pre-commit is a pre-commit hook installer for git
. It will ensure that your npm test
(or other specified scripts) passes before you can commit your changes. This all conveniently configured in your package.json
.
But don't worry, you can still force a commit by telling git
to skip the pre-commit
hooks by simply committing using --no-verify
.
It's advised to install the pre-commit module as a devDependencies
in your package.json
as you only need this for development purposes. To install the module simply run:
npm install --save-dev pre-commit
To install it as devDependency
. When this module is installed it will override the existing pre-commit
file in your .git/hooks
folder. Existing pre-commit
hooks will be backed up as pre-commit.old
in the same repository.
pre-commit
will try to run your npm test
command in the root of the git repository by default unless it's the default value that is set by the npm init
script.
But pre-commit
is not limited to just running your npm test
's during the commit hook. It's also capable of running every other script that you've specified in your package.json
"scripts" field. So before people commit you could ensure that:
The only thing you need to do is add a pre-commit
array to your package.json
that specifies which scripts you want to have ran and in which order:
{ "name": "437464d0899504fb6b7b", "version": "0.0.0", "description": "ERROR: No README.md file found!", "main": "index.js", "scripts": { "test": "echo \"Error: I SHOULD FAIL LOLOLOLOLOL \" && exit 1", "foo": "echo \"fooo\" && exit 0", "bar": "echo \"bar\" && exit 0" }, "pre-commit": [ "foo", "bar", "test" ] }
In the example above, it will first run: npm run foo
then npm run bar
and finally npm run test
which will make the commit fail as it returns the error code 1
. If you prefer strings over arrays or precommit
without a middle dash, that also works:
{ "precommit": "foo, bar, test" "pre-commit": "foo, bar, test" "pre-commit": ["foo", "bar", "test"] "precommit": ["foo", "bar", "test"], "precommit": { "run": "foo, bar, test", }, "pre-commit": { "run": ["foo", "bar", "test"], }, "precommit": { "run": ["foo", "bar", "test"], }, "pre-commit": { "run": "foo, bar, test", } }
The examples above are all the same. In addition to configuring which scripts should be ran you can also configure the following options:
pre-commit:
messages when things fail or when we have nothing to run. Should be a boolean.These options can either be added in the pre-commit
/precommit
object as keys or as "pre-commit.{key}
key properties in the package.json
:
{ "precommit.silent": true, "pre-commit": { "silent": true } }
It's all the same. Different styles so use what matches your project. To learn more about the scripts, please read the official npm
documentation:
https://docs.npmjs.com/misc/scripts
And to learn more about git hooks read:
MIT
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