Using this script you can check for changes not staged for commit. If there are changes the script will abord and exit. This works in any cases and is a safer check than Aaron D's answer because if you are using another language for git, that check will fail and it will say that you don't have unstaged stages even if you actually have.
So use this:
#!/bin/sh
# Check for changes not staged for commit
git diff --cached | grep -v ^$ > /dev/null
# If there are changes, exit with an error code
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "There are changes not staged for commit."
exit 1
fi
# Check for changes to already staged files
git diff --cached --name-only | while read file; do
if [ -f "$file" ]; then
# Check if there are unstaged changes to the file
if git diff --name-only "$file" | grep -v ^$ > /dev/null; then
echo "There are unstaged changes to the file '$file'."
exit 1
else
echo "Good to go! Commit now"
exit 0
fi
fi
done
Explanation:
The code provided is a pre-commit hook that checks for changes not staged for commit, changes to already staged files, and unstaged changes to already staged files.
The hook first checks for changes not staged for commit using the git diff --cached
command. If there are any changes, the hook will print a message and exit with an error code.
If there are no changes not staged for commit, the hook will then check for changes to already staged files using the git diff --cached --name-only
command. If there are any files that have been modified, the hook will print a message and exit with an error code.
The hook will then check if there are any unstaged changes to the files that have been modified. If there are any unstaged changes, the hook will print a message and exit with an error code.
If there are no changes to already staged files or unstaged changes to already staged files, the hook will exit with a success code.
In general text, the hook will check if there are any changes to your files that have not been committed. If there are any changes, the hook will print a message and exit with an error code. This will prevent you from committing changes that have not been staged.
Here is an example of how to use this hook:
- Create a file called * git/hooks/pre-commit
- Copy the code above into the file
- Make the file executable.
- The next time you try to commit, the pre-commit hook will check for changes not staged for commit, changes to already staged files, and unstaged changes to already staged files. If there are any changes, the hook will print a message and exit with an error code.
I actually use it to avoid code getting pushed to git that failed unit tests for flutter like this:
#!/bin/sh
# Check for changes not staged for commit
git diff --cached | grep -v ^$ > /dev/null
# If there are changes, exit with an error code
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo "There are no changes or some changes are not staged for commit."
git status
exit 1
fi
# Check for changes to already staged files
git diff --cached --name-only | while read file; do
if [ -f "$file" ]; then
# Check if there are unstaged changes to the file
if git diff --name-only "$file" | grep -v ^$ > /dev/null; then
echo "There are unstaged changes to the file '$file'."
exit 1
else
flutter test
# If the unit tests fail, exit with a non-zero exit code.
if [[ $? -ne 0 ]]; then
echo "Unit tests failed. Aborting commit."
exit 1
fi
fi
fi
done