We are working on tickets, and when we use the ticket number in the git commit message on the first line, then the ticket is updated with the commit message.
To make thi
You probably want to set up a prepare-commit-msg
hook on your local repository. It might look like this (say the branches are named 'work-on-ticket-XXXX':
#!/bin/sh
ORIG_MSG_FILE="$1"
TEMP=`mktemp /tmp/git-XXXXX`
TICKETNO=`git branch | grep '^\*' | cut -b3-`
(echo "Work on ticket #$TICKETNO"; cat "$ORIG_MSG_FILE") > "$TEMP"
cat "$TEMP" > "$ORIG_MSG_FILE"
Put something like that (marked executable) in .git/hooks/prepare-commit-msg
. You may have to adjust and elaborate on it of course.
Looks like you should be able to do this by using the .git/hooks/pre-commit-msg
An simple example of this would be:
#!/bin/sh
# $1 contains the file with the commit msg we're about to edit.
# We'll just completely clobber it for this example.
echo "Hello" > "$1"
This would make your commit begin with "Hello". Obviously, since it's a script you can work some magic here to fill out your ticket number and any other information. There should be a pre-commit-msg.sample in the .git/hooks/ directory telling you which args the script receives if you need anything else.