Subversion has the ability to substitute keywords—pieces of useful, dynamic information about a versioned file—into the contents of the file itself. Keywords generally describe information about the last time the file was known to be modified. Because this information changes each time the file changes, and more importantly, just after the file changes, it is a hassle for any process except the version control system to keep the data completely up-to-date. Left to human authors, the information would inevitably grow stale.
For example, say you have a document in which you would
like to display the last date on which it was modified. You
could burden every author of that document to, just before
committing their changes, also tweak the part of the
document that describes when it was last changed. But
sooner or later, someone would forget to do that. Instead
simply ask Subversion to perform keyword substitution on the
LastChangedDate
keyword. You control
where the keyword is inserted into your document by placing
a keyword anchor at the desired
location in the file. This anchor is just a string of text
formatted as
$
KeywordName
$
.
All keywords are case-sensitive where they appear as
anchors in files: you must use the correct capitalization in
order for the keyword to be expanded. You should consider the
value of the svn:keywords
property to be
case-sensitive too—certain keyword names will be recognized
regardless of case, but this behavior is deprecated.
Subversion defines the list of keywords available for substitution. That list contains the following five keywords, some of which have aliases that you can also use:
Date
This keyword describes the last time the file was
known to have been changed in the repository, and
looks something like $Date:
2006-07-22 21:42:37 -0700 (Sat, 22 Jul 2006)
$
. It may also be specified as
LastChangedDate
.
Revision
This keyword describes the last known revision in
which this file changed in the repository, and looks
something like $Revision: 144 $
.
It may also be specified as
LastChangedRevision
or
Rev
.
Author
This keyword describes the last known user to
change this file in the repository, and looks
something like $Author: harry $
.
It may also be specified as
LastChangedBy
.
HeadURL
This keyword describes the full URL to the latest
version of the file in the repository, and looks
something like $HeadURL:
http://svn.collab.net/repos/trunk/README $
.
It may be abbreviated as
URL
.
Id
This keyword is a compressed combination of the
other keywords. Its substitution looks something like
$Id: calc.c 148 2006-07-28 21:30:43Z sally
$
, and is interpreted to mean that the file
calc.c
was last changed in revision
148 on the evening of July 28, 2006 by the user
sally
.
Simply adding keyword anchor text to your file does nothing special. Subversion will never attempt to perform textual substitutions on your file contents unless explicitly asked to do so. After all, you might be writing a document [18] about how to use keywords, and you don't want Subversion to substitute your beautiful examples of un-substituted keyword anchors!
To tell Subversion whether or not to substitute keywords
on a particular file, we again turn to the property-related
subcommands. The svn:keywords
property,
when set on a versioned file, controls which keywords will
be substituted on that file. The value is a space-delimited
list of the keyword names or aliases found in the previous
table.
For example, say you have a versioned file named
weather.txt
that looks like
this:
Here is the latest report from the front lines. $LastChangedDate$ $Rev$ Cumulus clouds are appearing more frequently as summer approaches.
With no svn:keywords
property set on
that file, Subversion will do nothing special. Now, let's
enable substitution of the
LastChangedDate
keyword.
$ svn propset svn:keywords "Date Author" weather.txt property 'svn:keywords' set on 'weather.txt' $
Now you have made a local property modification on the
weather.txt
file. You will see no
changes to the file's contents (unless you made some of your
own prior to setting the property). Notice that the file
contained a keyword anchor for the Rev
keyword, yet we did not include that keyword in the property
value we set. Subversion will happily ignore requests to
substitute keywords that are not present in the file, and
will not substitute keywords that are not present in the
svn:keywords
property value.
Immediately after you commit this property change,
Subversion will update your working file with the new
substitute text. Instead of seeing your keyword anchor
$LastChangedDate$
, you'll see its
substituted result. That result also contains the name of
the keyword, and continues to be bounded by the dollar sign
($
) characters. And as we predicted, the
Rev
keyword was not substituted because
we didn't ask for it to be.
Note also that we set the svn:keywords
property to «Date Author» yet the keyword
anchor used the alias $LastChangedDate$
and still expanded correctly.
Here is the latest report from the front lines. $LastChangedDate: 2006-07-22 21:42:37 -0700 (Sat, 22 Jul 2006) $ $Rev$ Cumulus clouds are appearing more frequently as summer approaches.
If someone else now commits a change to
weather.txt
, your copy of that file
will continue to display the same substituted keyword value
as before—until you update your working copy. At that
time the keywords in your weather.txt
file will be re-substituted with information that
reflects the most recent known commit to that file.
Subversion 1.2 introduced a new variant of the keyword
syntax which brought additional, useful—though perhaps
atypical—functionality. You can now tell Subversion
to maintain a fixed length (in terms of the number of bytes
consumed) for the substituted keyword. By using a
double-colon (::
) after the keyword name,
followed by a number of space characters, you define that
fixed width. When Subversion goes to substitute your
keyword for the keyword and its value, it will essentially
replace only those space characters, leaving the overall
width of the keyword field unchanged. If the substituted
value is shorter than the defined field width, there will be
extra padding characters (spaces) at the end of the
substituted field; if it is too long, it is truncated with a
special hash (#
) character just before
the final dollar sign terminator.
For example, say you have a document in which you have some section of tabular data reflecting the document's Subversion keywords. Using the original Subversion keyword substitution syntax, your file might look something like:
$Rev$: Revision of last commit $Author$: Author of last commit $Date$: Date of last commit
Now, that looks nice and tabular at the start of things. But when you then commit that file (with keyword substitution enabled, of course), you see:
$Rev: 12 $: Revision of last commit $Author: harry $: Author of last commit $Date: 2006-03-15 02:33:03 -0500 (Wed, 15 Mar 2006) $: Date of last commit
The result is not so beautiful. And you might be tempted to then adjust the file after the substitution so that it again looks tabular. But that only holds as long as the keyword values are the same width. If the last committed revision rolls into a new place value (say, from 99 to 100), or if another person with a longer username commits the file, stuff gets all crooked again. However, if you are using Subversion 1.2 or better, you can use the new fixed-length keyword syntax, define some field widths that seem sane, and now your file might look like this:
$Rev:: $: Revision of last commit $Author:: $: Author of last commit $Date:: $: Date of last commit
You commit this change to your file. This time,
Subversion notices the new fixed-length keyword syntax, and
maintains the width of the fields as defined by the padding
you placed between the double-colon and the trailing dollar
sign. After substitution, the width of the fields is
completely unchanged—the short values for
Rev
and Author
are
padded with spaces, and the long Date
field is truncated by a hash character:
$Rev:: 13 $: Revision of last commit $Author:: harry $: Author of last commit $Date:: 2006-03-15 0#$: Date of last commit
The use of fixed-length keywords is especially handy when performing substitutions into complex file formats that themselves use fixed-length fields for data, or for which the stored size of a given data field is overbearingly difficult to modify from outside the format's native application (such as for Microsoft Office documents).
Be aware that because the width of a keyword field is measured in bytes, the potential for corruption of multi-byte values exists. For example, a username which contains some multi-byte UTF-8 characters might suffer truncation in the middle of the string of bytes which make up one of those characters. The result will be a mere truncation when viewed at the byte level, but will likely appear as a string with an incorrect or garbled final character when viewed as UTF-8 text. It is conceivable that certain applications, when asked to load the file, would notice the broken UTF-8 text and deem the entire file corrupt, refusing to operate on the file altogether.