import * as mod from "https://deno.land/std@0.203.0/semver/mod.ts";
The semantic version parser.
Adapted directly from semver.
Versions
A "version" is described by the v2.0.0
specification found at
https://semver.org.
A leading "="
or "v"
character is stripped off and ignored.
Format
Semantic versions can be formatted as strings, by default they
are formatted as full
. Below is a diagram showing the various
formatting options.
┌───── full
┌───┴───┐
├───────── release
┌───┴───┐ │
├───────────── primary
┌─┴─┐ │ │
1.2.3-pre.1+b.1
│ │ │ └─┬─┘ └┬┘
│ │ │ │ └── build
│ │ │ └─────── pre
│ │ └─────────── patch
│ └───────────── minor
└─────────────── major
Ranges
A version range
is a set of comparators
which specify versions that satisfy
the range.
A comparator
is composed of an operator
and a version
. The set of
primitive operators
is:
<
Less than<=
Less than or equal to>
Greater than>=
Greater than or equal to=
Equal. If no operator is specified, then equality is assumed, so this operator is optional, but MAY be included.
For example, the comparator >=1.2.7
would match the versions 1.2.7
, 1.2.8
,
2.5.3
, and 1.3.9
, but not the versions 1.2.6
or 1.1.0
.
Comparators can be joined by whitespace to form a comparator set
, which is
satisfied by the intersection of all of the comparators it includes.
A range is composed of one or more comparator sets, joined by ||
. A version
matches a range if and only if every comparator in at least one of the
||
-separated comparator sets is satisfied by the version.
For example, the range >=1.2.7 <1.3.0
would match the versions 1.2.7
,
1.2.8
, and 1.2.99
, but not the versions 1.2.6
, 1.3.0
, or 1.1.0
.
The range 1.2.7 || >=1.2.9 <2.0.0
would match the versions 1.2.7
, 1.2.9
,
and 1.4.6
, but not the versions 1.2.8
or 2.0.0
.
Prerelease Tags
If a version has a prerelease tag (for example, 1.2.3-alpha.3
) then it will
only be allowed to satisfy comparator sets if at least one comparator with the
same [major, minor, patch]
tuple also has a prerelease tag.
For example, the range >1.2.3-alpha.3
would be allowed to match the version
1.2.3-alpha.7
, but it would not be satisfied by 3.4.5-alpha.9
, even though
3.4.5-alpha.9
is technically "greater than" 1.2.3-alpha.3
according to the
SemVer sort rules. The version range only accepts prerelease tags on the 1.2.3
version. The version 3.4.5
would satisfy the range, because it does not have
a prerelease flag, and 3.4.5
is greater than 1.2.3-alpha.7
.
The purpose for this behavior is twofold. First, prerelease versions frequently are updated very quickly, and contain many breaking changes that are (by the author"s design) not yet fit for public consumption. Therefore, by default, they are excluded from range matching semantics.
Second, a user who has opted into using a prerelease version has clearly indicated the intent to use that specific set of alpha/beta/rc versions. By including a prerelease tag in the range, the user is indicating that they are aware of the risk. However, it is still not appropriate to assume that they have opted into taking a similar risk on the next set of prerelease versions.
Note that this behavior can be suppressed (treating all prerelease versions as
if they were normal versions, for the purpose of range matching) by setting the
includePrerelease
flag on the options object to any functions
that do range matching.
Prerelease Identifiers
The method .increment
takes an additional identifier
string argument that
will append the value of the string as a prerelease identifier:
semver.increment(parse("1.2.3"), "prerelease", "beta");
// "1.2.4-beta.0"
Build Metadata
Build metadata is .
delimited alpha-numeric string.
When parsing a version it is retained on the build: string[]
field
of the semver instance. When incrementing there is an additional parameter that
can set the build metadata on the semver instance.
Advanced Range Syntax
Advanced range syntax desugars to primitive comparators in deterministic ways.
Advanced ranges may be combined in the same way as primitive comparators using
white space or ||
.
Hyphen Ranges X.Y.Z - A.B.C
Specifies an inclusive set.
1.2.3 - 2.3.4
:=>=1.2.3 <=2.3.4
If a partial version is provided as the first version in the inclusive range, then the missing pieces are replaced with zeroes.
1.2 - 2.3.4
:=>=1.2.0 <=2.3.4
If a partial version is provided as the second version in the inclusive range, then all versions that start with the supplied parts of the tuple are accepted, but nothing that would be greater than the provided tuple parts.
1.2.3 - 2.3
:=>=1.2.3 <2.4.0
1.2.3 - 2
:=>=1.2.3 <3.0.0
X-Ranges 1.2.x
1.X
1.2.*
*
Any of X
, x
, or *
may be used to "stand in" for one of the numeric values
in the [major, minor, patch]
tuple.
*
:=>=0.0.0
(Any version satisfies)1.x
:=>=1.0.0 <2.0.0
(Matching major version)1.2.x
:=>=1.2.0 <1.3.0
(Matching major and minor versions)
A partial version range is treated as an X-Range, so the special character is in fact optional.
""
(empty string) :=*
:=>=0.0.0
1
:=1.x.x
:=>=1.0.0 <2.0.0
1.2
:=1.2.x
:=>=1.2.0 <1.3.0
Tilde Ranges ~1.2.3
~1.2
~1
Allows patch-level changes if a minor version is specified on the comparator. Allows minor-level changes if not.
~1.2.3
:=>=1.2.3 <1.(2+1).0
:=>=1.2.3 <1.3.0
~1.2
:=>=1.2.0 <1.(2+1).0
:=>=1.2.0 <1.3.0
(Same as1.2.x
)~1
:=>=1.0.0 <(1+1).0.0
:=>=1.0.0 <2.0.0
(Same as1.x
)~0.2.3
:=>=0.2.3 <0.(2+1).0
:=>=0.2.3 <0.3.0
~0.2
:=>=0.2.0 <0.(2+1).0
:=>=0.2.0 <0.3.0
(Same as0.2.x
)~0
:=>=0.0.0 <(0+1).0.0
:=>=0.0.0 <1.0.0
(Same as0.x
)~1.2.3-beta.2
:=>=1.2.3-beta.2 <1.3.0
Note that prereleases in the1.2.3
version will be allowed, if they are greater than or equal tobeta.2
. So,1.2.3-beta.4
would be allowed, but1.2.4-beta.2
would not, because it is a prerelease of a different[major, minor, patch]
tuple.
Caret Ranges ^1.2.3
^0.2.5
^0.0.4
Allows changes that do not modify the left-most non-zero element in the
[major, minor, patch]
tuple. In other words, this allows patch and minor
updates for versions 1.0.0
and above, patch updates for versions
0.X >=0.1.0
, and no updates for versions 0.0.X
.
Many authors treat a 0.x
version as if the x
were the major
"breaking-change" indicator.
Caret ranges are ideal when an author may make breaking changes between 0.2.4
and 0.3.0
releases, which is a common practice. However, it presumes that
there will not be breaking changes between 0.2.4
and 0.2.5
. It allows for
changes that are presumed to be additive (but non-breaking), according to
commonly observed practices.
^1.2.3
:=>=1.2.3 <2.0.0
^0.2.3
:=>=0.2.3 <0.3.0
^0.0.3
:=>=0.0.3 <0.0.4
^1.2.3-beta.2
:=>=1.2.3-beta.2 <2.0.0
Note that prereleases in the1.2.3
version will be allowed, if they are greater than or equal tobeta.2
. So,1.2.3-beta.4
would be allowed, but1.2.4-beta.2
would not, because it is a prerelease of a different[major, minor, patch]
tuple.^0.0.3-beta
:=>=0.0.3-beta <0.0.4
Note that prereleases in the0.0.3
version only will be allowed, if they are greater than or equal tobeta
. So,0.0.3-pr.2
would be allowed.
When parsing caret ranges, a missing patch
value desugars to the number 0
,
but will allow flexibility within that value, even if the major and minor
versions are both 0
.
^1.2.x
:=>=1.2.0 <2.0.0
^0.0.x
:=>=0.0.0 <0.1.0
^0.0
:=>=0.0.0 <0.1.0
A missing minor
and patch
values will desugar to zero, but also allow
flexibility within those values, even if the major version is zero.
^1.x
:=>=1.0.0 <2.0.0
^0.x
:=>=0.0.0 <1.0.0
Range Grammar
Putting all this together, here is a Backus-Naur grammar for ranges, for the benefit of parser authors:
range-set ::= range ( logical-or range ) *
logical-or ::= ( " " ) * "||" ( " " ) *
range ::= hyphen | simple ( " " simple ) * | ""
hyphen ::= partial " - " partial
simple ::= primitive | partial | tilde | caret
primitive ::= ( "<" | ">" | ">=" | "<=" | "=" ) partial
partial ::= xr ( "." xr ( "." xr qualifier ? )? )?
xr ::= "x" | "X" | "*" | nr
nr ::= "0" | ["1"-"9"] ( ["0"-"9"] ) *
tilde ::= "~" partial
caret ::= "^" partial
qualifier ::= ( "-" pre )? ( "+" build )?
pre ::= parts
build ::= parts
parts ::= part ( "." part ) *
part ::= nr | [-0-9A-Za-z]+
Note that, since ranges may be non-contiguous, a version might not be greater
than a range, less than a range, or satisfy a range! For example, the range
1.2 <1.2.9 || >2.0.0
would have a hole from 1.2.9
until 2.0.0
, so the
version 1.2.10
would not be greater than the range (because 2.0.1
satisfies,
which is higher), nor less than the range (since 1.2.8
satisfies, which is
lower), and it also does not satisfy the range.
If you want to know if a version satisfies or does not satisfy a range, use the
satisfies
function.
This module is browser compatible.
Examples
Example 1
Example 1
import {
parse,
parseComparator,
parseRange,
gt,
lt,
format
} from "https://deno.land/std@0.203.0/semver/mod.ts";
const semver = parse("1.2.3");
const range = parseRange("1.x || >=2.5.0 || 5.0.0 - 7.2.3");
const s0 = parse("1.2.3");
const s1 = parse("9.8.7");
gt(s0, s1); // false
lt(s0, s1); // true
format(semver) // "1.2.3"
Variables
v ALL | A comparator which will span all valid semantic versions |
v ANY | ANY is a sentinel value used by some range calculations. It is not a valid SemVer object and should not be used directly. |
A sentinel value used to denote an invalid SemVer object which may be the result of impossible ranges or comparator operations. | |
v MAX | MAX is a sentinel value used by some range calculations.
It is equivalent to |
v MIN | The minimum valid SemVer object. Equivalent to |
v NONE | A comparator which will not span any semantic versions |
Functions
f cmp | Do a comparison of two semantic version objects based on the given operator |
Formats the comparator into a string | |
Returns true if the range of possible versions intersects with the other comparators set of possible versions | |
The maximum version that could match this comparator. | |
The minimum semantic version that could match this comparator | |
Compare two semantic version objects. | |
Compare two semantic version objects including build metadata. | |
Returns difference between two versions by the release type, or
| |
f eq | Returns |
Format a SemVer object into a string. | |
f gt | Greater than comparison |
f gte | Greater than or equal to comparison |
f gtr | Checks to see if the version is greater than all possible versions of the range. |
Returns the new version resulting from an increment by release type. | |
Checks to see if value is a valid SemVer object. It does a check into each field including prerelease and build. | |
Does a deep check on the value to see if it is a valid SemVerComparator object. | |
Does a deep check on the object to determine if its a valid range. | |
f lt | Less than comparison |
f lte | Less than or equal to comparison |
f ltr | Greater than range comparison |
Returns the highest version in the list that satisfies the range, or | |
Returns the lowest version in the list that satisfies the range, or | |
f neq | Not equal comparison |
Attempt to parse a string as a semantic version, returning either a | |
Parses a comparator string into a valid SemVerComparator. | |
Parses a range string into a SemVerRange object or throws a TypeError. | |
Formats the range into a string | |
The ranges intersect every range of AND comparators intersects with a least one range of OR ranges. | |
The maximum valid SemVer for a given range or INVALID | |
The minimum valid SemVer for a given range or INVALID | |
A reverse comparison of two versions. Same as compare but
| |
Sorts a list of semantic versions in descending order. | |
f sort | Sorts a list of semantic versions in ascending order. |
Test to see if a semantic version falls within the range of the comparator. | |
Test to see if the version satisfies the range. |
Interfaces
A SemVer object parsed into its constituent parts. | |
The shape of a valid semantic version comparator | |
A type representing a semantic version range. The ranges consist of a nested array, which represents a set of OR comparisons while the inner array represents AND comparisons. |
Type Aliases
The style to use when formatting a SemVer object into a string | |
SemVer comparison operators. | |
The possible release types are used as an operator for the increment function and as a result of the difference function. |