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We've got VisualSVN set up as our Subversion server on Windows, and we use Ankhsvn + TortoiseSVN on our client workstations.

How can you configure the server to require commit messages to be non-empty?

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10 Answers

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SVN uses a number of hooks to accomplish tasks like this.

  • start-commit - run before commit transaction begins, can be used to do special permission checking
  • pre-commit - run at the end of the transaction, but before commit. Often used to validate things such as a non zero length log message.
  • post-commit - runs after the transaction has been committed. Can be used for sending emails, or backing up repository.
  • pre-revprop-change - runs before a revision property change. Can be used to check permissions.
  • post-revprop-change - runs after a revision property change. Can be used to email or backup these changes.

You want the pre-commit hook. You can write it yourself in just about any language your platform supports, but there are a number of scripts on the web. Googling "svn precommit hook to require comment" I found a couple that looked like they would fit the bill:

Perl Script

Python Script

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Ok, so if you edit one of those hooks, what is it! – coffeeaddict May 15 at 14:32
1  
what's the code to require x chars on the pre-commit comments? – coffeeaddict May 15 at 14:32
Using Visual SVN Server – coffeeaddict May 15 at 14:33
You will have to decide what language you wish to use if you are writing your own hook. I would just go find a pre-written hook to accomplish whatever your needs are and try to find it in a language with which you are comfortable. You may need to modify the code, which shouldn't be to difficult in this case. – Jason Jackson May 20 at 14:58
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The technical answers to your question have already been given. I'd like to add the social answer, which is: "By establishing commit message standards with your team and getting them to agree (or accept) reasons why one would need expressive commit messages"

I've seen so many commit messages that said "patch", "typo", "fix" or similar that I've lost count.

Really - make it clear to everybody why you'd need them.

Examples for reasons are:

  • Generated Changenotes (well - this'd actually make a nice automatic tool to enforce good messages if I know that they will be (with my name) publically visible - if only for the team)
  • License issues: You might need to know the origin of code later, e.g. should you want to change the license to your code (Some organizations even have standards for commit message formatting - well, you could automate the checking for this, but you'd not necessarily get good commit messages with this)
  • Interoperability with other tools, e.g. bugtrackers/issue management systems that interface with your version control and extract information from the commit messages.

Hope that helps, additionally to the technical answers about precommit hooks.

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I've worked for an organization that even went so far as to systematically roll back commits without acceptable commit messages, especially as the release approached. – Warren Pena Aug 12 at 14:27
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I believe you'll have to setup a pre-commit hook that will check for the message.

Indeed just by googling the first result I got was a perl pre-commit script to do exactly what you intended.

Perl pre-commit hook example (untested)

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vote up 2 vote down

What VisualSVN offers you to enter as hooks are "Windows NT command scripts", which are basically batch files.

Writing if-then-else in batch files is very ugly and probably very hard to debug.

It will look something like the following (search for pre-commit.bat) (not tested):

SVNLOOK.exe log -t "%2" "%1" | grep.exe "[a-zA-Z0-9]" > nul || GOTO ERROR
GOTO OK
:ERROR
ECHO "Please enter comment and then retry commit!"
exit 1
:OK
exit 0

You need a grep.exe on the path, %1 is the the path to this repository, %2 the name of the txn about to be committed. Also have a look at the pre-commit.tmpl in the hooks directory of your repository.

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1  
you need to echo to stderr in order to get the message back to the client - use: ECHO "bad boy" 1>&2 – gbjbaanb Feb 11 at 12:04
sorry, not an NT command script guru and don't have time to hack one up and hit my head learning it. Any chance you can tell us how to check the comment length here? – coffeeaddict May 15 at 14:52
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Use this on Windows:

svnlook log -t "%2" "%1" | c:\tools\grep -c "[a-zA-z0-9]" > nul
if %ERRORLEVEL% NEQ 1 exit 0

echo Please enter a check-in comment 1>&2
exit 1

You'll need a copy of grep, I recommend the gnu tools version.

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what about a comment length? – coffeeaddict May 15 at 14:52
the gnu tools link you gave does not work. The download is not available. – irperez Aug 7 at 17:45
its on SF! downloads.sourceforge.net/project/unxutils/… – gbjbaanb Aug 7 at 22:28
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Here's a Windows Shell JScript that you can use by specifying the hook as:

%SystemRoot%\System32\CScript.exe //nologo <..path..to..script> %1 %2

It's pretty easy-to-read, so go ahead an experiment.

BTW the reason to do this in JScript is that it does not rely on any other tools (Perl, CygWin, etc) to be installed.

if (WScript.Arguments.Length < 2) 
{   
    WScript.StdErr.WriteLine("Repository Hook Error: Missing parameters. Should be REPOS_PATH then TXN_NAME, e.g. %1 %2 in pre-commit hook");
    WScript.Quit(-1);
}

var oShell = new ActiveXObject("WScript.Shell");
var oFSO = new ActiveXObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject");

var preCommitStdOut = oShell.ExpandEnvironmentStrings("%TEMP%\\PRE-COMMIT." + WScript.Arguments(1) + ".stdout");
var preCommitStdErr = oShell.ExpandEnvironmentStrings("%TEMP%\\PRE-COMMIT." + WScript.Arguments(1) + ".stderr");

var commandLine = "%COMSPEC% /C \"C:\\Program Files\\VisualSVN Server\\bin\\SVNLook.exe\" log -t ";

commandLine += WScript.Arguments(1);
commandLine += " ";
commandLine += WScript.Arguments(0);
commandLine += "> " + preCommitStdOut + " 2> " + preCommitStdErr;


// Run Synchronously, don't show a window
// WScript.Echo("About to run: " + commandLine);
var exitCode = oShell.Run(commandLine, 0, true);

var fsOUT = oFSO.GetFile(preCommitStdOut).OpenAsTextStream(1);
var fsERR = oFSO.GetFile(preCommitStdErr).OpenAsTextStream(1);

var stdout = fsOUT && !fsOUT.AtEndOfStream ? fsOUT.ReadAll() : "";
var stderr = fsERR && !fsERR.AtEndOfStream ? fsERR.ReadAll() : "";

if (stderr.length > 0)
{
WScript.StdErr.WriteLine("Error with SVNLook: " + stderr);
WScript.Quit(-2);
}

// To catch naught commiters who write 'blah' as their commit message

if (stdout.length < 5)
{
WScript.StdErr.WriteLine("Please provide a commit message that describes why you've made these changes.");
WScript.Quit(-3);
}

WScript.Quit(0);
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This works great. – irperez Aug 7 at 17:59
The only issue I have is that it still accepts "blah"... weird. – irperez Aug 7 at 17:59
vote up 2 vote down

This is ours. No extra tools required.

I'm glad you asked this question

pre-commit:

setlocal 

set REPOS=%1
set TXN=%2

set SVNLOOK="C:\Program Files\VisualSVN Server\bin\svnlook.exe"

REM Make sure that the log message contains some text.
FOR /F "usebackq delims==" %%g IN (`%SVNLOOK% log -t %TXN% %REPOS% FINDSTR /R /C:......`) DO goto NORMAL_EXIT



:ERROR_TOO_SHORT
echo "Commit note must be at least 6 letters" >&2
goto ERROR_EXIT

:ERROR_EXIT
exit /b 1

REM All checks passed, so allow the commit.
:NORMAL_EXIT
exit 0
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this is awesome! – Sander Versluys Oct 30 at 10:28
1  
i've got a little improvement which is usefull in 64bit version of windows 2008: instead of using "C:\Program Files\Vis..." use Windows Environment Variables like "%PROGRAMFILES%\Vis...." – Sander Versluys Nov 3 at 10:31
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Good question and good solution! By the way, how can we modify commited files in start commit or pre-comit hook?

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You can't change a transaction in pre or start commit. The client assumes the file is committed unmodified, so even if this was possible it would break the working copy on the client. You should deny commits that are not valid (let the user fix it) or post commit fix it with an extra commit. – Bert Huijben Dec 20 '08 at 15:06
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Prior to adding commit hooks to my server, I just distributed svnprops to the tortoisesvn clients.

So, as an alternative:

In tortoiseSVN -> Properties property name - add/set tsvn:logminsize appropriately.

This of course is no guarantee on the server as clients/users can opt not to do it, but you can distribute svnprops files if you like. This way users don't have to set their own values - you can provide them to all users.

This also works for things like bugtraq: settings to link issue tracking stuff in the logs.

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vote up 0 vote down

tried this but no luck:

svnlook log -t "%2" "%1" | c:\tools\grep -c "[a-zA-z0-9]" > nul
if %ERRORLEVEL% NEQ 1 exit 0

echo Please enter a check-in comment 1>&2
exit 1

REPOS="$1"
TXN="$2"

# Make sure that the log message contains some text.
SVNLOOK=/usr/local/bin/svnlook
$SVNLOOK log -t "$TXN" "$REPOS" | \
   grep "[a-zA-Z0-9]" > /dev/null || exit 1

# Check that the author of this commit has the rights to perform
# the commit on the files and directories being modified.
commit-access-control.pl "$REPOS" "$TXN" commit-access-control.cfg || exit 1


# All checks passed, so allow the commit.
exit 0

also, how to check for comment length is more important than no comment at all!

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just the first bit is needed, as described in my answer. That's what I have in my hook. If you're using perl in your scripts, use a bit of perl to determine length. the length() call is what you want. – gbjbaanb May 15 at 15:26

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