If I create a new hook script in my local repository in repo/.git/hooks/post-commit and then I run "git push" are the hooks pushed to the remote? Then, when the other developers run "git pull" from the same origin will they get my new hooks?
3 Answers
No. Hooks are per-repository and are never pushed. Similarly, the repo config isn't pushed either, nor is anything in .git/info, or a number of other things.
Pushing and pulling only exchanges branches/tags and commit objects (and anything reachable from a commit, e.g. trees, blobs).
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24Is there a way to have hooks in central and get them pulled on each clone, and applied.– f1wadeDec 13, 2016 at 15:06
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10@f1wade You could add a
.githooksdirectory which would be version controlled then either sym-link or create wrapper hook scripts from inside.git. Cloning wouldn't automatically wire in.githooksbut once wired in you can push and pull new versions of the hook scripts. Jan 11, 2019 at 12:34
No, git hooks are not pushed or pulled, as they are not part of the repository code.
Please refer to the documentation for a list of simple client-side and server-side hooks.
If you want to enable some hooks for all clients that clone or pull from a given repository, you have to add the hooks to your codebase and then create your own script to copy them into, or link to them from repo/.git/hooks/.
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4
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8@AdamJohns It gets called by the user/developer, probably in the form of a
setup.shthat the dev runs when they first clone the repository. After this, updates to the hooks can happen automatically by having a hook that re-runs an script updating them after every pull, for example. So you don't have to rely on the developer to do it themselves.– cm92May 20, 2016 at 16:23
Sadly no but since git 2.9 you can place them into .githooks folder (as others mentioned) and run:
git config --local core.hooksPath .githooks/
So no need to create symlinks or copy files.