#!/bin/sh # # Copyright (c) 2007 Andy Parkins # # An example hook script to mail out commit update information. This hook sends emails # listing new revisions to the repository introduced by the change being reported. The # rule is that (for branch updates) each commit will appear on one email and one email # only. # # This hook is stored in the contrib/hooks directory. Your distribution will have put # this somewhere standard. You should make this script executable then link to it in # the repository you would like to use it in. For example, on debian the hook is stored # in /usr/share/doc/git-core/contrib/hooks/post-receive-email: # # chmod a+x post-receive-email # cd /path/to/your/repository.git # ln -sf /usr/share/doc/git-core/contrib/hooks/post-receive-email hooks/post-receive # # This hook script assumes it is enabled on the central repository of a project, with # all users pushing only to it and not between each other. It will still work if you # don't operate in that style, but it would become possible for the email to be from # someone other than the person doing the push. # # Config # ------ # hooks.mailinglist # This is the list that all pushes will go to; leave it blank to not send # emails for every ref update. # hooks.announcelist # This is the list that all pushes of annotated tags will go to. Leave it # blank to default to the mailinglist field. The announce emails lists the # short log summary of the changes since the last annotated tag. # hook.envelopesender # If set then the -f option is passed to sendmail to allow the envelope sender # address to be set # # Notes # ----- # All emails have their subjects prefixed with "[SCM]" to aid filtering. # All emails include the headers "X-Git-Refname", "X-Git-Oldrev", # "X-Git-Newrev", and "X-Git-Reftype" to enable fine tuned filtering and # give information for debugging. # # ---------------------------- Functions # # Top level email generation function. This decides what type of update # this is and calls the appropriate body-generation routine after outputting # the common header # # Note this function doesn't actually generate any email output, that is taken # care of by the functions it calls: # - generate_email_header # - generate_create_XXXX_email # - generate_update_XXXX_email # - generate_delete_XXXX_email # - generate_email_footer # generate_email() { # --- Arguments oldrev=$(git rev-parse $1) newrev=$(git rev-parse $2) refname="$3" # --- Interpret # 0000->1234 (create) # 1234->2345 (update) # 2345->0000 (delete) if expr "$oldrev" : '0*$' >/dev/null then change_type="create" else if expr "$newrev" : '0*$' >/dev/null then change_type="delete" else change_type="update" fi fi # --- Get the revision types newrev_type=$(git cat-file -t $newrev 2> /dev/null) oldrev_type=$(git cat-file -t "$oldrev" 2> /dev/null) case "$change_type" in create|update) rev="$newrev" rev_type="$newrev_type" ;; delete) rev="$oldrev" rev_type="$oldrev_type" ;; esac # The revision type tells us what type the commit is, combined with # the location of the ref we can decide between # - working branch # - tracking branch # - unannoted tag # - annotated tag case "$refname","$rev_type" in refs/tags/*,commit) # un-annotated tag refname_type="tag" short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/} ;; refs/tags/*,tag) # annotated tag refname_type="annotated tag" short_refname=${refname##refs/tags/} # change recipients if [ -n "$announcerecipients" ]; then recipients="$announcerecipients" fi ;; refs/heads/*,commit) # branch refname_type="branch" short_refname=${refname##refs/heads/} ;; refs/remotes/*,commit) # tracking branch refname_type="tracking branch" short_refname=${refname##refs/remotes/} echo >&2 "*** Push-update of tracking branch, $refname" echo >&2 "*** - no email generated." exit 0 ;; *) # Anything else (is there anything else?) echo >&2 "*** Unknown type of update to $refname ($rev_type)" echo >&2 "*** - no email generated" exit 1 ;; esac # Check if we've got anyone to send to if [ -z "$recipients" ]; then echo >&2 "*** hooks.recipients is not set so no email will be sent" echo >&2 "*** for $refname update $oldrev->$newrev" exit 0 fi # Email parameters # The committer will be obtained from the latest existing rev; so # for a deletion it will be the oldrev, for the others, then newrev committer=$(git show --pretty=full -s $rev | sed -ne "s/^Commit: //p" | sed -ne 's/\(.*\) /dev/null) if [ -z "$describe" ]; then describe=$rev fi generate_email_header # Call the correct body generation function fn_name=general case "$refname_type" in "tracking branch"|branch) fn_name=branch ;; "annotated tag") fn_name=atag ;; esac generate_${change_type}_${fn_name}_email generate_email_footer } generate_email_header() { # --- Email (all stdout will be the email) # Generate header cat <<-EOF From: $committer To: $recipients Subject: ${EMAILPREFIX}$projectdesc $refname_type, $short_refname, ${change_type}d. $describe X-Git-Refname: $refname X-Git-Reftype: $refname_type X-Git-Oldrev: $oldrev X-Git-Newrev: $newrev This is an automated email from the git hooks/post-receive script. It was generated because a ref change was pushed to the repository containing the project "$projectdesc". The $refname_type, $short_refname has been ${change_type}d EOF } generate_email_footer() { cat <<-EOF hooks/post-receive -- $projectdesc EOF } # --------------- Branches # # Called for the creation of a branch # generate_create_branch_email() { # This is a new branch and so oldrev is not valid echo " at $newrev ($newrev_type)" echo "" echo $LOGBEGIN # This shows all log entries that are not already covered by # another ref - i.e. commits that are now accessible from this # ref that were previously not accessible (see generate_update_branch_email # for the explanation of this command) git rev-parse --not --branches | grep -v $(git rev-parse $refname) | git rev-list --pretty --stdin $newrev echo $LOGEND } # # Called for the change of a pre-existing branch # generate_update_branch_email() { # Consider this: # 1 --- 2 --- O --- X --- 3 --- 4 --- N # # O is $oldrev for $refname # N is $newrev for $refname # X is a revision pointed to by some other ref, for which we may # assume that an email has already been generated. # In this case we want to issue an email containing only revisions # 3, 4, and N. Given (almost) by # # git-rev-list N ^O --not --all # # The reason for the "almost", is that the "--not --all" will take # precedence over the "N", and effectively will translate to # # git-rev-list N ^O ^X ^N # # So, we need to build up the list more carefully. git-rev-parse will # generate a list of revs that may be fed into git-rev-list. We can get # it to make the "--not --all" part and then filter out the "^N" with: # # git-rev-parse --not --all | grep -v N # # Then, using the --stdin switch to git-rev-list we have effectively # manufactured # # git-rev-list N ^O ^X # # This leaves a problem when someone else updates the repository # while this script is running. Their new value of the ref we're working # on would be included in the "--not --all" output; and as our $newrev # would be an ancestor of that commit, it would exclude all of our # commits. What we really want is to exclude the current value of # $refname from the --not list, rather than N itself. So: # # git-rev-parse --not --all | grep -v $(git-rev-parse $refname) # # Get's us to something pretty safe (apart from the small time between # refname being read, and git-rev-parse running - for that, I give up) # # # Next problem, consider this: # * --- B --- * --- O ($oldrev) # \ # * --- X --- * --- N ($newrev) # # That is to say, there is no guarantee that oldrev is a strict subset of # newrev (it would have required a --force, but that's allowed). So, we # can't simply say rev-list $oldrev..$newrev. Instead we find the common # base of the two revs and list from there. # # As above, we need to take into account the presence of X; if another # branch is already in the repository and points at some of the revisions # that we are about to output - we don't want them. The solution is as # before: git-rev-parse output filtered. # # Finally, tags: # 1 --- 2 --- O --- T --- 3 --- 4 --- N # # Tags pushed into the repository generate nice shortlog emails that # summarise the commits between them and the previous tag. However, # those emails don't include the full commit messages that we output # for a branch update. Therefore we still want to output revisions # that have been output on a tag email. # # Luckily, git-rev-parse includes just the tool. Instead of using "--all" # we use "--branches"; this has the added benefit that "remotes/" will # be ignored as well. # List all of the revisions that were removed by this update, in a fast forward # update, this list will be empty, because rev-list O ^N is empty. For a non # fast forward, O ^N is the list of removed revisions fastforward="" rev="" for rev in $(git rev-list $newrev..$oldrev) do revtype=$(git cat-file -t "$rev") echo " discards $rev ($revtype)" done if [ -z "$rev" ]; then fast_forward=1 fi # List all the revisions from baserev to newrev in a kind of # "table-of-contents"; note this list can include revisions that have # already had notification emails and is present to show the full detail # of the change from rolling back the old revision to the base revision and # then forward to the new revision for rev in $(git rev-list $oldrev..$newrev) do revtype=$(git cat-file -t "$rev") echo " via $rev ($revtype)" done if [ -z "$fastforward" ]; then echo " from $oldrev ($oldrev_type)" else echo "" echo "This update added new revisions after undoing old revisions. That is to" echo "say, the old revision is not a strict subset of the new revision. This" echo "situation occurs when you --force push a change and generate a" echo "repository containing something like this:" echo "" echo " * -- * -- B -- O -- O -- O ($oldrev)" echo " \\" echo " N -- N -- N ($newrev)" echo "" echo "When this happens we assume that you've already had alert emails for all" echo "of the O revisions, and so we here report only the revisions in the N" echo "branch from the common base, B." fi echo "" echo "Those revisions listed above that are new to this repository have" echo "not appeared on any other notification email; so we list those" echo "revisions in full, below." echo "" echo $LOGBEGIN git rev-parse --not --branches | grep -v $(git rev-parse $refname) | git rev-list --pretty --stdin $oldrev..$newrev # XXX: Need a way of detecting whether git rev-list actually outputted # anything, so that we can issue a "no new revisions added by this # update" message echo $LOGEND # The diffstat is shown from the old revision to the new revision. This # is to show the truth of what happened in this change. There's no point # showing the stat from the base to the new revision because the base # is effectively a random revision at this point - the user will be # interested in what this revision changed - including the undoing of # previous revisions in the case of non-fast forward updates. echo "" echo "Summary of changes:" git diff-tree --stat --summary --find-copies-harder $oldrev..$newrev } # # Called for the deletion of a branch # generate_delete_branch_email() { echo " was $oldrev" echo "" echo $LOGEND git show -s --pretty=oneline $oldrev echo $LOGEND } # --------------- Annotated tags # # Called for the creation of an annotated tag # generate_create_atag_email() { echo " at $newrev ($newrev_type)" generate_atag_email } # # Called for the update of an annotated tag (this is probably a rare event # and may not even be allowed) # generate_update_atag_email() { echo " to $newrev ($newrev_type)" echo " from $oldrev (which is now obsolete)" generate_atag_email } # # Called when an annotated tag is created or changed # generate_atag_email() { # Use git-for-each-ref to pull out the individual fields from the tag eval $(git for-each-ref --shell --format=' tagobject=%(*objectname) tagtype=%(*objecttype) tagger=%(taggername) tagged=%(taggerdate)' $refname ) echo " tagging $tagobject ($tagtype)" case "$tagtype" in commit) # If the tagged object is a commit, then we assume this is a # release, and so we calculate which tag this tag is replacing prevtag=$(git describe --abbrev=0 $newrev^ 2>/dev/null) if [ -n "$prevtag" ]; then echo " replaces $prevtag" fi ;; *) echo " length $(git cat-file -s $tagobject) bytes" ;; esac echo " tagged by $tagger" echo " on $tagged" echo "" echo $LOGBEGIN # Show the content of the tag message; this might contain a change log # or release notes so is worth displaying. git cat-file tag $newrev | sed -e '1,/^$/d' echo "" case "$tagtype" in commit) # Only commit tags make sense to have rev-list operations performed # on them if [ -n "$prevtag" ]; then # Show changes since the previous release git rev-list --pretty=short "$prevtag..$newrev" | git shortlog else # No previous tag, show all the changes since time began git rev-list --pretty=short $newrev | git shortlog fi ;; *) # XXX: Is there anything useful we can do for non-commit objects? ;; esac echo $LOGEND } # # Called for the deletion of an annotated tag # generate_delete_atag_email() { echo " was $oldrev" echo "" echo $LOGEND git show -s --pretty=oneline $oldrev echo $LOGEND } # --------------- General references # # Called when any other type of reference is created (most likely a # non-annotated tag) # generate_create_general_email() { echo " at $newrev ($newrev_type)" generate_general_email } # # Called when any other type of reference is updated (most likely a # non-annotated tag) # generate_update_general_email() { echo " to $newrev ($newrev_type)" echo " from $oldrev" generate_general_email } # # Called for creation or update of any other type of reference # generate_general_email() { # Unannotated tags are more about marking a point than releasing a version; # therefore we don't do the shortlog summary that we do for annotated tags # above - we simply show that the point has been marked, and print the log # message for the marked point for reference purposes # # Note this section also catches any other reference type (although there # aren't any) and deals with them in the same way. echo "" if [ "$newrev_type" = "commit" ]; then echo $LOGBEGIN git show --no-color --root -s $newrev echo $LOGEND else # What can we do here? The tag marks an object that is not a commit, # so there is no log for us to display. It's probably not wise to # output git-cat-file as it could be a binary blob. We'll just say how # big it is echo "$newrev is a $newrev_type, and is $(git cat-file -s $newrev) bytes long." fi } # # Called for the deletion of any other type of reference # generate_delete_general_email() { echo " was $oldrev" echo "" echo $LOGEND git show -s --pretty=oneline $oldrev echo $LOGEND } # ---------------------------- main() # --- Constants EMAILPREFIX="[SCM] " LOGBEGIN="- Log -----------------------------------------------------------------" LOGEND="-----------------------------------------------------------------------" # --- Config # Set GIT_DIR either from the working directory, or from the environment # variable. GIT_DIR=$(git rev-parse --git-dir 2>/dev/null) if [ -z "$GIT_DIR" ]; then echo >&2 "fatal: post-receive: GIT_DIR not set" exit 1 fi projectdesc=$(sed -e '1p' "$GIT_DIR/description") # Check if the description is unchanged from it's default, and shorten it to a # more manageable length if it is if expr "$projectdesc" : "Unnamed repository.*$" >/dev/null then projectdesc="UNNAMED PROJECT" fi recipients=$(git repo-config hooks.mailinglist) announcerecipients=$(git repo-config hooks.announcelist) envelopesender=$(git-repo-config hooks.envelopesender) # --- Main loop # Allow dual mode: run from the command line just like the update hook, or if # no arguments are given then run as a hook script if [ -n "$1" -a -n "$2" -a -n "$3" ]; then # Output to the terminal in command line mode - if someone wanted to # resend an email; they could redirect the output to sendmail themselves PAGER= generate_email $2 $3 $1 else if [ -n "$envelopesender" ]; then envelopesender="-f '$envelopesender'" fi while read oldrev newrev refname do generate_email $oldrev $newrev $refname | /usr/sbin/sendmail -t $envelopesender done fi