HOW TOR VERSION NUMBERS WORK 1. The Old Way Before 0.1.0, versions were of the format: MAJOR.MINOR.MICRO(status(PATCHLEVEL))?(-cvs)? where MAJOR, MINOR, MICRO, and PATCHLEVEL are numbers, status is one of "pre" (for an alpha release), "rc" (for a release candidate), or "." for a release. As a special case, "a.b.c" was equivalent to "a.b.c.0". We compare the elements in order (major, minor, micro, status, patchlevel, cvs), with "cvs" preceding non-cvs. We would start each development branch with a final version in mind: say, "0.0.8". Our first pre-release would be "0.0.8pre1", followed by (for example) "0.0.8pre2-cvs", "0.0.8pre2", "0.0.8pre3-cvs", "0.0.8rc1", "0.0.8rc2-cvs", and "0.0.8rc2". Finally, we'd release 0.0.8. The stable CVS branch would then be versioned "0.0.8.1-cvs", and any eventual bugfix release would be "0.0.8.1". 2. The New Way After 0.1.0, versions are of the format: MAJOR.MINOR.MICRO[.PATCHLEVEL][-STATUS_TAG][ (EXTRA_INFO)] The stuff in parentheses is optional. As before, MAJOR, MINOR, MICRO, and PATCHLEVEL are numbers, with an absent number equivalent to 0. All versions should be distinguishable purely by those four numbers. The STATUS_TAG is purely informational, and lets you know how stable we think the release is: "alpha" is pretty unstable; "rc" is a release candidate; and no tag at all means that we have a final release. If the tag ends with "-cvs" or "-dev", you're looking at a development snapshot that came after a given release. If we *do* encounter two versions that differ only by status tag, we compare them lexically. The STATUS_TAG can't contain whitespace. The EXTRA_INFO is also purely informational, often containing information about the SCM commit this version came from. It is surrounded by parentheses and can't contain whitespace. Unlike the STATUS_TAG this never impacts the way that versions should be compared. Now, we start each development branch with (say) 0.1.1.1-alpha. The patchlevel increments consistently as the status tag changes, for example, as in: 0.1.1.2-alpha, 0.1.1.3-alpha, 0.1.1.4-rc, 0.1.1.5-rc. Eventually, we release 0.1.1.6. The next patch release is 0.1.1.7. Between these releases, CVS is versioned with a -cvs tag: after 0.1.1.1-alpha comes 0.1.1.1-alpha-cvs, and so on. But starting with 0.1.2.1-alpha-dev, we switched to SVN and started using the "-dev" suffix instead of the "-cvs" suffix.