118
votes

Many programs return their version number with a command like:

$ program --version
program (platform info) v1.2.3

This is useful for scripting the installation or maintenance of the program, and some other controlled automation magic from System Admins and friends.

Problem

How to easily get the version number for Erlang (OTP)?

On the net

Here are some unsatisfactory solutions (from the trapexit forum and other tutorials/Erlang documentation):

Emulator

$ erl
1> erlang:system_info(otp_release).
"R13B03"

Hard to script. I have not found a way to have erl execute a single command from a shell prompt.

Release file

$ cat /usr/lib/erlang/releases/RELEASES
[{release,"OTP  APN 181 01","R13B03","5.7.4",
      [{kernel,"2.13.4","/usr/lib/erlang/lib/kernel-2.13.4"},
       {stdlib,"1.16.4","/usr/lib/erlang/lib/stdlib-1.16.4"},
       {sasl,"2.1.8","/usr/lib/erlang/lib/sasl-2.1.8"}],
      permanent}].

Parsing paradise (with shell).

An alternative could also be checking the install path, but that is not portable (my install path does not include the version, for one).

Personal context: I am writing a script to install the same version of RabbitMQ with plugins on several machines. Some plugins have minimal requirements on the OTP version, and it is how this question started.

12
What's so bad about RELEASES? It's trivially parsed by Erlang :-)Julian Fondren
Ooops, nothing bad with that! I edited the post for the context. I meant parsing the Erlang string with shell tools. My goal is to script SA tasks for an Erlang package.Eric Platon
I don't understand Erlang syntax yet; I just want to check whether the installed version supports Riak or not. Starring this and hoping that one day Erlang will provide a simpler way to report its version to administrators of tools that depend on it.Iain Samuel McLean Elder
erl --version .Michael Dimmitt

12 Answers

165
votes
 erl -eval 'erlang:display(erlang:system_info(otp_release)), halt().'  -noshell
100
votes

The other answers only display major version as of OTP 17 (from docs for erlang:system_info). This works to display major and minor version on my development machine:

erl -eval '{ok, Version} = file:read_file(filename:join([code:root_dir(), "releases", erlang:system_info(otp_release), "OTP_VERSION"])), io:fwrite(Version), halt().' -noshell

This reads from the appropriate file, as described in the docs.

43
votes

(I'm adding this answer here since I've searched for this at least 3 times in the past three months)

Starting from version 17.0 releases have a new format in their version number (17.0, 17.1, ...) but erlang:system_info(otp_release). only returns the major version number.

In order to get the full version number it is necessary to check the contents of the OTP_RELEASE file under the already mentioned releases folder.

$ which erl
/usr/bin/erl
$ cd /usr/bin
$ ls -l erl
../lib/erlang/bin/erl
$ cd ../lib/erlang/
$ cat releases/17/OTP_RELEASE
17.3

EDIT

# Some versions seem to have OTP_VERSION instead of OTP_RELEASE
$ cat releases/17/OTP_VERSION
17.4
14
votes

init docs, linked by 'man erl'.

-eval Expr

Scans, parses and evaluates an arbitrary expression Expr during system initialization. If any of these steps fail (syntax error, parse error or exception during evaluation), Erlang stops with an error message. Here is an example that seeds the random number generator:

% erl -eval '{X,Y,Z} = now(), random:seed(X,Y,Z).'

This example uses Erlang as a hexadecimal calculator:

% erl -noshell -eval 'R = 16#1F+16#A0, io:format("~.16B~n", [R])'  -s erlang halt
BF

If multiple -eval expressions are specified, they are evaluated sequentially in the order specified. -eval expressions are evaluated sequentially with -s and -run function calls (this also in the order specified). As with -s and -run, an evaluation that does not terminate, blocks the system initialization process.

Thus,

$ erl -noshell -eval 'io:fwrite("~s\n", [erlang:system_info(otp_release)]).' -s erlang halt
13
votes

To retrieve EShell (Erlang Shell) version, you may use:

erlang:system_info(version).

and to retrieve Erlang OTP (Open Telecom Platform) version:

erlang:system_info(otp_release).


enter image description here

7
votes

Find in /usr/lib/erlang/releases/18/OTP_VERSION

4
votes

erl +V or you can use erl -version

result : Erlang (SMP,ASYNC_THREADS) (BEAM) emulator version 5.8.5

2
votes

Finds the erl in your PATH and reads the RELEASES file to extract the erlang release number.

awk -F, 'NR==1 {gsub(/"/,"",$3);print $3}' "$(dirname $(readlink -f $(which erl)))/../releases/RELEASES"
1
votes

Open terminal and enter command erl

You will get the following output:

Erlang R16B03 (erts-5.10.4) [source] [64-bit] [smp:4:4] [async-threads:10] [kernel-poll:false] Eshell V5.10.4 (abort with ^G)

Erlang R16B03 (erts-5.10.4) [source] [64-bit] [smp:4:4] [async-threads:10] [kernel-poll:false] - This is the language version

Eshell V5.10.4 (abort with ^G) - This is the shell version

1
votes

Based on Jay's answer above, I wrote the following shell function that I can use:

erlang () {
    if [[ $@ == "-v" ]]; then
        command erl -eval '{ok, Version} = file:read_file(filename:join([code:root_dir(), "releases", erlang:system_info(otp_release), "OTP_VERSION"])), io:fwrite(Version), halt().' -noshell
    else
        command erl
    fi
}

I often forget that the command is erl rather than erlang, so this lets my forgetful brain just use erlang as if it were erl, and erlang -v like I would expect from something like elixir.

0
votes

I ran the updates for the systems and works

sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade
-6
votes

A simple command you can use:

erl --version