I am writing a pre-commit hook. I want to run php -l
against all files with .php extension. However I am stuck.
I need to obtain a list of new/changed files that are staged. deleted files should be excluded.
I have tried using git diff
and git ls-files
, but I think I need a hand here.
git diff --cached --name-status
will show a summary of what's staged, so you can easily exclude removed files, e.g.:This indicates that wt-status.c was modified and wt-status.h was removed in the staging area (index). So, to check only files that weren't removed:
You will have to jump through extra hoops to deal with filenames with spaces in though (-z option to git diff and some more interesting parsing)
git diff --cached is not sufficient if the commit call was specified with the -a flag, and there is no way to determine if that flag has been thrown in the hook. It would help if the arguments to commit should be available to the hook for examination.
None of the answers here support filenames with spaces. The best way for that is to add the
-z
flag in combination withxargs -0
This is what is given by git in built-in samples (see .git/hooks/pre-commit.sample)
A slightly neater way of obtaining the same list is:
This will return the list of files that need to be checked.
But just running
php -l
on your working copy may not be the right thing to do. If you are doing a partial commit i.e. just selecting a subset of the differences between your current working set and the HEAD for the commit, then the test will be run on your working set, but will be certifying a commit that has never existed on your disk.To do it right you should extract the whole staged image to a temp area and perform the test there .
See Building a better pre-commit hook for Git for another implementation.
Here is what I use for my Perl checks:
for PHP it will look like this: