On Mar 20, 2009, at 5:30 AM, Eric Noulard wrote:

2009/3/20 Philip Lowman <phi...@yhbt.com>:
On Thu, Mar 19, 2009 at 11:18 PM, Michael Jackson
<mike.jack...@bluequartz.net> wrote:

I am trying to find a nice portable solution for generating version
strings based on the date (seems reasonable). I even have my own c+ + code that can generate the proper string for me. The problem that I can not seem to get my head around is that I need to compile and run the program at cmake
time which probably isn't really going to happen, at least easily.
 So. what is everyone else doing for this?

My main goal is to automate the generation of cmake code like the
following:

set ( ${${Project_Name}_VERSION} "2009.03.10")

so that I can later use it for OS X bundle building.

On Unix systems I can easily spawn a "date" command to get what I need but
what to do on windows?

I use 'date' on unix and nothing but a "nodate" string on windows :-(


Ugly, but apparently possible with batch file scripting!
http://www.tech-recipes.com/rx/956/windows-batch-file-bat-to-get-current-date-in-mmddyyyy-format/

Another option is you could write a small program which uses localtime() and other posix functions to get you the format that you want and then use the
output from the program via a CHECK_C_SOURCE_COMPILES configure test.

may be the same idea, use TRY_RUN with your home made portable source
to get your string at CMake time.

another solution would be to try to find some script language installed (perl, python, ...) then EXECUTE_PROCESS with appropriate pieces of code
for getting the date you want.

I think it would be worth a feature request for cmake -E date <format>
the "how to get date" is popping again and again.

--
Erk


That was the ticket. The try_run is working as best as I would expect it to. I plan to wrap that code in a CMake variable so that I can trigger the try_run when I need to increment the version string.

After all of this I'll probably put in a feature request for this functionality to be a part of CMake. Actually, if we could just get the following variables set by CMake it would be great:

CMAKE_CURRENT_YEAR
CMAKE_CURRENT_MONTH
CMAKE_CURRENT_DAY
CMAKE_CURRENT_HOUR
CMAKE_CURRENT_MINUTE
CMAKE_CURRENT_SECOND

that would be _really_ helpful.

Thanks to everyone for the suggestions.
----
Mike Jackson



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