Skip to content

Gusto/committer

Repository files navigation

Committer

Committer is a parallel runner for running static analysis in a git hook created. It supports:

  • Feeding in only the relevant changed files to the analysis commands
  • Running in "fix" mode, and automatically correcting files before commit
    • By default, the files will automatically be staged to be included in the commit
    • An environment variable can be set to always stop the pre-commit hook if there are changes to be staged manually
  • Running any number of static analysis tools in parallel
  • Helpful display of what was changed before the commit goes through

Installation

You can run the install script by executing:

bash <(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Gusto/committer/master/configure.sh)

This will:

  • Add committer to /usr/local/bin
  • Create a basic committer.yml in your current working directory to run Rubocop
  • Setup your .git/hooks/pre-commit to run committer, if it is not already present

You can also build it from source by cloning this repository and running go build committer.go.

Configuration

Committer is fed a YAML file that describes how it should run. There is an example of such file here. By default, it will look for a committer.yml in the current working directory.

Structure

There is a required top level tasks key, containing an array of Task objects.

  • name: Used to describe the task and provide a title for the output.
  • command: The command to run when executing the linter. This command should be able to receive a list of files as an argument.
  • files: A Regex describing the type of files that should be fed into this command.
  • excludefilenames: Set this to true if the command should not receive the list of changed files (i.e. it is intended to run on the whole repo).
  • fix (Optional)
    • command: The command to auto-correct violations. If this is specified, committer will attempt to fix and stage your files.
    • output: A Regex to pull the relevant fixed output for display before committing.

Running

Committer is most often run as a pre-commit hook. A typical configuration would be to have the following in your .git/hooks/pre-commit script:

#!/usr/bin/env bash
committer --fix

Releasing and deploying a new committer version

Release

  1. Make your changes on a branch.
  2. Update VERSION in committer.go to new version number.
  3. Once landed in origin/main, add a new version tag to the branch:
git fetch && git checkout main && git pull
git tag --annotate "vNEW.VERSION.HERE"
git push --follow-tags
  1. .github/workflows/publish.yml will generate a new release for your tag. Follow the action in said tab.

  2. The v is important.

Deploy

  1. Gusto engineers may go/deploy-committer-with-cpe-chef.

Autofix

Committer can auto-fix everything by default. set export COMMITTER_AUTO_FIX=true # or 1, T, t in your ~/.profile or equivalent dotfile.

Opting out of automatic staging

Committer will stage auto-corrected files by default. In order to always leave auto-corrected files unstaged for manual staging, set export COMMITTER_SKIP_STAGE=1 in your ~/.bashrc or equivalent.

Best-practices

Purely Functional Pre-Commit Hooks

Custom git pre-commit hooks should, as much as possible, be "pure functions" that simply reject / accept changes without side effects. Pre-commit hooks by default should perform no

  • Intermediate stashing
  • git add'ing
  • Autocorrection
  • etc

The recommended workflow:

  1. git add your code
  2. git commit
  3. See the pre-commit hook failure
  4. Manually run committer --fix
  5. Redo git add and git commit.

We originally performed autocorrection and other modification but there were a lot of random difficult-to-debug side effects that emerged. As we add more steps the possibility for interference grows n^2 (any step can potentially interfere with any other step). Moving to a "purely functional" pre-commit hook model lets us easily add additional steps.

No Composition

Steps defined by committer.yml should be completely independent. Steps have no guaranteed order, and are not intended to be composable.