A tiny crate to make it easy to share and apply Git hooks for Rust projects. Inspired by Husky.
- Zero dependencies.
- No magic, uses Git's
config core.hooksPath
to set a custom hooks path. Use native/regular shell scripts for git hooks. - Makes use of Cargo's build script.
- IDE/Code editor agnostic.
- Customizable setup.
Sloughi is an ancient breed of domesticated dog originating from North Africa (i.e. Algeria, where I live 👋).
-
Add sloughi to your
build-dependencies
(notdev-dependencies
):[build-dependencies] sloughi = "0.3.0"
-
Create a
build.rs
file at the root of your project to install Sloughi (besidesCargo.toml
, not insidesrc/
):use sloughi::Sloughi; fn main() { let _ = Sloughi::new().install(); // This will fail silently. Won't interrupt the build. }
That's it!
The next time cargo build
is triggered (by VSCode, or by running cargo run
/cargo test
), you will notice a .sloughi
folder is created with a sample pre-commit
hook inside.
This crate uses the builder pattern, you can chain options on top ::new()
to adjust the install:
let _ = Sloughi::new()
.custom_path(".git_hooks"). // Choose a custom Git hooks relative path (default is ".sloughi")
.ignore_env("CI"). // Ignore setup when `CI` environment variable is set (like in CircleCI ..etc)
.ignore_env("GITHUB_ACTIONS") // Do not run in Github Actions as well
.install();
The above snippets for build.rs
will not interrupt the build in case Sloughi install failed (e.g. not a git repo, permission error ..etc). It's explicitly silenced with let _ =
, you can handle the error however you like, or just yell with:
Sloughi::new().install().expect("Sloughi install failed");
Cargo lacks install hooks (like postinstall
in npm's package.json
), this makes it challenging to have a way to share git hooks automatically in a upstream repository.
Cargo's build script is a nice & transparent way to:
- Act on the project at build/compile time.
- Customize the setup without extra config files and formats.
The install()
call is idempotent. It won't modify the existing setup and hooks.
No:
build.rs
itself is only built when it's changed (by default).- The setup will first check if you already have
.sloughi
(or the custom path) created. If so, it skips installs.
No, release mode is a no-op.
- Optional feature flags. I.e. conventional commits as pre-commit, rustfmt as pre-commit.
- A [optiona] companion binary to manage hooks.
- Check Cargo workspaces compatiblity.
- Introduce the
uninstall()
call to the exportedSloughi
struct. - Integration tests.