143 lines
4.6 KiB
Markdown
143 lines
4.6 KiB
Markdown
# git-check-assertions
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I recently wrote two blog posts arguing that there might be some value in writing verifiable claims, i.e. assertions, inside of our commit messages:
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* [Should we start writing verifiable claims in commit messages?](https://sven.memcmp.org/2026-02-19-should-we-start-writing-verifiable-claims-in-commit-messages/)
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* [Writing the steps to validate a test that already passes in the commit message](https://sven.memcmp.org/2026-02-20-writing-the-steps-to-validate-a-test-that-already-passes-in-the-commit-message/)
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This is a simple verifier for such assertions.
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You write assertions in your commit messages, and `git-check-assertions` will then check out every commit (from the point that your branch diverged from `main`), and verify that the assertions in the commit message hold for the version of the code that is in the commit.
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For a real-world example, check out the commits in [this pull request](https://codeberg.org/svenvanheugten/git-check-assertions/pulls/8), where `git-check-assertions` is used on itself.
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⚠️ Only run this on repositories and branches that you trust, since the commands in the commit messages can do whatever they want.
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## Installation
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On most systems, clone this repository and add the `bin` directory to your `PATH`.
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If you use Nix with flakes, you can simply add it to your program's devshell instead:
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<details>
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<summary>Instructions for using the flake</summary>
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```diff
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@@ -2,12 +2,18 @@
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inputs = {
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nixpkgs.url = "github:nixos/nixpkgs/nixpkgs-unstable";
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flake-utils.url = "github:numtide/flake-utils";
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+ git-check-assertions = {
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+ url = "git+https://codeberg.org/svenvanheugten/git-check-assertions.git?ref=main";
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+ inputs.nixpkgs.follows = "nixpkgs";
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+ inputs.flake-utils.follows = "flake-utils";
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+ };
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};
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outputs =
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{
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self,
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nixpkgs,
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flake-utils,
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+ git-check-assertions,
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}:
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flake-utils.lib.eachDefaultSystem (
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system:
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@@ -17,7 +23,7 @@
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{
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packages.default = pkgs.callPackage ./default.nix { };
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devShells.default = pkgs.mkShell {
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- packages = [ ];
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+ packages = [ git-check-assertions.packages.${system}.default ];
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};
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}
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)
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```
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</details>
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## What do you put in your commit messages?
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Simply add a `git-check-assertions` block to a commit message, e.g.:
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~~~
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```git-check-assertions
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✓ dotnet build
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✓ dotnet test --no-build
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```
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~~~
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Each block is parsed line-by-line:
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* A line starting with `[success] ` or `✓ ` runs the rest of the line as a shell command and asserts that it exits with status `0`.
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* A line starting with `[failure] ` or `✗ ` runs the rest of the line as a shell command and asserts that it exits with a non-zero status.
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* Any following non-empty line belongs to the most recent command and asserts that the combined stdout/stderr from that command contains that string.
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Blank lines are ignored. A new `[success]`, `[failure]`, `✓`, or `✗` line starts a new command block.
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## Multiple blocks in one commit message
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You can include multiple `git-check-assertions` blocks in a single commit message. When you do, each individual block will run with a 'fresh' version of the commit, in which all changes that you made in the previous block have been undone.
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## Cache of successful commits
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After a commit's assertions run successfully, `git-check-assertions` appends the commit hash to `.git-check-assertions-cache` in the repo root. On the next run, any commit listed there is skipped.
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Be sure to add `.git-check-assertions-cache` to your `.gitignore`.
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## Examples of commit messages
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Assert that a commit builds:
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~~~
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```git-check-assertions
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✓ dotnet build
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```
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~~~
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Assert that a commit builds and that the tests succeed:
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~~~
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```git-check-assertions
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✓ dotnet build
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✓ dotnet test --no-build
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```
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~~~
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Assert that a commit builds, but that the tests do not succeed:
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~~~
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```git-check-assertions
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✓ dotnet build
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✗ dotnet test --no-build
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```
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~~~
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Assert that a commit builds, and that the tests fail with the error that you expect:
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~~~
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```git-check-assertions
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✓ dotnet build
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✗ dotnet test --no-build
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Invalid URL
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```
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~~~
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Assert that a specific change breaks the tests (as discussed [here](https://sven.memcmp.org/2026-02-20-writing-the-steps-to-validate-a-test-that-already-passes-in-the-commit-message/)):
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~~~
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```git-check-assertions
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✓ dotnet test
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✓ sed -i '/crucial code/d' Main.fs
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✗ dotnet test
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```
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~~~
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Assert that a specific change in a commit is necessary for the tests to succeed:
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~~~
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```git-check-assertions
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✓ dotnet test
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✓ git checkout HEAD~ Main.fs
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✗ dotnet test
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Invalid URL
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```
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~~~
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