A CLI that writes your git commit messages for you with AI using Groq. Never write a commit message again.
The minimum supported version of Node.js is v18. Check your Node.js version with
node --version
.
-
Install lazycommit:
npm install -g lazycommitt
brew install lazycommit
Upgrade:
brew upgrade lazycommit
-
Retrieve your API key from Groq Console
Note: If you haven't already, you'll have to create an account and get your API key.
-
Set the key so lazycommit can use it:
lazycommit config set GROQ_API_KEY=<your token>
This will create a
.lazycommit
file in your home directory.
Check the installed version with:
lazycommit --version
If it's not the latest version, run:
npm update -g lazycommitt
You can call lazycommit
directly to generate a commit message for your staged changes:
git add <files...>
lazycommit
lazycommit
passes down unknown flags to git commit
, so you can pass in commit
flags.
For example, you can stage all changes in tracked files as you commit:
lazycommit --all # or -a
👉 Tip: Use the
lzc
alias iflazycommit
is too long for you.
Sometimes the recommended commit message isn't the best so you want it to generate a few to pick from. You can generate multiple commit messages at once by passing in the --generate <i>
flag, where 'i' is the number of generated messages:
lazycommit --generate <i> # or -g <i>
Warning: this uses more tokens, meaning it costs more.
If you'd like to generate Conventional Commits, you can use the --type
flag followed by conventional
. This will prompt lazycommit
to format the commit message according to the Conventional Commits specification:
lazycommit --type conventional # or -t conventional
This feature can be useful if your project follows the Conventional Commits standard or if you're using tools that rely on this commit format.
You can exclude specific files from AI analysis using the --exclude
flag:
lazycommit --exclude package-lock.json --exclude dist/
When you stage many files, lazycommit
can automatically split your changes into logical groups and create multiple commits with proper Conventional Commit messages.
- Auto-trigger: when staged files ≥ 5, or when the diff is large
- Grouping: buckets by type/scope (e.g.,
feat(api)
,docs
,ci
,build
,test
,chore
) - Deep split: if everything falls into one big bucket (e.g.,
app/api/*
), it auto-splits by second-level directory (likeanalytics
,projects
,sessions
) - Token-safe AI: each group uses a compact
git diff --cached --numstat
summary (not full diffs) to generate the commit line
Usage:
# Just run as usual; grouping triggers automatically when applicable
lazycommit
# Force grouping even for < 5 files
lazycommit --split
For large commits with many files, lazycommit automatically stays within API limits and maintains clean history:
- Automatic detection: Large diffs and many-file changes are detected
- Logical grouping: Files are grouped into conventional buckets; single huge buckets are auto-split by second-level directory (e.g.,
app/api/<group>/...
) - Token-safe summaries: Each group sends a small
--numstat
summary to AI instead of full diffs - Sequential commits: In multi-commit mode, groups are committed one-by-one with their own messages
You can also integrate lazycommit with Git via the prepare-commit-msg
hook. This lets you use Git like you normally would, and edit the commit message before committing.
In the Git repository you want to install the hook in:
lazycommit hook install
In the Git repository you want to uninstall the hook from:
lazycommit hook uninstall
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Stage your files and commit:
git add <files...> git commit # Only generates a message when it's not passed in
If you ever want to write your own message instead of generating one, you can simply pass one in:
git commit -m "My message"
-
Lazycommit will generate the commit message for you and pass it back to Git. Git will open it with the configured editor for you to review/edit it.
-
Save and close the editor to commit!
To retrieve a configuration option, use the command:
lazycommit config get <key>
For example, to retrieve the API key, you can use:
lazycommit config get GROQ_API_KEY
You can also retrieve multiple configuration options at once by separating them with spaces:
lazycommit config get GROQ_API_KEY generate
To set a configuration option, use the command:
lazycommit config set <key>=<value>
For example, to set the API key, you can use:
lazycommit config set GROQ_API_KEY=<your-api-key>
You can also set multiple configuration options at once by separating them with spaces, like
lazycommit config set GROQ_API_KEY=<your-api-key> generate=3 locale=en
Required
The Groq API key. You can retrieve it from Groq Console.
Default: en
The locale to use for the generated commit messages. Consult the list of codes in: https://wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-1_codes.
Default: 1
The number of commit messages to generate to pick from.
Note, this will use more tokens as it generates more results.
Set a HTTP/HTTPS proxy to use for requests.
To clear the proxy option, you can use the command (note the empty value after the equals sign):
lazycommit config set proxy=
Default: openai/gpt-oss-20b
The Groq model to use for generating commit messages. Available models include:
openai/gpt-oss-20b
(default) - Fast, efficient for conventional commits
For conventional commit generation, the 8B instant model provides the best balance of speed and quality.
The timeout for network requests to the Groq API in milliseconds.
Default: 10000
(10 seconds)
lazycommit config set timeout=20000 # 20s
The maximum character length of the generated commit message.
Default: 50
lazycommit config set max-length=100
Default: ""
(Empty string)
The type of commit message to generate. Set this to "conventional" to generate commit messages that follow the Conventional Commits specification:
lazycommit config set type=conventional
You can clear this option by setting it to an empty string:
lazycommit config set type=
This CLI tool runs git diff
to grab all your latest code changes, sends them to Groq's AI models, then returns the AI generated commit message.
The tool uses Groq's fast inference API to provide quick and accurate commit message suggestions based on your code changes.
For large commits that exceed API token limits, lazycommit automatically:
- Detects large/many-file diffs and switches to a scalable flow
- Groups files by conventional type/scope; if only one large bucket remains, auto-splits by second-level directory (e.g.,
app/api/<group>/...
) - Generates messages per group using compact
git diff --cached --numstat
summaries (not full diffs) - Commits sequentially per group with clear, conventional messages
- When a single commit is requested, uses compact summaries to generate conventional messages efficiently
This ensures you can commit large changes (like new features, refactoring, or initial project setup) without hitting API limits, while keeping a clean history.
If you get a 413 error, your diff is too large for the API. Try these solutions:
-
Exclude build artifacts:
lazycommit --exclude "dist/**" --exclude "node_modules/**" --exclude ".next/**"
-
Use a different model:
lazycommit config set model "llama-3.1-70b-versatile"
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Commit in smaller batches:
git add src/ # Stage only source files lazycommit git add docs/ # Then stage documentation lazycommit
- Check your API key:
lazycommit config get GROQ_API_KEY
- Verify you have staged changes:
git status
- Try excluding large files or using a different model
- Use the GPT-OSS-20B model (default):
lazycommit config set model "openai/gpt-oss-20b"
- Exclude unnecessary files:
lazycommit --exclude "*.log" --exclude "*.tmp"
- Use automatic multi-commit mode to split large changes into logical groups
- Lower generate count:
lazycommit config set generate=1
(default) - Reduce timeout:
lazycommit config set timeout=5000
for faster failures
- Fast: Groq provides ultra-fast inference speeds, especially with the 8B instant model
- Cost-effective: More affordable than traditional AI APIs
- Open source models: Uses leading open-source language models
- Reliable: High uptime and consistent performance
- Optimized for commits: The 8B instant model is perfectly sized for conventional commit generation
- Kartik Labhshetwar: @KartikLabhshetwar
If you want to help fix a bug or implement a feature in Issues, checkout the Contribution Guide to learn how to setup and test the project.
This project is licensed under the Apache-2.0 License - see the LICENSE file for details.