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SubmittingPatches: add convention of prefixing commit messages

Conscientious newcomers to git development will read SubmittingPatches
and CodingGuidelines, but could easily miss the convention of
prefixing commit messages with a single word identifying the file
or area the commit touches.

Signed-off-by: Adam Spiers <git@adamspiers.org>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
This commit is contained in:
Adam Spiers 2012-12-16 19:35:59 +00:00 committed by Junio C Hamano
parent bdd478d620
commit 6a5b649883

View File

@ -9,6 +9,14 @@ Checklist (and a short version for the impatient):
- the first line of the commit message should be a short
description (50 characters is the soft limit, see DISCUSSION
in git-commit(1)), and should skip the full stop
- it is also conventional in most cases to prefix the
first line with "area: " where the area is a filename
or identifier for the general area of the code being
modified, e.g.
. archive: ustar header checksum is computed unsigned
. git-cherry-pick.txt: clarify the use of revision range notation
(if in doubt which identifier to use, run "git log --no-merges"
on the files you are modifying to see the current conventions)
- the body should provide a meaningful commit message, which:
. explains the problem the change tries to solve, iow, what
is wrong with the current code without the change.