prefix-commit-message

Git hook to extract ID from branch name into commit message

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import prefixCommitMessage from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/prefix-commit-message';
</script>

README

Prefix Commit Message

This script is meant to be used as a prepare-commit-msg Git hook. Each time you commit, it extracts the issue identifier or user-story identifier from the current branch name and prefixes your commit message with the extracted identifier.

It supports identifiers of the form ABCD-1234 and 1234, and will look for such identifiers right after the / in the name of the current branch. If you're on the branch feature/JIRA-874-cannot-log-in-on-macos, for example, this hook will prefix each of your commit messages with [ JIRA-874 ] .

There are simpler shell scripts that achieve the same, but this solution works on Windows too.

This script can be used standalone or in combination with Husky (version 6 and newer). If you're using an older Husky, see (https://github.com/ljpengelen/prefix-commit-message/tree/v1.3.0).

Installation

Standalone usage

First, install this script:

npm install prefix-commit-message --save-dev

Then, navigate to .git/hooks from the root of your repository and create an executable file named prepare-commit-msg with the following content:

#!/bin/sh
npx prefix-commit-message $1

Usage with Husky

First, install Husky and this script:

npm install husky --save-dev
npm install prefix-commit-message --save-dev

Then, enable Git hooks via Husky:

npx husky install

Finally, set up the prepare-commit-msg hook:

npx husky add .husky/prepare-commit-msg "npx prefix-commit-message \$1"

Custom prefix

If you don't like the square brackets around the identifier, you can supply a custom opening and closing symbol. For example,

#!/bin/sh
npx prefix-commit-message $1 -o -c :

and

npx husky add .husky/prepare-commit-msg "npx prefix-commit-message \$1 -o -c :"

will result in the prefix JIRA-874: .

The opening symbol is specified via the '-o' flag, and the closing symbol is specified via the '-c' flag. As the example shows, the empty string is used when no value is specified after a flag.