.12.0. Is deployer API version v0.12.0 compatible
with version v0.10.0? Well, the deployer was written before v0.12.0 was
even created, so it doesn't have a good way to know.

The codegen version is also tricky because it relies on some compiler
tricks to prevent an app from compiling if it has code generated with a
stale version of `weaver generate`. I'm not sure how to implement these
tricks without hardcoding a codegen version.

Because of these challenges, I decided to stick with our current
approach to versioning, for now at least. To clean things up a bit
though, I moved all versioning related code to `runtime/version.go`. I
also moved some code to the `bin` package because it felt more
appropriate there.

[1]: golang/go#29228
[2]: https://pkg.go.dev/runtime/debug#ReadBuildInfo
mwhittaker added a commit to ServiceWeaver/weaver that referenced this issue Jun 28, 2023
> Module Version

We want a `weaver version` command that prints out the weaver module
version the `weaver` binary was built with, or failing that, the commit
at which the binary was built. Unfortunately, both of these things are
hard.

There is currently no nice way to automatically get the version of the
main module in a go program [1]. There is a way to get the git commit
using `debug.ReadBuildInfo()` [2], but when `go install`ing a binary,
the version control information is stripped.

Browsing existing open source projects, it seems the standard practice
is to hard code the module version in the code. This PR does that and
updates the `weaver version` command to use it:

```
$ weaver version
weaver v0.17.0 linux/amd64
```

> Other Versions

The weaver repo has two other versioned APIs: the deployer API version
and the codegen version. Currently, the deployer API version is the
latest module version where the deployer API changed (and the same for
the codegen version).

We discussed offline the idea of replacing the three versions (module,
deployer API, codegen) with just the module version. Then, we could
write additional code to check version compatibility. Is codegen v0.17.3
incompatible with v0.12.0, for example?

When trying to implement this, however, I ran into some problems. For
example, let's say a deployer is at version v0.10.0 and tries to deploy
an app at version v0.12.0. Is deployer API version v0.12.0 compatible
with version v0.10.0? Well, the deployer was written before v0.12.0 was
even created, so it doesn't have a good way to know.

The codegen version is also tricky because it relies on some compiler
tricks to prevent an app from compiling if it has code generated with a
stale version of `weaver generate`. I'm not sure how to implement these
tricks without hardcoding a codegen version.

Because of these challenges, I decided to stick with our current
approach to versioning, for now at least. To clean things up a bit
though, I moved all versioning related code to `runtime/version.go`. I
also moved some code to the `bin` package because it felt more
appropriate there.

[1]: golang/go#29228
[2]: https://pkg.go.dev/runtime/debug#ReadBuildInfo
mwhittaker added a commit to ServiceWeaver/weaver that referenced this issue Jun 28, 2023
> Module Version

We want a `weaver version` command that prints out the weaver module
version the `weaver` binary was built with, or failing that, the commit
at which the binary was built. Unfortunately, both of these things are
hard.

There is currently no nice way to automatically get the version of the
main module in a go program [1]. There is a way to get the git commit
using `debug.ReadBuildInfo()` [2], but when `go install`ing a binary,
the version control information is stripped.

Browsing existing open source projects, it seems the standard practice
is to hard code the module version in the code. This PR does that and
updates the `weaver version` command to use it:

```
$ weaver version
weaver v0.17.0 linux/amd64
```

> Other Versions

The weaver repo has two other versioned APIs: the deployer API version
and the codegen version. Currently, the deployer API version is the
latest module version where the deployer API changed (and the same for
the codegen version).

We discussed offline the idea of replacing the three versions (module,
deployer API, codegen) with just the module version. Then, we could
write additional code to check version compatibility. Is codegen v0.17.3
incompatible with v0.12.0, for example?

When trying to implement this, however, I ran into some problems. For
example, let's say a deployer is at version v0.10.0 and tries to deploy
an app at version v0.12.0. Is deployer API version v0.12.0 compatible
with version v0.10.0? Well, the deployer was written before v0.12.0 was
even created, so it doesn't have a good way to know.

The codegen version is also tricky because it relies on some compiler
tricks to prevent an app from compiling if it has code generated with a
stale version of `weaver generate`. I'm not sure how to implement these
tricks without hardcoding a codegen version.

Because of these challenges, I decided to stick with our current
approach to versioning, for now at least. To clean things up a bit
though, I moved all versioning related code to `runtime/version.go`. I
also moved some code to the `bin` package because it felt more
appropriate there.

[1]: golang/go#29228
[2]: https://pkg.go.dev/runtime/debug#ReadBuildInfo
@0xdevalias
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1.18 stamps vcs info but not as the version, that's #50603

I was wondering if there have been any updates on this since the last comment in March 2022; potentially in other issue's I may not be aware of?

@seankhliao seankhliao added the NeedsInvestigation Someone must examine and confirm this is a valid issue and not a duplicate of an existing one. label Jul 13, 2024
ulope added a commit to shutter-network/rolling-shutter that referenced this issue Jul 16, 2024
Due to golang being annoying the VCS version isn't recorded in
debug.ReadBuildInfo when using `go build`.

If you have too much time, see:
- golang/go#29228
- golang/go#50603
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