From a34bc428d57f2c59059824fd7dcc1bd39fdea7b5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Luiz Augusto von Dentz Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2018 10:50:54 +0300 Subject: gitlint: Add .gitlint configuration This adds a configuration for gitlint matching the preferred format. --- .gitlint | 48 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 48 insertions(+) create mode 100644 .gitlint (limited to '.gitlint') diff --git a/.gitlint b/.gitlint new file mode 100644 index 000000000..59ed7d605 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitlint @@ -0,0 +1,48 @@ +# All these sections are optional, edit this file as you like. +# [general] +# ignore=title-trailing-punctuation, T3 +# verbosity should be a value between 1 and 3, the commandline -v flags take precedence over this +# verbosity = 2 +# By default gitlint will ignore merge commits. Set to 'false' to disable. +# ignore-merge-commits=true +# Enable debug mode (prints more output). Disabled by default. +# debug=true + +# Set the extra-path where gitlint will search for user defined rules +# See http://jorisroovers.github.io/gitlint/user_defined_rules for details +# extra-path=examples/ + +[title-max-length] +line-length=72 + +# [title-must-not-contain-word] +# Comma-separated list of words that should not occur in the title. Matching is case +# insensitive. It's fine if the keyword occurs as part of a larger word (so "WIPING" +# will not cause a violation, but "WIP: my title" will. +# words=wip + +# [title-match-regex] +# python like regex (https://docs.python.org/2/library/re.html) that the +# commit-msg title must be matched to. +# Note that the regex can contradict with other rules if not used correctly +# (e.g. title-must-not-contain-word). +# regex=^US[0-9]* + +# [B1] +# B1 = body-max-line-length +# line-length=120 + +[body-min-length] +min-length=1 + +# [body-is-missing] +# Whether to ignore this rule on merge commits (which typically only have a title) +# default = True +# ignore-merge-commits=false + +# [body-changed-file-mention] +# List of files that need to be explicitly mentioned in the body when they are changed +# This is useful for when developers often erroneously edit certain files or git submodules. +# By specifying this rule, developers can only change the file when they explicitly reference +# it in the commit message. +# files=gitlint/rules.py,README.md -- cgit v1.2.1