We use Hudson to build our projects, and Hudson conveniently defines environment variables like "%BUILD_NUMBER%" at compile time.
I'd like to use that variable in code, so we can do things like log what build this is at run time. However I CAN NOT do System.Environment.GetEnvironmentVariable because that is accessing the run-time environment, what I want is something like:
#define BUILD_NUM = %BUILD_NUMBER%
or
const string BUILD_NUM = %BUILD_NUMBER%
Except I don't know the syntax. Can someone please point me in the right direction? Thanks!
Okay here's what I wound up doing. It's not very elegant, but it works. I created a pre-build step that looks like this:
echo namespace Some.Namespace > "$(ProjectDir)\CiInfo.cs"
echo { >> "$(ProjectDir)\CiInfo.cs"
echo ///^<summary^>Info about the continuous integration server build that produced this binary.^</summary^> >> "$(ProjectDir)\CiInfo.cs"
echo public static class CiInfo >> "$(ProjectDir)\CiInfo.cs"
echo { >> "$(ProjectDir)\CiInfo.cs"
echo ///^<summary^>The current build number, such as "153"^</summary^> >> "$(ProjectDir)\CiInfo.cs"
echo public const string BuildNumber = ("%BUILD_NUMBER%" == "" ? @"Unknown" : "%BUILD_NUMBER%"); >> "$(ProjectDir)\CiInfo.cs"
echo ///^<summary^>String of the build number and build date/time, and other useful info.^</summary^> >> "$(ProjectDir)\CiInfo.cs"
echo public const string BuildTag = ("%BUILD_TAG%" == "" ? @"nohudson" : "%BUILD_TAG%") + " built: %DATE%-%TIME%"; >> "$(ProjectDir)\CiInfo.cs"
echo } >> "$(ProjectDir)\CiInfo.cs"
echo } >> "$(ProjectDir)\CiInfo.cs"
Then I added "CiInfo.cs" to the project, but ignored it from version control. That way I never have to edit it or commit it, and the project always has a constant available that is the latest build number and time.