For a long time I didn't know that even writing commit message can have its own "best practices". When I got in touch with git for the first time, this part was described with words like "...and here you can write something short about what's going on in the commit".

Bad commit messages

Look at the commit messages below. If you want to merge them, you realy don't know, what you are adding / changing, what they do or why you need them. The same applies if you want to search something in the history. You scroll down the log, but it is a mess and a waste of time.

cd3e27a contact page aee9d0d comments eac95e5 list of online users, some other changes because of server fae5636 little edit

Good commit messages

And now take a look at these messages. Better? I think so.

43ec6aa Fix error when the URL is not reachable 4fe84ab Add error message if something went wrong 753aa05 Add server fingerprint check df3a662 Fix shadow box closing problem

How to write a good commit message

The whole message should have its format - subject, body and optionally conclusion consisting of resolved / closed issues.

Subject

The git commit help page described it very good as a single short (less than 50 character) line summarizing the change, followed by a blank line. The subject should start with a capital letter and should not end with dot. And the important thing here is, it has to be in imperative form. Chris Beams wrote a simple rule to get it right every time :

A properly formed Git commit subject line should always be able to complete the following sentence: if applied, this commit will your subject line here. For example :

if applied, this commit will Delete unnecessary files

if applied, this commit will Add grep option

if applied, this commit will Fix error when protocol is missing

It will not work for bad commit messages :

if applied, this commit will contact page

if applied, this commit will list of online users, some other changes because of server

The git itself is using this approach. When you merge something it generates a commit message like "Merge branch...", or when reverting "Revert...".

Body

Here you write what and why is changed. The body should not exceed 72 characters for a line. Of course not every commit has to have body.

Bottom line

On the end, you can add which issue does the commit fix or is related to. This can be a link, number or if you use GitHub you can write it as Resolves #N / Closes #N, where N is the issue ID.

Example

This is an example commit from one of my repositories :

Fix error when protocol is missing First, it checks if the protocol is set. If not, it changes the url and add the basic http protocol on the beginning. Second, it does a "preflight" request and follows all redirects and returns the last URL. The process then continues with this URL. Resolves #17

Conclusion

Thank you for reading, I hope you learned something new. If you have another tip(s) how to write better commit messages, or how to better use this tool, please leave a comment.

Generate a changelog

Another advantage of such commits is it is really easy to generate changelog.

# show whole commit history $ git log --oneline --decorate --color # show history from one tag to another $ git log 0.0.9..0.0.10 --oneline --decorate --color # show history form tag to head git log 0.0.9..HEAD --oneline --decorate --color

The result of such command is the list of commits.

21629ee Fix getResources bug aa13384 Update docs 44de44c Add HSTS check

Commitizen

There is a command line tool available on GitHub named Commitizen which makes it a little bit easier. When you want to commit, you just type git cz and it asks you couple of questions and then creates the commit with proper message for you.

References

Git commit manpage

Closing issues using keywords on GitHub

How to Write a Git Commit Message post from Chris Beams

Angular Commit Message Format