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Bitbucket merge CLI tool

This is an opinionated tool to automate a squash merge for a Bitbucket pull request with a commit message that differs from the default.

This tool exists due to my frustration with the default squash merge message that the Bitbucket UI makes upon merging. Especially recently, it no longer includes the entire commit text and truncates it with an ellipsis ... if the commit text is too long.

I want a commit from a pull request to look like this in my commit history after doing a squash merge:

<PR title> (PR #X)

<commits text>

Approved by: <Approver 1>
Approved by: <Approver 2>
...

Since this isn't built into Bitbucket, I decided to make a CLI tool to do this for me.

Dependencies

  • node
  • bash
  • curl
  • sed
  • awk
  • gpg

Usage

# help
./bb-merge.sh -h

# print out commit message, do not actually do the merge
./bb-merge.sh -w <workspace> -r <repo> [?-c (all|first)] <pr number>

# do the merge
./bb-merge.sh -w <workspace> -r <repo> [?-c (all|first)] -a merge <pr number>

Security

This code relies on a Bitbucket app password to be able to read from Bitbucket and perform the merge. When first running the script, you will be prompted to input your Bitbucket username and app password. These will be encrypted and stored with gpg in $PWD/.bb-creds.gpg. Your credentials are not sent anywhere other than to Bitbucket over https. Feel free to check the code, there's not that much of it.

Commit message after merging

This tool always uses the squash merge strategy. There are two ways that the commit message can be formatted, determined by the -c | --commit flag. They are mostly similar, with the difference being in the commit body.

Header

A properly formatted git commit has the following format:

header

body

The header will always be the Pull Request title, as set in the Bitbucket pull request UI, followed by (PR #<pr number>)

Example:

Fix race condition in db write (PR #99)

Body

The body changes depending on if all or first is configured for the -c flag. The default is all.

Body: all

When the flag is set to all, the commit will have the following appearance:

<header>

* <commit 1>

* <commit 2>

<approvals>

Example:

Fix bugs in x and y (PR #101)

* Fix bug in x

Bug in x was very confusing. Here is a long description about what the
root cause is and how the code change fixes the bug.

* Fix bug in y

Bug in y was very confusing. Here is a long description about what the
root cause is and how the code change fixes the bug.

Approved by: Me
Approved by: You

Body: first

When the flag is set to first, the commit will have the following appearance:

<header>

<commit 1 body only>

<approvals>

Example:

Fix bug in x (PR #101)

Bug in x was very confusing. Here is a long description about what the
root cause is and how the code change fixes the bug.

Approved by: Me
Approved by: You

Note that the header for the commit is stripped out. This is done because the assumption is that I put more thought into the PR title in the bitbucket UI as opposed to the header of the commit message. The original commit header won't be the actual header after merging, so including the header of the first commit message is redundant and wasteful.

This option exists because often I will have a meaningful and useful first commit, but then as part of the review process, add commits after creating the PR such as:

* Improve naming of function
* Improve clarity of doc comment

These post-creation commits are useful to see during the review process, but are useless in the actual git history after merging to main. Using -c first, this code will only use the first, useful commit when merging to main.

My qualms

If you're curious, below are more of my specific qualms about the default Bitbucket squash merge message.

  • The truncation described above is particularly grievous
  • The default header prefix Merged in <branch> wastes characters and relies on the branch name being useful. Even if your branch name is useful, it's ugly since you can't use whitespace in the branch name.
  • The default header suffix (pull request #X) also wastes characters when it could be shortened without losing any meaning. The PR #X text correctly hyperlinks in the Bitbucket UI at the time of writing, so there's no reason not to use PR instead of pull request.
  • Redundant header when the PR is only one commit (see body: first)

About

CLI tool for merging Bitbucket pull requests with my desired formatting.

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