A PHP library for creating and validating commit messages.
ramsey/conventional-commits is a PHP library for creating and validating commit messages according to the Conventional Commits specification. It also includes a CaptainHook action!
This project adheres to a code of conduct. By participating in this project and its community, you are expected to uphold this code.
Install this package as a development dependency using Composer.
composer require --dev ramsey/conventional-commits
To use the conventional-commits
console command to help you prepare commit
messages according to Conventional Commits, enter the following in your console:
./vendor/bin/conventional-commits prepare
You can also validate the commit message using the following command:
./vendor/bin/conventional-commits validate "[commit message]"
If you don't provide a commit message in the command line, the command will prompt you for it.
To see all the features of the console command, enter:
./vendor/bin/conventional-commits
To use ramsey/conventional-commits with CaptainHook as part of your commit-msg
and/or prepare-commit-msg
Git hooks, be sure to require CaptainHook as a
development dependency.
Check out the CaptainHook documentation for more information on installing and configuring CaptainHook.
To use the CaptainHook action to validate commit messages according to the
Conventional Commits specification, add the following to the commit-msg
property in your captainhook.json
file:
{
"commit-msg": {
"enabled": true,
"actions": [
{
"action": "\\Ramsey\\CaptainHook\\ValidateConventionalCommit"
}
]
}
}
You can set up this library to prompt you to prepare commit messages when you
use git commit
!
To use the CaptainHook action to prepare commit messages according to the
Conventional Commits specification, add the following to the prepare-commit-msg
property in your captainhook.json
file:
{
"prepare-commit-msg": {
"enabled": true,
"actions": [
{
"action": "\\Ramsey\\CaptainHook\\PrepareConventionalCommit"
}
]
}
}
Configuring ramsey/conventional-commits offers control over a few more aspects of commit messages, such as letter case (i.e. lower, upper), allowed types and scopes, required footers, and more.
We look for configuration in one of two places:
composer.json
captainhook.json
⚠️ Please note: if yourcomposer.json
file is not in the same location as thevendor/
directory, we might have trouble locating it. Feel free to open an issue, and we'll work with you to see if we can find a solution.
Configuration for ramsey/conventional-commits consists of the following properties:
Property | Description |
---|---|
typeCase |
The letter case to require for the type. By default, any letter case is acceptable. |
types |
An array of accepted types (in addition to "feat" and "fix"). By default, any type is acceptable. |
scopeCase |
The letter case to require for the scope. By default, any letter case is acceptable. |
scopeRequired |
Whether a scope is required. By default, scope is not required. |
scopes |
An array of accepted scopes. By default, any scope is acceptable. |
descriptionCase |
The letter case to require for the description. By default, any letter case is acceptable. |
descriptionEndMark |
A character to require at the end of the description. By default, any character is allowed. Use an empty string to indicate a punctuation character is not allowed at the end of the description. |
bodyRequired |
Whether a body is required. By default, a body is not required. |
bodyWrapWidth |
An integer indicating the character width to auto-wrap the body of the commit message. By default, the commit body does not auto-wrap. |
requiredFooters |
An array of footers that must be provided. By default, footers are not required. |
When specifying configuration, if you wish to use the default behavior for a property, it is not necessary to list the property in your configuration.
Recognized letter cases are:
Identifier | Name | Example |
---|---|---|
ada |
Ada case | The_Quick_Brown_Fox |
camel |
Camel case | theQuickBrownFox |
cobol |
COBOL case | THE-QUICK-BROWN-FOX |
dot |
Dot notation | the.quick.brown.fox |
kebab |
Kebab case | the-quick-brown-fox |
lower |
Lower case | the quick brown fox |
macro |
Macro case | THE_QUICK_BROWN_FOX |
pascal |
Pascal case | TheQuickBrownFox |
sentence |
Sentence case | The quick brown fox |
snake |
Snake case | the_quick_brown_fox |
title |
Title case | The Quick Brown Fox |
train |
Train case | The-Quick-Brown-Fox |
upper |
Upper case | THE QUICK BROWN FOX |
If you choose to put your configuration in composer.json
, place it within the
extra
property, namespaced under ramsey/conventional-commits
, like this:
{
"extra": {
"ramsey/conventional-commits": {
"config": {
"typeCase": null,
"types": [],
"scopeCase": null,
"scopeRequired": false,
"scopes": [],
"descriptionCase": null,
"descriptionEndMark": null,
"bodyRequired": false,
"bodyWrapWidth": null,
"requiredFooters": []
}
}
}
}
📝 The properties in this example represent the default values.
If you choose to put your configuration in captainhook.json
, you must provide
it for each action you configure, like this:
{
"commit-msg": {
"enabled": true,
"actions": [
{
"action": "\\Ramsey\\CaptainHook\\ValidateConventionalCommit",
"options": {
"config": {
"typeCase": null,
"types": [],
"scopeCase": null,
"scopeRequired": false,
"scopes": [],
"descriptionCase": null,
"descriptionEndMark": null,
"bodyRequired": false,
"bodyWrapWidth": null,
"requiredFooters": []
}
}
}
]
},
"prepare-commit-msg": {
"enabled": true,
"actions": [
{
"action": "\\Ramsey\\CaptainHook\\PrepareConventionalCommit",
"options": {
"config": {
"typeCase": null,
"types": [],
"scopeCase": null,
"scopeRequired": false,
"scopes": [],
"descriptionCase": null,
"descriptionEndMark": null,
"bodyRequired": false,
"bodyWrapWidth": null,
"requiredFooters": []
}
}
}
]
}
}
However, if you provide your configuration in composer.json
, it is not
necessary to also provide it in captainhook.json
.
🚨 If using the Git commit hook functionality of Captain Hook, any configuration provided in
captainhook.json
will override configuration incomposer.json
.
⚠️ When using the standalone command (i.e../vendor/bin/conventional-commits
), only configuration incomposer.json
will apply, unless providing the--config
option.
You may also store your configuration in a separate file. For example, you may
store it in conventional-commits.json
, like this:
{
"typeCase": "kebab",
"types": [
"ci",
"deps",
"docs",
"refactor",
"style",
"test"
],
"scopeCase": "kebab",
"scopeRequired": false,
"scopes": [],
"descriptionCase": "lower",
"descriptionEndMark": "",
"bodyRequired": true,
"bodyWrapWidth": 72,
"requiredFooters": ["Signed-off-by"]
}
When stored in a separate file, we won't know where to look for your
configuration, unless you tell us, so you must still provide a small amount of
configuration in either composer.json
or captainhook.json
, so we can find
it.
Here's what this looks like in composer.json
:
{
"extra": {
"ramsey/conventional-commits": {
"configFile": "./conventional-commits.json"
}
}
}
And here's what this looks like in captainhook.json
:
{
"commit-msg": {
"enabled": true,
"actions": [
{
"action": "\\Ramsey\\CaptainHook\\ValidateConventionalCommit",
"options": {
"configFile": "./conventional-commits.json"
}
}
]
},
"prepare-commit-msg": {
"enabled": true,
"actions": [
{
"action": "\\Ramsey\\CaptainHook\\PrepareConventionalCommit",
"options": {
"configFile": "./conventional-commits.json"
}
}
]
}
}
Contributions are welcome! To contribute, please familiarize yourself with CONTRIBUTING.md.
Keeping user information safe and secure is a top priority, and we welcome the contribution of external security researchers. If you believe you've found a security issue in software that is maintained in this repository, please read SECURITY.md for instructions on submitting a vulnerability report.
The ramsey/conventional-commits library is copyright © Ben Ramsey and licensed for use under the terms of the MIT License (MIT). Please see LICENSE for more information.