3 # modified: 2010-09-01 and on by tzz@lifelogs.com
5 # Use the email address of the author of the last commit.
6 export USER_EMAIL
=$
(git log
-1 --format=format
:%ce HEAD
)
7 export USER_NAME
=$
(git log
-1 --format=format
:%cn HEAD
)
9 # the remainder is the standard git-core post-receive-email with some changes:
11 # - USER_EMAIL and USER_NAME are used in the header
12 # - the update message is after the diff
13 # - without annotations, we use `git log --format=oneline' to generate the change summary (joining multiples with semicolons)
14 # - the subject is shorter
16 # Copyright (c) 2007 Andy Parkins
18 # An example hook script to mail out commit update information. This hook
19 # sends emails listing new revisions to the repository introduced by the
20 # change being reported. The rule is that (for branch updates) each commit
21 # will appear on one email and one email only.
23 # This hook is stored in the contrib/hooks directory. Your distribution
24 # will have put this somewhere standard. You should make this script
25 # executable then link to it in the repository you would like to use it in.
26 # For example, on debian the hook is stored in
27 # /usr/share/doc/git-core/contrib/hooks/post-receive-email:
29 # chmod a+x post-receive-email
30 # cd /path/to/your/repository.git
31 # ln -sf /usr/share/doc/git-core/contrib/hooks/post-receive-email hooks/post-receive
33 # This hook script assumes it is enabled on the central repository of a
34 # project, with all users pushing only to it and not between each other. It
35 # will still work if you don't operate in that style, but it would become
36 # possible for the email to be from someone other than the person doing the
42 # This is the list that all pushes will go to; leave it blank to not send
43 # emails for every ref update.
45 # This is the list that all pushes of annotated tags will go to. Leave it
46 # blank to default to the mailinglist field. The announce emails lists
47 # the short log summary of the changes since the last annotated tag.
48 # hooks.envelopesender
49 # If set then the -f option is passed to sendmail to allow the envelope
50 # sender address to be set
52 # All emails have their subjects prefixed with this prefix, or "[SCM]"
53 # if emailprefix is unset, to aid filtering
55 # The shell command used to format each revision in the email, with
56 # "%s" replaced with the commit id. Defaults to "git rev-list -1
57 # --pretty %s", displaying the commit id, author, date and log
58 # message. To list full patches separated by a blank line, you
59 # could set this to "git show -C %s; echo".
60 # To list a gitweb/cgit URL *and* a full patch for each change set, use this:
61 # "t=%s; printf 'http://.../?id=%%s' \$t; echo;echo; git show -C \$t; echo"
62 # Be careful if "..." contains things that will be expanded by shell "eval"
67 # All emails include the headers "X-Git-Refname", "X-Git-Oldrev",
68 # "X-Git-Newrev", and "X-Git-Reftype" to enable fine tuned filtering and
69 # give information for debugging.
72 # ---------------------------- Functions
75 # Top level email generation function. This decides what type of update
76 # this is and calls the appropriate body-generation routine after outputting
79 # Note this function doesn't actually generate any email output, that is
80 # taken care of by the functions it calls:
81 # - generate_email_header
82 # - generate_create_XXXX_email
83 # - generate_update_XXXX_email
84 # - generate_delete_XXXX_email
85 # - generate_email_footer
90 oldrev
=$
(git rev-parse
$1)
91 newrev
=$
(git rev-parse
$2)
98 if expr "$oldrev" : '0*$' >/dev
/null
102 if expr "$newrev" : '0*$' >/dev
/null
110 # --- Get the revision types
111 newrev_type
=$
(git cat-file
-t $newrev 2> /dev
/null
)
112 oldrev_type
=$
(git cat-file
-t "$oldrev" 2> /dev
/null
)
113 case "$change_type" in
116 rev_type
="$newrev_type"
120 rev_type
="$oldrev_type"
124 # The revision type tells us what type the commit is, combined with
125 # the location of the ref we can decide between
130 case "$refname","$rev_type" in
134 short_refname
=${refname##refs/tags/}
138 refname_type
="annotated tag"
139 short_refname
=${refname##refs/tags/}
141 if [ -n "$announcerecipients" ]; then
142 recipients
="$announcerecipients"
147 refname_type
="branch"
148 short_refname
=${refname##refs/heads/}
150 refs
/remotes
/*,commit
)
152 refname_type
="tracking branch"
153 short_refname
=${refname##refs/remotes/}
154 echo >&2 "*** Push-update of tracking branch, $refname"
155 echo >&2 "*** - no email generated."
159 # Anything else (is there anything else?)
160 echo >&2 "*** Unknown type of update to $refname ($rev_type)"
161 echo >&2 "*** - no email generated"
166 # Check if we've got anyone to send to
167 if [ -z "$recipients" ]; then
168 case "$refname_type" in
170 config_name
="hooks.announcelist"
173 config_name
="hooks.mailinglist"
176 echo >&2 "*** $config_name is not set so no email will be sent"
177 echo >&2 "*** for $refname update $oldrev->$newrev"
182 # The email subject will contain the best description of the ref
183 # that we can build from the parameters
184 describe
=$
(git describe
$rev 2>/dev
/null
)
185 if [ -z "$describe" ]; then
186 describe
=$
((git log
--format="%s" $oldrev...
$newrev | perl
-e'@p = <>; chomp @p; print "=", scalar @p, "= ", join(" ; ", @p)') 2>/dev
/null
)
189 if [ -z "$describe" ]; then
193 generate_email_header
195 # Call the correct body generation function
197 case "$refname_type" in
198 "tracking branch"|branch
)
205 generate_
${change_type}_
${fn_name}_email
207 generate_email_footer
210 generate_email_header
()
212 # --- Email (all stdout will be the email)
215 From: ${USER_NAME} <${USER_EMAIL}>
217 Subject: $emailprefix $refname_type $short_refname ${change_type}d: $describe
218 X-Git-Refname: $refname
219 X-Git-Reftype: $refname_type
220 X-Git-Oldrev: $oldrev
221 X-Git-Newrev: $newrev
226 generate_email_footer
()
231 This is an automated email from the git hooks/post-receive script. It was
232 generated because a ref change was pushed to the repository containing
233 the project "$projectdesc".
235 The $refname_type, $short_refname has been ${change_type}d
244 # --------------- Branches
247 # Called for the creation of a branch
249 generate_create_branch_email
()
251 # This is a new branch and so oldrev is not valid
252 echo " at $newrev ($newrev_type)"
261 # Called for the change of a pre-existing branch
263 generate_update_branch_email
()
266 # 1 --- 2 --- O --- X --- 3 --- 4 --- N
268 # O is $oldrev for $refname
269 # N is $newrev for $refname
270 # X is a revision pointed to by some other ref, for which we may
271 # assume that an email has already been generated.
272 # In this case we want to issue an email containing only revisions
273 # 3, 4, and N. Given (almost) by
275 # git rev-list N ^O --not --all
277 # The reason for the "almost", is that the "--not --all" will take
278 # precedence over the "N", and effectively will translate to
280 # git rev-list N ^O ^X ^N
282 # So, we need to build up the list more carefully. git rev-parse
283 # will generate a list of revs that may be fed into git rev-list.
284 # We can get it to make the "--not --all" part and then filter out
287 # git rev-parse --not --all | grep -v N
289 # Then, using the --stdin switch to git rev-list we have effectively
292 # git rev-list N ^O ^X
294 # This leaves a problem when someone else updates the repository
295 # while this script is running. Their new value of the ref we're
296 # working on would be included in the "--not --all" output; and as
297 # our $newrev would be an ancestor of that commit, it would exclude
298 # all of our commits. What we really want is to exclude the current
299 # value of $refname from the --not list, rather than N itself. So:
301 # git rev-parse --not --all | grep -v $(git rev-parse $refname)
303 # Get's us to something pretty safe (apart from the small time
304 # between refname being read, and git rev-parse running - for that,
308 # Next problem, consider this:
309 # * --- B --- * --- O ($oldrev)
311 # * --- X --- * --- N ($newrev)
313 # That is to say, there is no guarantee that oldrev is a strict
314 # subset of newrev (it would have required a --force, but that's
315 # allowed). So, we can't simply say rev-list $oldrev..$newrev.
316 # Instead we find the common base of the two revs and list from
319 # As above, we need to take into account the presence of X; if
320 # another branch is already in the repository and points at some of
321 # the revisions that we are about to output - we don't want them.
322 # The solution is as before: git rev-parse output filtered.
324 # Finally, tags: 1 --- 2 --- O --- T --- 3 --- 4 --- N
326 # Tags pushed into the repository generate nice shortlog emails that
327 # summarise the commits between them and the previous tag. However,
328 # those emails don't include the full commit messages that we output
329 # for a branch update. Therefore we still want to output revisions
330 # that have been output on a tag email.
332 # Luckily, git rev-parse includes just the tool. Instead of using
333 # "--all" we use "--branches"; this has the added benefit that
334 # "remotes/" will be ignored as well.
336 # List all of the revisions that were removed by this update, in a
337 # fast-forward update, this list will be empty, because rev-list O
338 # ^N is empty. For a non-fast-forward, O ^N is the list of removed
342 for rev in $
(git rev-list
$newrev..
$oldrev)
344 revtype
=$
(git cat-file
-t "$rev")
345 echo " discards $rev ($revtype)"
347 if [ -z "$rev" ]; then
351 # List all the revisions from baserev to newrev in a kind of
352 # "table-of-contents"; note this list can include revisions that
353 # have already had notification emails and is present to show the
354 # full detail of the change from rolling back the old revision to
355 # the base revision and then forward to the new revision
356 for rev in $
(git rev-list
$oldrev..
$newrev)
358 revtype
=$
(git cat-file
-t "$rev")
359 echo " via $rev ($revtype)"
362 if [ "$fast_forward" ]; then
363 echo " from $oldrev ($oldrev_type)"
365 # 1. Existing revisions were removed. In this case newrev
366 # is a subset of oldrev - this is the reverse of a
367 # fast-forward, a rewind
368 # 2. New revisions were added on top of an old revision,
369 # this is a rewind and addition.
371 # (1) certainly happened, (2) possibly. When (2) hasn't
372 # happened, we set a flag to indicate that no log printout
377 # Find the common ancestor of the old and new revisions and
378 # compare it with newrev
379 baserev
=$
(git merge-base
$oldrev $newrev)
381 if [ "$baserev" = "$newrev" ]; then
382 echo "This update discarded existing revisions and left the branch pointing at"
383 echo "a previous point in the repository history."
385 echo " * -- * -- N ($newrev)"
387 echo " O -- O -- O ($oldrev)"
389 echo "The removed revisions are not necessarilly gone - if another reference"
390 echo "still refers to them they will stay in the repository."
393 echo "This update added new revisions after undoing existing revisions. That is"
394 echo "to say, the old revision is not a strict subset of the new revision. This"
395 echo "situation occurs when you --force push a change and generate a repository"
396 echo "containing something like this:"
398 echo " * -- * -- B -- O -- O -- O ($oldrev)"
400 echo " N -- N -- N ($newrev)"
402 echo "When this happens we assume that you've already had alert emails for all"
403 echo "of the O revisions, and so we here report only the revisions in the N"
404 echo "branch from the common base, B."
409 if [ -z "$rewind_only" ]; then
414 # XXX: Need a way of detecting whether git rev-list actually
415 # outputted anything, so that we can issue a "no new
416 # revisions added by this update" message
420 echo "Those revisions listed above that are new to this repository have"
421 echo "not appeared on any other notification email; so we listed those"
422 echo "revisions in full, above."
425 echo "No new revisions were added by this update."
428 # The diffstat is shown from the old revision to the new revision.
429 # This is to show the truth of what happened in this change.
430 # There's no point showing the stat from the base to the new
431 # revision because the base is effectively a random revision at this
432 # point - the user will be interested in what this revision changed
433 # - including the undoing of previous revisions in the case of
434 # non-fast-forward updates.
436 echo "Summary of changes:"
437 git diff-tree
--stat --summary --find-copies-harder $oldrev..
$newrev
441 # Called for the deletion of a branch
443 generate_delete_branch_email
()
448 git show
-s --pretty=oneline
$oldrev
452 # --------------- Annotated tags
455 # Called for the creation of an annotated tag
457 generate_create_atag_email
()
459 echo " at $newrev ($newrev_type)"
465 # Called for the update of an annotated tag (this is probably a rare event
466 # and may not even be allowed)
468 generate_update_atag_email
()
470 echo " to $newrev ($newrev_type)"
471 echo " from $oldrev (which is now obsolete)"
477 # Called when an annotated tag is created or changed
479 generate_atag_email
()
481 # Use git for-each-ref to pull out the individual fields from the
483 eval $
(git for-each-ref
--shell --format='
484 tagobject=%(*objectname)
485 tagtype=%(*objecttype)
487 tagged=%(taggerdate)' $refname
490 echo " tagging $tagobject ($tagtype)"
494 # If the tagged object is a commit, then we assume this is a
495 # release, and so we calculate which tag this tag is
497 prevtag
=$
(git describe
--abbrev=0 $newrev^
2>/dev
/null
)
499 if [ -n "$prevtag" ]; then
500 echo " replaces $prevtag"
504 echo " length $(git cat-file -s $tagobject) bytes"
507 echo " tagged by $tagger"
513 # Show the content of the tag message; this might contain a change
514 # log or release notes so is worth displaying.
515 git cat-file tag
$newrev |
sed -e '1,/^$/d'
520 # Only commit tags make sense to have rev-list operations
522 if [ -n "$prevtag" ]; then
523 # Show changes since the previous release
524 git rev-list
--pretty=short
"$prevtag..$newrev" | git shortlog
526 # No previous tag, show all the changes since time
528 git rev-list
--pretty=short
$newrev | git shortlog
532 # XXX: Is there anything useful we can do for non-commit
541 # Called for the deletion of an annotated tag
543 generate_delete_atag_email
()
548 git show
-s --pretty=oneline
$oldrev
552 # --------------- General references
555 # Called when any other type of reference is created (most likely a
558 generate_create_general_email
()
560 echo " at $newrev ($newrev_type)"
562 generate_general_email
566 # Called when any other type of reference is updated (most likely a
569 generate_update_general_email
()
571 echo " to $newrev ($newrev_type)"
574 generate_general_email
578 # Called for creation or update of any other type of reference
580 generate_general_email
()
582 # Unannotated tags are more about marking a point than releasing a
583 # version; therefore we don't do the shortlog summary that we do for
584 # annotated tags above - we simply show that the point has been
585 # marked, and print the log message for the marked point for
588 # Note this section also catches any other reference type (although
589 # there aren't any) and deals with them in the same way.
592 if [ "$newrev_type" = "commit" ]; then
594 git show
--no-color --root -s --pretty=medium
$newrev
597 # What can we do here? The tag marks an object that is not
598 # a commit, so there is no log for us to display. It's
599 # probably not wise to output git cat-file as it could be a
600 # binary blob. We'll just say how big it is
601 echo "$newrev is a $newrev_type, and is $(git cat-file -s $newrev) bytes long."
606 # Called for the deletion of any other type of reference
608 generate_delete_general_email
()
613 git show
-s --pretty=oneline
$oldrev
618 # --------------- Miscellaneous utilities
621 # Show new revisions as the user would like to see them in the email.
625 # This shows all log entries that are not already covered by
626 # another ref - i.e. commits that are now accessible from this
627 # ref that were previously not accessible
628 # (see generate_update_branch_email for the explanation of this
631 # Revision range passed to rev-list differs for new vs. updated
633 if [ "$change_type" = create
]
635 # Show all revisions exclusive to this (new) branch.
638 # Branch update; show revisions not part of $oldrev.
639 revspec
=$oldrev..
$newrev
642 other_branches
=$
(git for-each-ref
--format='%(refname)' refs
/heads
/ |
644 git rev-parse
--not $other_branches |
645 if [ -z "$custom_showrev" ]
647 git rev-list
--pretty --stdin $revspec
649 git rev-list
--stdin $revspec |
652 eval $
(printf "$custom_showrev" $onerev)
660 if [ -n "$envelopesender" ]; then
661 /usr
/sbin
/sendmail
-t -f "$envelopesender"
663 /usr
/sbin
/sendmail
-t
667 # ---------------------------- main()
670 LOGBEGIN
="- Log -----------------------------------------------------------------"
671 LOGEND
="-----------------------------------------------------------------------"
674 # Set GIT_DIR either from the working directory, or from the environment
676 GIT_DIR
=$
(git rev-parse
--git-dir 2>/dev
/null
)
677 if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then
678 echo >&2 "fatal: post-receive: GIT_DIR not set"
682 projectdesc
=$
(sed -ne '1p' "$GIT_DIR/description")
683 # Check if the description is unchanged from it's default, and shorten it to
684 # a more manageable length if it is
685 if expr "$projectdesc" : "Unnamed repository.*$" >/dev
/null
687 projectdesc
="UNNAMED PROJECT"
690 recipients
=$
(git config hooks.mailinglist
)
691 announcerecipients
=$
(git config hooks.announcelist
)
692 envelopesender
=$
(git config hooks.envelopesender
)
693 emailprefix
=$
(git config hooks.emailprefix ||
echo '[SCM] ')
694 custom_showrev
=$
(git config hooks.showrev
)
697 # Allow dual mode: run from the command line just like the update hook, or
698 # if no arguments are given then run as a hook script
699 if [ -n "$1" -a -n "$2" -a -n "$3" ]; then
700 # Output to the terminal in command line mode - if someone wanted to
701 # resend an email; they could redirect the output to sendmail
703 PAGER
= generate_email
$2 $3 $1
705 while read oldrev newrev refname
707 generate_email
$oldrev $newrev $refname | send_mail