The customizable Commitizen plugin (or standalone utility) to help achieve consistent commit messages such as Conventional Commits. Note that you can create any commit message pattern. You don't have to use the pattern from the Conventional Commits. For example, my team uses this pattern: [minor] add new feature xyz
Suitable for large teams working with multiple projects with their own commit scopes. It allows you to select the pre-defined scopes or commit types. It works perfectly with https://github.com/semantic-release/semantic-release.
You have two ways to use cz-customizable
. Originally, this project started as a commitizen plugin (Option 1). We introduced the second option to run this cz-customizable
in standalone mode (Option 2), just like any NodeJS script. It's recommended to use Option 2
for simplicity. The way you configure is shared between both options.
.cz-config.js
cz-config.js
to your home directory.cz-config.js
at the root level of your project and commit it to your code repository (Assuming you have a team agreement to use this tool).npm i cz-customizable -g
Then run cz-customizable
from your root repo. You can also use the alias cz-cust
.
If everything is correct, you should see commit questions like the image above.
npx cz-customizable
Use cz-customizable
without commitzen
.
npm install cz-customizable --save-dev
package.json
:"scripts" : {
...
"commit": "./node_modules/cz-customizable/standalone.js"
}
.cz-config.js
file.npm run commit
.This is how this project started.
install commitizen in case you don't have it: npm install -g commitizen
. Make sure you have the latest version of commitizen installed globally.
configure commitizen
to use cz-customizable
as plugin. Add those lines to your package.json
:
...
"config": {
"commitizen": {
"path": "node_modules/cz-customizable"
}
}
.cz-config.js
package.json
.cz-customizable
will first look for a file called .cz-config.js
or .config/cz-config.js
in the project root, near your package.json
.cz-config.js
or or .config/cz-config.js
in your home directorypackage.json
:
...
"config": {
"commitizen": { // not needed for standlone usage
"path": "node_modules/cz-customizable"
},
"cz-customizable": {
"config": "config/path/to/my/config.js"
}
}
Note: option one allows you to have your config away from root directory. It also gives you a change to define any name to your .cz-config.js
.
This is suitable when your team is not ready to roll cz-customizable
across all teams but you still would like to use it for your own commits, no matter the project.
Steps:
.cz-config.js
in your git repository root (*Assumptions: you git ignore global on ~/.gitignore_global
for .cz-config.js
). Or;.cz-config.js
your home directory.>v5.6.x
.czrc
: echo '{ "path": "cz-customizable" }' > ~/.czrc
npx git-cz
or git cz
.Notes:
.cz-config.js
file to your git when applicable.Hopefully this will help you to have consistent commit messages and have a fully automated deployment without any human intervention.
Here are the options you can set in your .cz-config.js
:
subjectLimit: {number, default 100}: This is the subject limit. Example: this is a new feature
or fix a bug
subjectSeparator: {string, default ': '}: This is the subject separator. Example: feat: this is a new feature
typePrefix: {string, default ''}: This is the commit type prefix. Example: config: { typePrefix: '[' }
, result: [feat: this is a new feature
typeSuffix: {string, default ''}: This is the commit type suffix. Example: config: { typePrefix: '[', typeSuffix: ']', subjectSeparator: ' ' }
, result: [feat] this is a new feature
scopes: {Array of Strings}: Specify the scopes for your particular project. Eg.: for some banking system: ["acccounts", "payments"]. For another travelling application: ["bookings", "search", "profile"]
scopeOverrides: {Object where key contains a Array of String}: Use this when you want to override scopes for a specific commit type. Example below specify scopes when type is fix
:
scopeOverrides: {
fix: [
{name: 'merge'},
{name: 'style'},
{name: 'e2eTest'},
{name: 'unitTest'}
]
}
allowCustomScopes: {boolean, default false}: adds the option custom
to scope selection so you can still type a scope if you need.
allowBreakingChanges: {Array of Strings: default none}. List of commit types you would like to the question breaking change
prompted. Eg.: ['feat', 'fix'].
skipQuestions: {Array of Strings: default none}. List of questions you want to skip. Eg.: ['body', 'footer'].
skipEmptyScopes: {boolean, default false}: If a chosen type has no scopes declared, skip the scope question
appendBranchNameToCommitMessage: If you use cz-customizable
with cz-customizable-ghooks
, you can get the branch name automatically appended to the commit message. This is done by a commit hook on cz-customizable-ghooks
. This option has been added on cz-customizable-ghooks
, v1.3.0. Default value is true
.
ticketNumberPrefix: {string, default 'ISSUES CLOSED:'}: Set custom prefix for footer ticker number.
ticketNumberSuffix: {string, default ''}: Set custom suffix for footer ticker number.
fallbackTicketNumber: {string, default ''}: Set fallback ticket number which will be used if ticketNumber
is not provided.
breakingPrefix: {string, default 'BREAKING CHANGE:'}: Set a custom prefix for the breaking change block in commit messages.
footerPrefix: {string, default 'ISSUES CLOSED:'}: Set a custom prefix for the footer block in commit messages. Set to empty string to remove prefix.
breaklineChar: {string, default '|'}: It gets replaced with \n to create the breakline in your commit message. This is supported for fields body
and footer
at the moment.
upperCaseSubject: { boolean, default false }: Capitalizes first subject letter if set to true
askForBreakingChangeFirst: { boolean, default false }: It asks for breaking change as first question when set to true
usePreparedCommit: { boolean, default false }: It re-uses commit from ./.git/COMMIT_EDITMSG when set to true
backticks
If you wish to have backticks in your content, for example "feat: `string`", the commit preview will be "feat: \`string\`".
Don't worry because on your git log
will be "feat: `string`" as desired.
multiline contents on the body of the message
Body is the only place where you can use a pipe
to break lines.
E.g.: you type this: my items are:| - item01| - item 02
, which will become:
my items are:
- item01
- item 02
README.md
and index.d.ts
.Leonardo Correa