(10-16-2011, 07:41 AM)Runo Wrote: Glennric, is there an easy way to tell which is the 3.0-xx number of a certain commit, because this number is just a build related thing right?
Runo, the 3.0-xxx number can be obtained using "git describe" from a linux command line inside the git repository. I am not sure how you do this on windows. It is an incremental numbering system for git. Basically if the master branch is at 3.0-158 then the first number of a all branches from that will be 3.0-159 (including the next commit to the master branch). Of course the hash at the end makes each of them unique. The number isn't build related, but commit related.
(10-16-2011, 07:41 AM)Runo Wrote: Glennric, is there an easy way to tell which is the 3.0-xx number of a certain commit, or is this number really just a build related thing? Because it would help a lot, hash only doesn't help much... I'm asking because, when you update the pot file, it would be good to have some order so we can know if a translation is newer than another.
Runo, this number can be obtained by using "git describe" from the linux command line in the git repository when the translation-update branch is checked out. I am not sure how to do this on windows. The number is not build related, but is commit related and is sequential. So a higher number will mean a newer pot file.
(10-16-2011, 07:41 AM)Runo Wrote: Glennric, is there an easy way to tell which is the 3.0-xx number of a certain commit, or is this number really just a build related thing? Because it would help a lot, hash only doesn't help much... I'm asking because, when you update the pot file, it would be good to have some order so we can know if a translation is newer than another.