Lint commit messages
Demo generated with svg-term-cli
cat docs/assets/commitlint.json | svg-term --out docs/assets/commitlint.svg --frame --profile=Seti --height=20 --width=80
- 🚓 Be a good
commitizen
- 📦 Share configuration via
npm
- 🤖 Tap into
conventional-changelog
- What is commitlint
- Getting started
- CLI
- Config
- Shared configuration
- API
- Tools
- Roadmap
- Version Support
- Related projects
- License
- Development
commitlint checks if your commit messages meet the conventional commit format.
In general the pattern mostly looks like this:
type(scope?): subject #scope is optional; multiple scopes are supported (current delimiter options: "/", "\" and ",")
Real world examples can look like this:
chore: run tests on travis ci
fix(server): send cors headers
feat(blog): add comment section
Common types according to commitlint-config-conventional (based on the the Angular convention) can be:
- build
- ci
- chore
- docs
- feat
- fix
- perf
- refactor
- revert
- style
- test
These can be modified by your own configuration.
# Install commitlint cli and conventional config
npm install --save-dev @commitlint/{config-conventional,cli}
# For Windows:
npm install --save-dev @commitlint/config-conventional @commitlint/cli
# Configure commitlint to use conventional config
echo "module.exports = {extends: ['@commitlint/config-conventional']}" > commitlint.config.js
To lint commits before they are created you can use Husky's 'commit-msg' hook.
Install in your project npm install husky --save-dev
or yarn add -D husky
.
After that, you can create a .huskyrc
file or add to your package.json
the following code:
{
"husky": {
"hooks": {
"commit-msg": "commitlint -E HUSKY_GIT_PARAMS"
}
}
}
Detailed Setup instructions
- Local setup - Lint messages on commit with husky
- CI setup - Lint messages during CI builds
- Primary way to interact with commitlint.
npm install --save-dev @commitlint/cli
- Packages: cli
- Configuration is picked up from
commitlint.config.js
,.commitlintrc.js
,.commitlintrc.json
, or.commitlintrc.yml
file or acommitlint
field inpackage.json
- Packages: cli, core
- See Rules for a complete list of possible rules
- An example configuration can be found at @commitlint/config-conventional
A number of shared configurations are available to install and use with commitlint
:
- @commitlint/config-angular
- @commitlint/config-conventional
- @commitlint/config-lerna-scopes
- @commitlint/config-patternplate
- conventional-changelog-lint-config-atom
- conventional-changelog-lint-config-canonical
- commitlint-config-jira
⚠️ If you want to publish your own shareable config then make sure it has a name aligning with the patterncommitlint-config-emoji-log
orcommitlint-config-your-config-name
— then in extend all you have to write isemoji-log
oryour-config-name
.
- Alternative, programmatic way to interact with
commitlint
- Packages:
- See API for a complete list of methods and examples
commitlint
is considered stable and is used in various projects as development tool.
We identify ease of adoption and developer experience as fields where there
is room and need for improvement. The items on the roadmap should enhance commitlint
regarding those aspects.
- Adoption: Provide reusable Travis CI integration:
@commitlint/travis-cli
(https://github.com/conventional-changelog/commitlint/releases/tag/v5.1.0) - DX: Support PR squash scenario via ahmed-taj/commitlint-bot and
@commitlint/travis-cli
- Adoption: Make ahmed-taj/commitlint-bot configurable via
commitlint
configuration - Adoption: Create
commitlint init
- DX: Extend the configuration schema to allow for additional fields (descriptions, examples, fixes) on both the rule and value level
- DX: Incorporate an extended version of lennym/commit-template deducing a template from commitlint configuration
- DX: Rewrite
@commitlint/prompt
for better usability (might involve a lot of yak-shaving)
- Node.js LTS
>= 10.21.0
- git
>= 2.13.2
- conventional-changelog – Generate a changelog from conventional commit history
- commitizen – Simple commit conventions for internet citizens
- create-semantic-module – CLI for quickly integrating commitizen and commitlint in new or existing projects
Copyright by @marionebl. All commitlint
packages are released under the MIT license.
commitlint
is developed in a mono repository.
git clone git@github.com:conventional-changelog/commitlint.git
cd commitlint
yarn
yarn run build # run build tasks
yarn start # run tests, again on change
For more information on how to contribute please take a look at our contribution guide.
Before publishing a release do a yarn run publish --dry-run
to get the upcoming version and update the version
in the should print help
test.
Commit that change before creating the new version without --dry-run
.
npm login
yarn clean
yarn install
yarn run build
yarn test
yarn run publish --otp <one-time password>
npm login
yarn clean
yarn install
yarn run build
yarn test
npx lerna publish --conventional-commits --dist-tag next --otp <one-time password>
npm login
Move next to latest:
npx lerna exec --no-bail --no-private --no-sort --stream -- '[ -n "$(npm v . dist-tags.next)" ] && npm dist-tag add ${LERNA_PACKAGE_NAME}@$(npm v . dist-tags.next) latest --otp <one-time password>'
Remove next:
npx lerna exec --no-bail --no-private --no-sort --stream -- '[ -n "$(npm v . dist-tags.next)" ] && npm dist-tag rm ${LERNA_PACKAGE_NAME} next --otp <one-time password>'