On Thu, Jul 04, 2013 at 01:59:10PM +0300, Orgad Shaneh wrote: > On Thu, Jul 4, 2013 at 1:34 PM, John Keeping <john@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Thu, Jul 04, 2013 at 12:47:28PM +0300, Orgad Shaneh wrote: > >> Hi, > >> > >> If a prepare-commit-msg hook is used, git gui executes it for "New Commit". > >> > >> If the "New Commit" is selected, and then immediately "Amend" (before > >> the hook returns), when the hook returns the message is replaced with > >> the one produced by the hook. > > > > I think this is a problem with the hook you are running. The hook is > > given arguments specifying the message file and optionally the source of > > whatever is already in the file (see githooks(5) for details). > > > > It sounds like your hook is blindly overwriting the file, rather than > > preserving its contents in the cases where you wish to do so. > > Let me try to explain. > > When git gui is executed, it calls the prepare-commit-msg script with > .git/PREPARE_COMMIT_MSG as an argument. > > When amend is selected, the hook is *not* called at all (what would it > prepare? The message is already committed) > > Use the following hook to reproduce: > --- snip --- > #!/bin/sh > > sleep 5 > echo "$@" >> /tmp/hook.log > echo 'Hello hook' > "$1" > --- snip --- > > Now run git gui (or press F5 if it is already running), and before 5 > seconds pass, click Amend last commit. You'll see the commit's > message, but when the 5 seconds pass it is replaced with "Hello hook". > That's the bug. Yes, and that's a bug in the hook. The hook is called with a second argument "commit" but it is ignoring this and blindly overwriting the message. githooks(5) says: prepare-commit-msg This hook is invoked by git commit right after preparing the default log message, and before the editor is started. It takes one to three parameters. The first is the name of the file that contains the commit log message. The second is the source of the commit message, and can be: message (if a -m or -F option was given); template (if a -t option was given or the configuration option commit.template is set); merge (if the commit is a merge or a .git/MERGE_MSG file exists); squash (if a .git/SQUASH_MSG file exists); or commit, followed by a commit SHA1 (if a -c, -C or --amend option was given). If the exit status is non-zero, git commit will abort. The purpose of the hook is to edit the message file in place, and it is not suppressed by the --no-verify option. A non-zero exit means a failure of the hook and aborts the commit. It should not be used as replacement for pre-commit hook. Your problem is that your hook script is not checking $2 so it is overwriting the message even when you do not want to do so. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html