Do you have a pile of old print-outs of PDF documents on your desk that correspond to different versions of the same file, but you can't see which printout corresponds to which version? And the file in question sits in a git repository?
Well, your prayers shall be heard. Here's the answer to that mess: Just watermark each PDF before you print it with the git commit id. You can find out the current git commit id with git describe --always.
How to get that onto you PDF? Either use a pen or pdflatex with the pdfinput and tikz packages. For those of us who don't like to use pens the script below automates that task. Just say (assuming you have named the script commitid and put it to some place in your PATH)
commitid filename.pdf
and the file will be watermarked with the current git commit id (well, something like that).
Enjoy!
bash
if [ ! -f "$1" -o $# -ne 1 ]; then
cat <<EOF
Usage: $0 <pdf file>
This command will take a pdf file located in a git repository and
watermark it with the current commit id.
(c) Bjoern Rueffer 2011
EOF
exit 1
elif ! git describe --always >/dev/null 2>&1; then
cat <<EOF
Error: This command must be invoked in a git repository!
(Otherwise I cannot know which commit ID to use.)
EOF
exit 1
elif !(echo "$1" | grep -i 'PDF$' >/dev/null 2>&1); then
cat <<EOF
Error: The file appears not to be PDF. I can only process PDF files.
EOF
exit 1
fi
echo -n Processing "$1" with git commit ID `git describe --always` ...
COMMITID=`git describe --always`
cp "$1" /tmp/pdf_to_stamp.pdf
cat >/tmp/commitid.tex <<EOF
\documentclass{scrlttr2}
\usepackage{pdfpages,pgf,tikz}
\pagestyle{empty}
\begin{document}
\includepdf[fitpaper,pages=-,%
picturecommand={},%
pagecommand={%
\begin{tikzpicture}[remember picture, overlay]
\node [xshift=1cm,yshift=-1cm,below right, fill=yellow!50, rounded corners, opacity=.5] at (current page.north west) {%
commit id: $COMMITID \qquad \today \qquad p.\thepage
};
\end{tikzpicture}%
}%
]{/tmp/pdf_to_stamp.pdf}
\end{document}
EOF
(cd /tmp; pdflatex commitid && pdflatex commitid) >/dev/null 2>&1
cp /tmp/commitid.pdf "$1"
rm /tmp/commitid*
echo \ done.