# COMMITS
In the hledger project we try to follow certain conventions for commit messages, because good messages lead to good commits => good change docs => easier code review => quicker merging => faster delivery of quality software. We'll check and help you polish messages as part of CI and code review. (You can also set up a local commit hook, described below.) Here's the typical format: [feat|imp|fix[!]:] topic: Summary [Longer description when useful] More precisely: - Commit messages must begin with one or more prefixes (colon-terminated words), indicating the type and/or [topic](ISSUES.md#topics). - Commits causing user-visible changes must begin with `feat:`, `imp:` or `fix:` (feature, improvement, or bugfix). These will be used in release notes. If they are breaking/incompatible changes, use `feat!:`, `imp!:` or `fix!:`. - To skip CI builds on commits which would normally trigger one, add a `;` at the beginning. (Our CI does a lot of work, so you can use this to reduce energy waste and carbon emissions from minor changes. Non-code commits do this automatically.) - Mention any relevant issue numbers, usually parenthesised at the end. `(#NNNN)` - Try to write commit messages as changelog/release-note-ready documentation that will tell their intended audience (which might be users, installers, packagers, and/or developers) what they need to know. Some examples: - `feat: accounts: --types shows account types (#1820)` - `imp!: journal: Remove deprecated account type code syntax from account directives.` - `fix: types: Ensure auto postings can match against and be matched by type: queries.` - `tools: commitlint: allow a git "fixup! " prefix` - `doc: releasing: tweaks` Some possible prefixes: - `feat` - a new feature - `imp` - an improvement to existing features - `fix` - a bugfix - `dev` - a generic developer change - `ref` - refactoring - `cln` - cleanup - `doc` - documentation-related - `test` - tests-related - `ci` - continuous integration-related - Any of the standard [labels](ISSUES.md#labels) used in the issue tracker. ## How to check commits Before committing, pushing, or merging, run `tools/commitlint` to check recent commit messages. (See the script for more ways to select commits.) You can configure your local working copy to do this automatically, by running `just installcommithook`. commitlint also runs automatically on Github to check pull requests. ## See also - - - -> Commit messages