I would like to be prevented† when staging‡ in a git
repo if the changes I am about to commit contain a certain string (say, @todo
or @hack
).
Can someone show me how to achieve this?
† or warned.
‡ or when committing.
A simple pre-commit hook that checks if the string '@todo' is being added could look like:
#!/bin/sh
. git-sh-setup # for die
if git-diff-index -p -M --cached HEAD -- \
| grep '^+' \
| grep @todo; then
die Blocking commit because string @todo detected in patch
fi
If this is the content of .git/hooks/pre-commit
and is executable,
any patch that adds the string @todo
will be rejected.
die
unless a custom flag is present? Would be used similar to: git commit -m "msg" --ignore-todo
grep -i @todo && ...
to make it case insensitive.
Jul 31, 2014 at 7:59
For a more general and thorough solution to this, take a look at Git Confirm, an open-source project I've been working on:
You can have a pre-commit
hook that looks for the string and blocks (warns) the commit.
The sample pre-commit hook (under .git/hooks) should get you started.
zsh provides a pre-command execution hook that might allow the running of some kind of script that would interrogate your commit, grep-ing for @to-do or @hack, and warn you before doing the actual commit. This posting (http://sebastiancelis.com/2009/11/16/zsh-prompt-git-users/) is really about building a fancy git prompt in zsh, but talks about using the pre-command execution hook.