quickhook | Faster Git hook runner | Version Control System library
kandi X-RAY | quickhook Summary
kandi X-RAY | quickhook Summary
Quickhook is a fast, Unix'y, opinionated Git hook runner. It handles running all user-defined hooks, collecting their output, reporting failures, and exiting with a non-zero status code if appropriate.
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Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- main initializes the app .
- promptForInstallShim prompts for an install shim
- PreCommit runs the pre - commit hooks .
- ExecutablesForHook returns a list of executable files for a hook
- Install the hooks in the context
- CommitMsg commit message
- runExecutablesInParallel runs all executables in parallel .
- filterLinesForFiles returns a list of file names for the given line .
- shimCommandForHook returns a shim command for a hook
- IsDir returns true if the given path is a directory .
quickhook Key Features
quickhook Examples and Code Snippets
$ quickhook install
Create file .git/hooks/commit-msg? [yn] y
Installed shim .git/hooks/commit-msg
Create file .git/hooks/pre-commit? [yn] y
Installed shim .git/hooks/pre-commit
# Run the pre-commit hooks on all Git-tracked files in the repository
q
brew tap dirk/quickhook
# Tapped 1 formula (28 files, 28KB).
brew install quickhook
# /usr/local/Cellar/quickhook/1.4.0: 3 files, 3.7MB, built in 9 seconds
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on Version Control System
QUESTION
I have the following use case:
On my local computer, I had the following structure of files/folders outside of any version control system, including git.
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-27 at 10:31No, it's not possible with Git. Git does not keep track of the commands executed in a repository.
Your best bet is your shell's command history.
QUESTION
I have a project with the composer.lock
file.
I installed packages with the command:
ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-14 at 18:58rm -rf vendor
QUESTION
I want to download source for suricata package
I do add following repo
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-18 at 21:32This line:
QUESTION
I'm using secrets-gradle-plugin to read the API keys that I put in my local.properties.
I've added this code into the root build.gradle
ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-03 at 11:38try and add this line in
app/build.gradle
within thedefaultConfig
buildConfigField("String", "apiKey", API_KEY)
then try to fetch it
String apiKey = BuildConfig.apiKey;
QUESTION
Win 10, using Git bash. Git version 2.32.0.windows.1. Researched similar/same topics, they didn't help.
I'm a new user of Git, trying to learn how to use it, never used version control systems before, and I don't have anyone fleshy to ask or show me.
I follow the tutorial and even understand what's going on so far, but the push to the remote repository takes forever and does nothing. Everything up to that point worked.
Tutorial I'm using: YouTube Link with timestamp
What I successfully managed to do: created my first local repo, created dummy test file (took a random script for PCB CAD program with a bit of text, doesn't matter I guess), learned to create a branch and commit stuff to local branches. My head is about to explode, but it works, and I understand it so far. But pushing to remote repo hangs without giving any hint or clue.
I did a bit of research and found this topic here on StackOverflow: link
I added --verbose to the push command, so now it looks like this:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Nov-18 at 15:08On Windows, try and push from the command-line (not from a GUI) to test if that would be working.
Make sure that, in a simple CMD:
git config credential.helper
does returnmanager-core
- git ls-remote https://github.com// triggers a popup where you can enter your GitHub user account name and your PAT (Personal Access Token that you need to create first)
Then try and git push
from within your local repository folder.
From the discussion, this started to work with:
C:\Program Files\Git\bin
, so you need to add it to the system PATH (it is wherebash.exe
is)- a CMD opened as Administrator
QUESTION
This is probably a duplicate of this question.
My question is how should I approach this when working in a docker environment so for my project I have a docker-compose.yml and docker-compose-deploy.yml for my production environment and obviously migration files are generated only in the docker images and aren't included in my version control system.
How should I approach this? should I stop using Docker as my development environment and go for something like virtual environments or even machines?
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Nov-17 at 16:12No. The migration files are there so you can update your database without destroying it and rebuilding it from scratch (or doing the sql update statements by hand).
So you definitely want to track them in your version control.
During development, a classic scenario would be
- write code
- make migrations
- apply migrations on your dev database
- test the changes locally
- check in and push the commit to your production server
- execute the migrations (so only do
python manage.py migrate
) in production
Edit: I forgot to answer your docker question. Usually you put your source code in a volume outside the container, that you then mount into the container. So you can do docker development like this. That way the migration files and up in your codebase and you can track it.
QUESTION
Git is an awesome version control system, I want learn git by writing my own version control system. The first step I have to do is implement a string diff tool. I've read this blog and this paper. In order to get the diff of two strings, I need to locate the common part. Hence, I came into the problem: How can I find all common sub strings of two strings?
This is first part of my problem:The algorithm problem.
This is the algorithm I am using:
Algorithm Problem【Problem】Find all common sub strings of string1 and string2.
【Solution】
- compare all sub string of string1 with string2 then gather matches into answer.
- compare all sub string of string2 with string1 then gather matches into answer.
This algorithm is O(N^2) time complex.
The language ProblemTo proof my thought, I can easily implement it with Python:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Nov-04 at 02:16I find Google's awesome repo:
👉 https://github.com/google/diff-match-patch
But there is no rust language 🦀.
Old answerThanks for your reply. I've found a simple solution here.
Welcome to upgrade it 😘:
QUESTION
I am trying to set up the sync server with docker on Windows, but I get "Error opening the database 'objectbox': In entity "Album", property "artistId": missing virtualTarget" after running this command: docker run --rm -it -v %cd%:/data --publish 127.0.0.1:9999:9999 --publish 127.0.0.1:9980:9980 --user=0 objectboxio/sync:21.5.14-server --model /data/objectbox-model.json --unsecured-no-authentication --browser-bind 0.0.0.0:9980
Here is my model.json:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Sep-27 at 06:13Use at least ObjectBox for Java version 2.9.2-RC4 which removes some flags that are incompatible with Sync from the model JSON file.
QUESTION
I tried to create a fresh Nuxt.js project with the below command. Everything has worked fine previously except today.
The process as well as the output are all described below.
Anyone could help me to investigate this ?
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Aug-13 at 22:16npx create-nuxt-app
is still the fastest and easiest way to get a brand new Nuxt project. Not sure if you'll get the Node issue with it.
For more details, check this one: https://github.com/nuxt/create-nuxt-app
QUESTION
Why does the Version Control System Git stage files first, instead of committing them directly? I mean why we can't just commit files directly instead of staging them firstly then commit them?
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Aug-12 at 09:58Instead of committing all of the changes you've made since the last commit, the stage lets you group related changes into highly focused snapshots before actually committing it to the project history. This means you can make all sorts of edits to unrelated files, then go back and split them up into logical commits by adding related changes to the stage and commit them piece-by-piece. As in any revision control system, it’s important to create atomic commits so that it’s easy to track down bugs and revert changes with minimal impact on the rest of the project.
Ref : https://www.atlassian.com/git/tutorials/saving-changes
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