Begin a design document for config-based hooks, managed via git-hook. Focus on an overview of the implementation and motivation for design decisions. Briefly discuss the alternatives considered before this point. Also, attempt to redefine terms to fit into a multihook world. Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@xxxxxxxxxx> --- Notes: Since v4, addressed comments from Jonathan Tan about wording. Documentation/Makefile | 1 + .../technical/config-based-hooks.txt | 367 ++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 368 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Documentation/technical/config-based-hooks.txt diff --git a/Documentation/Makefile b/Documentation/Makefile index 80d1908a44..58d6b3acbe 100644 --- a/Documentation/Makefile +++ b/Documentation/Makefile @@ -81,6 +81,7 @@ SP_ARTICLES += $(API_DOCS) TECH_DOCS += MyFirstContribution TECH_DOCS += MyFirstObjectWalk TECH_DOCS += SubmittingPatches +TECH_DOCS += technical/config-based-hooks TECH_DOCS += technical/hash-function-transition TECH_DOCS += technical/http-protocol TECH_DOCS += technical/index-format diff --git a/Documentation/technical/config-based-hooks.txt b/Documentation/technical/config-based-hooks.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..dac391f505 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/technical/config-based-hooks.txt @@ -0,0 +1,367 @@ +Configuration-based hook management +=================================== +:sectanchors: + +[[motivation]] +== Motivation + +Replace the .git/hook/hookname path as the only source of hooks to execute; +allow users to define hooks using config files, in a way which is friendly to +users with multiple repos which have similar needs. + +Redefine "hook" as an event rather than a single script, allowing users to +perform unrelated actions on a single event. + +Take a step closer to safety when copying zipped Git repositories from untrusted +users by making it more apparent to users which scripts will be run during +normal Git operations. + +Make it easier for users to discover Git's hook feature and automate their +workflows. + +[[user-interfaces]] +== User interfaces + +[[config-schema]] +=== Config schema + +Hooks can be introduced by editing the configuration manually. There are two new +sections added, `hook` and `hookcmd`. + +[[config-schema-hook]] +==== `hook` + +Primarily contains subsections for each hook event. The order of variables in +these subsections defines the hook command execution order; hook commands can be +specified by setting the value directly to the command if no additional +configuration is needed, or by setting the value as the name of a `hookcmd`. If +Git does not find a `hookcmd` whose subsection matches the value of the given +command string, Git will try to execute the string directly. Hooks are executed +by passing the resolved command string to the shell. In the future, hook event +subsections could also contain per-hook-event settings; see +<<per-hook-event-settings,the section in Future Work>> for more details. + +Also contains top-level hook execution settings, for example, `hook.runHookDir` +or `hook.disableAll`. (These settings are described more in +<<library,Library>>.) + +---- +[hook "pre-commit"] + command = perl-linter + command = /usr/bin/git-secrets --pre-commit + +[hook "pre-applypatch"] + command = perl-linter + # for illustration purposes; error behavior isn't planned yet + error = ignore + +[hook] + runHookDir = interactive +---- + +[[config-schema-hookcmd]] +==== `hookcmd` + +Defines a hook command and its attributes, which will be used when a hook event +occurs. Unqualified attributes are assumed to apply to this hook during all hook +events, but event-specific attributes can also be supplied. The example runs +`/usr/bin/lint-it --language=perl <args passed by Git>`, but for repos which +include this config, the hook command will be skipped for all events to which +it's normally subscribed _except_ `pre-commit`. + +---- +[hookcmd "perl-linter"] + command = /usr/bin/lint-it --language=perl + skip = true + # for illustration purposes; below hasn't been defined yet + pre-commit-skip = false +---- + +[[command-line-api]] +=== Command-line API + +Users should be able to view, reorder, and create hook commands via the command +line. External tools should be able to view a list of hooks in the correct order +to run. + +*`git hook list <hook-event>`* + +*`git hook list (--system|--global|--local|--worktree)`* + +*`git hook edit <hook-event>`* + +*`git hook add <hook-command> <hook-event> <options...>`* + +[[hook-editor]] +=== Hook editor + +The tool which is presented by `git hook edit <hook-command>`. Ideally, this +tool should be easier to use than manually editing the config, and then produce +a concise config afterwards. It may take a form similar to `git rebase +--interactive`. + +[[implementation]] +== Implementation + +[[library]] +=== Library + +`hook.c` and `hook.h` are responsible for interacting with the config files. In +the case when the code generating a hook event doesn't have special concerns +about how to run the hooks, the hook library will provide a basic API to call +all hooks in config order with an `strvec` provided by the code which +generates the hook event: + +*`int run_hooks(const char *hookname, struct strvec *args)`* + +This call includes the hook command provided by `run-command.h:find_hook()`; +eventually, this legacy hook will be gated by a config `hook.runHookDir`. The +config is checked against a number of cases: + +- "no": the legacy hook will not be run +- "interactive": Git will prompt the user before running the legacy hook +- "warn": Git will print a warning to stderr before running the legacy hook +- "yes" (default): Git will silently run the legacy hook + +In case this list is expanded in the future, if a value for `hook.runHookDir` is +given which Git does not recognize, Git should discard that config entry. For +example, if "warn" was specified at system level and "junk" was specified at +global level, Git would resolve the value to "warn"; if the only time the config +was set was to "junk", Git would use the default value of "yes". + +If the caller wants to do something more complicated, the hook library can also +provide a callback API: + +*`int for_each_hookcmd(const char *hookname, hookcmd_function *cb)`* + +Finally, to facilitate the builtin, the library will also provide the following +APIs to interact with the config: + +---- +int set_hook_commands(const char *hookname, struct string_list *commands, + enum config_scope scope); +int set_hookcmd(const char *hookcmd, struct hookcmd options); + +int list_hook_commands(const char *hookname, struct string_list *commands); +int list_hooks_in_scope(enum config_scope scope, struct string_list *commands); +---- + +`struct hookcmd` is expected to grow in size over time as more functionality is +added to hooks; so that other parts of the code don't need to understand the +config schema, `struct hookcmd` should contain logical values instead of string +pairs. + +---- +struct hookcmd { + const char *name; + const char *command; + + /* for illustration only; not planned at present */ + int parallelizable; + const char *hookcmd_before; + const char *hookcmd_after; + enum recovery_action on_fail; +} +---- + +[[builtin]] +=== Builtin + +`builtin/hook.c` is responsible for providing the frontend. It's responsible for +formatting user-provided data and then calling the library API to set the +configs as appropriate. The builtin frontend is not responsible for calling the +config directly, so that other areas of Git can rely on the hook library to +understand the most recent config schema for hooks. + +[[migration]] +=== Migration path + +[[stage-0]] +==== Stage 0 + +Hooks are called by running `run-command.h:find_hook()` with the hookname and +executing the result. The hook library and builtin do not exist. Hooks only +exist as specially named scripts within `.git/hooks/`. + +[[stage-1]] +==== Stage 1 + +`git hook list --porcelain <hook-event>` is implemented. Users can replace their +`.git/hooks/<hook-event>` scripts with a trampoline based on `git hook list`'s +output. Modifier commands like `git hook add` and `git hook edit` can be +implemented around this time as well. + +[[stage-2]] +==== Stage 2 + +`hook.h:run_hooks()` is taught to include `run-command.h:find_hook()` at the +end; calls to `find_hook()` are replaced with calls to `run_hooks()`. Users can +opt-in to config-based hooks simply by creating some in their config; otherwise +users should remain unaffected by the change. + +[[stage-3]] +==== Stage 3 + +The call to `find_hook()` inside of `run_hooks()` learns to check for a config, +`hook.runHookDir`. Users can opt into managing their hooks completely via the +config this way. + +[[stage-4]] +==== Stage 4 + +`.git/hooks` is removed from the template and the hook directory is considered +deprecated. To avoid breaking older repos, the default of `hook.runHookDir` is +not changed, and `find_hook()` is not removed. + +[[caveats]] +== Caveats + +[[security]] +=== Security and repo config + +Part of the motivation behind this refactor is to mitigate hooks as an attack +vector;footnote:[https://lore.kernel.org/git/20171002234517.GV19555@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx/] +however, as the design stands, users can still provide hooks in the repo-level +config, which is included when a repo is zipped and sent elsewhere. The +security of the repo-level config is still under discussion; this design +generally assumes the repo-level config is secure, which is not true yet. The +goal is to avoid an overcomplicated design to work around a problem which has +ceased to exist. + +[[ease-of-use]] +=== Ease of use + +The config schema is nontrivial; that's why it's important for the `git hook` +modifier commands to be usable. Contributors with UX expertise are encouraged to +share their suggestions. + +[[alternatives]] +== Alternative approaches + +A previous summary of alternatives exists in the +archives.footnote:[https://lore.kernel.org/git/20191116011125.GG22855@xxxxxxxxxx] + +[[status-quo]] +=== Status quo + +Today users can implement multihooks themselves by using a "trampoline script" +as their hook, and pointing that script to a directory or list of other scripts +they wish to run. + +[[hook-directories]] +=== Hook directories + +Other contributors have suggested Git learn about the existence of a directory +such as `.git/hooks/<hookname>.d` and execute those hooks in alphabetical order. + +[[comparison]] +=== Comparison table + +.Comparison of alternatives +|=== +|Feature |Config-based hooks |Hook directories |Status quo + +|Supports multiple hooks +|Natively +|Natively +|With user effort + +|Safer for zipped repos +|A little +|No +|No + +|Previous hooks just work +|If configured +|Yes +|Yes + +|Can install one hook to many repos +|Yes +|No +|No + +|Discoverability +|Better (in `git help git`) +|Same as before +|Same as before + +|Hard to run unexpected hook +|If configured +|No +|No +|=== + +[[future-work]] +== Future work + +[[execution-ordering]] +=== Execution ordering + +We may find that config order is insufficient for some users; for example, +config order makes it difficult to add a new hook to the system or global config +which runs at the end of the hook list. A new ordering schema should be: + +1) Specified by a `hook.order` config, so that users will not unexpectedly see +their order change; + +2) Either dependency or numerically based. + +Dependency-based ordering is prone to classic linked-list problems, like a +cycles and handling of missing dependencies. But, it paves the way for enabling +parallelization if some tasks truly depend on others. + +Numerical ordering makes it tricky for Git to generate suggested ordering +numbers for each command, but is easy to determine a definitive order. + +[[parallelization]] +=== Parallelization + +Users with many hooks might want to run them simultaneously, if the hooks don't +modify state; if one hook depends on another's output, then users will want to +specify those dependencies. If we decide to solve this problem, we may want to +look to modern build systems for inspiration on how to manage dependencies and +parallel tasks. + +[[securing-hookdir-hooks]] +=== Securing hookdir hooks + +With the design as written in this doc, it's still possible for a malicious user +to modify `.git/config` to include `hook.pre-receive.command = rm -rf /`, then +zip their repo and send it to another user. It may be necessary to teach Git to +only allow inlined hooks like this if they were configured outside of the local +scope (in other words, only run hookcmds, and only allow hookcmds to be +configured in global or system scope); or another approach, like a list of safe +projects, might be useful. It may also be sufficient (or at least useful) to +teach a `hook.disableAll` config or similar flag to the Git executable. + +[[submodule-inheritance]] +=== Submodule inheritance + +It's possible some submodules may want to run the identical set of hooks that +their superrepo runs. While a globally-configured hook set is helpful, it's not +a great solution for users who have multiple repos-with-submodules under the +same user. It would be useful for submodules to learn how to run hooks from +their superrepo's config, or inherit that hook setting. + +[[per-hook-event-settings]] +=== Per-hook-event settings + +It might be desirable to keep settings specifically for some hook events, but +not for others - for example, a user may wish to disable hookdir hooks for all +events but pre-commit, which they haven't had time to convert yet; or, a user +may wish for execution order settings to differ based on hook event. In that +case, it would be useful to set something like `hook.pre-commit.executionOrder` +which would not apply to the 'prepare-commit-msg' hook, for example. + +[[glossary]] +== Glossary + +*hook event* + +A point during Git's execution where user scripts may be run, for example, +_prepare-commit-msg_ or _pre-push_. + +*hook command* + +A user script or executable which will be run on one or more hook events. -- 2.28.0.rc0.142.g3c755180ce-goog