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commitplease

Validates strings as commit messages

  • 2.0.0
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Commitplease

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This node.js module validates git commit messages while you commit, according to the rules specified in the jQuery Commit Guidlines. These are pretty generic, so this module should be useful for most projects that care about commit message formats.

Installation

npm install commitplease

A git version of 1.8.5 or newer is recommended. If you use git commit --verbose, it is required.

Usage

Just commit as usual. This modules installs a git commit-msg hook, automatically validating all commit messages as you enter them. Invalid messages will be rejected, with details on what's wrong and a copy of the input.

By default, the commit message needs to match the jQuery Commit Guidlines. See there for details, and below on how to change the default behaviour.

In addition, a subject (the first line) starting with "fixup!" and "squash!" is considered valid. These are generated by git commit --fixup and --squash. A component in square brackets like "[Tmp]" or "[fix]" is also considered valid, to be manually squashed later.

API

The API is a work-in-progress

var validate = require('commitplease/lib/validate');
var errors = validate(commit.message);
if (errors.length) {
	postComment('This commit has ' + errors.length + ' problems!');
}

validate(message[, options]), returns Array

  • message (String): The commit message to validate. Must use LF (\n) as line breaks.
  • options (Object, optional): Use this to override the default settings, see properties and defaults below
  • returns Array: Empty for valid messages, one or more items as String for each problem found

Options and their defaults:

component: true,
components: [],
limits: {
	subject: 72,
	other: 80
}
  • component: The default true requires a component, set to false to skip the check.
  • components: A list of valid components. When a component is found, it's compared to the ones specified in this array.
  • limits: Line length limits, for subject and other lines.

Customizing the bundled options

The validation options can be overriden by configuring the commitplease property on your own project's package.json. This allows you to customize the validation rules.

Here's an example for specifiying what components are valid:

{
  "name": "Example",
  "description": "An example project with custom commit hook options",
  "devDependencies": {
    "commitplease": "1.10.x"
  },
  "commitplease": {
    "components": [ "Build", "Test", "Core", "Legacy" ]
  }
}

License

Copyright 2014 Jörn Zaefferer. Released under the terms of the MIT license.


Support this project by donating on Gratipay.

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Package last updated on 22 Oct 2014

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