The semver package provides the ability to work with Semantic Versions in Go. Specifically it provides the ability to:
v prefixTo parse a semantic version use the NewVersion function. For example,
v, err := semver.NewVersion("1.2.3-beta.1+build345")
If there is an error the version wasn't parseable. The version object has methods to get the parts of the version, compare it to other versions, convert the version back into a string, and get the original string. For more details please see the documentation.
A set of versions can be sorted using the sort package from the standard library. For example,
raw := []string{"1.2.3", "1.0", "1.3", "2", "0.4.2",}
vs := make([]*semver.Version, len(raw))
for i, r := range raw {
v, err := semver.NewVersion(r)
if err != nil {
t.Errorf("Error parsing version: %s", err)
}
vs[i] = v
}
sort.Sort(semver.Collection(vs))
Checking a version against version constraints is one of the most featureful parts of the package.
c, err := semver.NewConstraint(">= 1.2.3") if err != nil { // Handle constraint not being parseable. } v, _ := semver.NewVersion("1.3") if err != nil { // Handle version not being parseable. } // Check if the version meets the constraints. The a variable will be true. a := c.Check(v)
There are two elements to the comparisons. First, a comparison string is a list of comma separated and comparisons. These are then separated by || separated or comparisons. For example, ">= 1.2, < 3.0.0 || >= 4.2.3" is looking for a comparison that's greater than or equal to 1.2 and less than 3.0.0 or is greater than or equal to 4.2.3.
The basic comparisons are:
=: equal (aliased to no operator)!=: not equal>: greater than<: less than>=: greater than or equal to<=: less than or equal toThere are multiple methods to handle ranges and the first is hyphens ranges. These look like:
1.2 - 1.4.5 which is equivalent to >= 1.2, <= 1.4.52.3.4 - 4.5 which is equivalent to >= 2.3.4, <= 4.5The x, X, and * characters can be used as a wildcard character. This works for all comparison operators. When used on the = operator it falls back to the pack level comparison (see tilde below). For example,
1.2.x is equivalent to >= 1.2.0, < 1.3.0>= 1.2.x is equivalent to >= 1.2.0<= 2.x is equivalent to <= 3* is equivalent to >= 0.0.0The tilde (~) comparison operator is for patch level ranges when a minor version is specified and major level changes when the minor number is missing. For example,
~1.2.3 is equivalent to >= 1.2.3, < 1.3.0~1 is equivalent to >= 1, < 2~2.3 is equivalent to >= 2.3, < 2.4~1.2.x is equivalent to >= 1.2.0, < 1.3.0~1.x is equivalent to >= 1, < 2The caret (^) comparison operator is for major level changes. This is useful when comparisons of API versions as a major change is API breaking. For example,
^1.2.3 is equivalent to >= 1.2.3, < 2.0.0^1.2.x is equivalent to >= 1.2.0, < 2.0.0^2.3 is equivalent to >= 2.3, < 3^2.x is equivalent to >= 2.0.0, < 3In addition to testing a version against a constraint, a version can be validated against a constraint. When validation fails a slice of errors containing why a version didn't meet the constraint is returned. For example,
c, err := semver.NewConstraint("<= 1.2.3, >= 1.4") if err != nil { // Handle constraint not being parseable. } v, _ := semver.NewVersion("1.3") if err != nil { // Handle version not being parseable. } // Validate a version against a constraint. a, msgs := c.Validate(v) // a is false for _, m := range msgs { fmt.Println(m) // Loops over the errors which would read // "1.3 is greater than 1.2.3" // "1.3 is less than 1.4" }
If you find an issue or want to contribute please file an issue or create a pull request.