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@qoomon
Last active December 21, 2024 08:36
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Conventional Commits Cheatsheet

Conventional Commit Messages starline

See how a minor change to your commit message style can make a difference.

Tip

Have a look at git-conventional-commits , a CLI util to ensure these conventions, determine version and generate changelogs

Commit Message Formats

Default

<type>(<optional scope>): <description>
empty separator line
<optional body>
empty separator line
<optional footer>

Merge Commit

Merge branch '<branch name>'

Follows default git merge message

Revert Commit

Revert "<reverted commit subject line>"

Follows default git revert message

Inital Commit

chore: init

Types

  • API relevant changes
    • feat Commits, that adds or remove a new feature
    • fix Commits, that fixes a bug
  • refactor Commits, that rewrite/restructure your code, however does not change any API behaviour
    • perf Commits are special refactor commits, that improve performance
  • style Commits, that do not affect the meaning (white-space, formatting, missing semi-colons, etc)
  • test Commits, that add missing tests or correcting existing tests
  • docs Commits, that affect documentation only
  • build Commits, that affect build components like build tool, ci pipeline, dependencies, project version, ...
  • ops Commits, that affect operational components like infrastructure, deployment, backup, recovery, ...
  • chore Miscellaneous commits e.g. modifying .gitignore

Scopes

The scope provides additional contextual information.

  • Is an optional part of the format
  • Allowed Scopes depends on the specific project
  • Don't use issue identifiers as scopes

Breaking Changes Indicator

Breaking changes should be indicated by an ! before the : in the subject line e.g. feat(api)!: remove status endpoint

  • Is an optional part of the format

Description

The description contains a concise description of the change.

  • Is a mandatory part of the format
  • Use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes"
    • Think of This commit will... or This commit should...
  • Don't capitalize the first letter
  • No dot (.) at the end

Body

The body should include the motivation for the change and contrast this with previous behavior.

  • Is an optional part of the format
  • Use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes"
  • This is the place to mention issue identifiers and their relations

Footer

The footer should contain any information about Breaking Changes and is also the place to reference Issues that this commit refers to.

  • Is an optional part of the format
  • optionally reference an issue by its id.
  • Breaking Changes should start with the word BREAKING CHANGES: followed by space or two newlines. The rest of the commit message is then used for this.

Examples

  • feat: add email notifications on new direct messages
    
  • feat(shopping cart): add the amazing button
    
  • feat!: remove ticket list endpoint
    
    refers to JIRA-1337
    
    BREAKING CHANGES: ticket enpoints no longer supports list all entites.
    
  • fix(shopping-cart): prevent order an empty shopping cart
    
  • fix(api): fix wrong calculation of request body checksum
    
  • fix: add missing parameter to service call
    
    The error occurred because of <reasons>.
    
  • perf: decrease memory footprint for determine uniqe visitors by using HyperLogLog
    
  • build: update dependencies
    
  • build(release): bump version to 1.0.0
    
  • refactor: implement fibonacci number calculation as recursion
    
  • style: remove empty line
    

Git Hook Scripts to ensure commit message header format

Click to expand

commit-msg Hook (local)

pre-receive Hook (server side)

  • create following file in your repository folder .git/hooks/pre-receive
    #!/usr/bin/env bash
    
    # Pre-receive hook that will block commits with messges that do not follow regex rule
    
    commit_msg_type_regex='feat|fix|refactor|style|test|docs|build'
    commit_msg_scope_regex='.{1,20}'
    commit_msg_description_regex='.{1,100}'
    commit_msg_regex="^(${commit_msg_type_regex})(\(${commit_msg_scope_regex}\))?: (${commit_msg_description_regex})\$"
    merge_msg_regex="^Merge branch '.+'\$"
    
    zero_commit="0000000000000000000000000000000000000000"
    
    # Do not traverse over commits that are already in the repository
    excludeExisting="--not --all"
    
    error=""
    while read oldrev newrev refname; do
      # branch or tag get deleted
      if [ "$newrev" = "$zero_commit" ]; then
        continue
      fi
    
      # Check for new branch or tag
      if [ "$oldrev" = "$zero_commit" ]; then
        rev_span=`git rev-list $newrev $excludeExisting`
      else
        rev_span=`git rev-list $oldrev..$newrev $excludeExisting`
      fi
    
      for commit in $rev_span; do
        commit_msg_header=$(git show -s --format=%s $commit)
        if ! [[ "$commit_msg_header" =~ (${commit_msg_regex})|(${merge_msg_regex}) ]]; then
          echo "$commit" >&2
          echo "ERROR: Invalid commit message format" >&2
          echo "$commit_msg_header" >&2
          error="true"
        fi
      done
    done
    
    if [ -n "$error" ]; then
      exit 1
    fi
  • ⚠ make .git/hooks/pre-receive executable (unix: chmod +x '.git/hooks/pre-receive')

References


@doni404
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doni404 commented Sep 25, 2024

Should the first commit of the project be considered as 'build'? @andre-alck

I believe it should be categorized as a chore since labeling it that way for an initial commit makes sense.

Why do you think that makes sense?

The build type is usually reserved for changes that affect the build system, such as updating dependencies, configuration files for build tools, or scripts that are essential for the build process. Since the initial commit is more about setting up the project structure and doesn't specifically involve modifying or adding build-related configurations, using chore is more fitting for this purpose. @andre-alck

@qoomon
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qoomon commented Sep 25, 2024

@doni404 In the end it depends on what your first commit contains. If it is just a README it is probably docs if you have a hello world program with build process build make sense, if it already contains a real feature it might be an feat commit. If you just commit an .gitignore file or even create an empty commit chore: init would be appropriate.

If you are in doubt I would go for chore: init by default.

But to be honest it really does not matter for the first commit.

@NikitaRevenco
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NikitaRevenco commented Sep 28, 2024

What about commits in repositories that aren't even code? For example text-only .md repos. I usually do something like this myself:

  • fix when fixing spelling issues
  • style e.g. changing a bullet point list of 1. 2. 3. to 1. 1. 1., adding removing insignificant whitespace
  • feat for adding new content
  • docs for modifying which is not the primary source of purpose for the repo (e.g. repo contains javascript learning material, but we are modifying the README or other files which are only used for people working on the repo, not the end user)

or is it even worth using conventional commits on these types of repositories?

@qoomon
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qoomon commented Sep 28, 2024

@NikitaRevenco I think it make sense in your scenario as well.
In you use-case adding new content is a new feature because it will add a new feature to the primariy interface in this case the interface is a document. However I guess docs commits will be quite rare, because docs commit basically will add description on how to iteract with the project interface in your case a document, but maybe there will be some cases.

@ammar-codeable
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What would changing a variable name go under?

@qoomon
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qoomon commented Sep 29, 2024

@ammar-codeable most likely refactor or feat if it has an impact on the interface

@yaroslavgorshkov
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powerful

@duggi
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duggi commented Oct 6, 2024

If you fix a bug in the build system
For example a ci config file
Is it A, B, C … or something else?

A: fix: update syntax error in ci config
B: build: fix syntax error in ci config
C: fix(ci): update syntax error in ci config

@qoomon
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qoomon commented Oct 6, 2024

Definitely B, because fix as well as feat are only for interface/API related changes.

@marss72
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marss72 commented Oct 12, 2024

Hey. What type would I use, if I had some method, and I would only change some value in it, that would change the behavior of the program, but would not add or remove any feature.

A great example can be a method validate_registration(person), that would check for person age for example. In this example, how could I name the commit changing the minimum age from 18 to 15 years?

@qoomon
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qoomon commented Oct 12, 2024

Should be feat because it will effect the API. Take feature as a synonym of behavior. When ever a behavior is changed by purpose it is most likely a feat commit if you repair an exit behavior it is most likely a fix commit.

@marss72
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marss72 commented Oct 12, 2024

Should be feat because it will effect the API. Take feature as a synonym of behavior. Wen ever a behavior is changed by purpose it is most likely a feat commit if you repair an exit behavior it is most likely a fix commit.

Thanks. I appreciate your gist and your quick response.

@Cyrille-18
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helpful , Thanks

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