Imagine that you cloned an open source project to contribute something. You implemented a bugfix through a series of atomic commits on a private branch. Just when you’re about to create a Pull Request to submit your changes, you discover in the contributor’s guide that you’re supposed to prefix each commit with the bug tracking number.
Rewriting the commit message of the last commit is easy:
git commit --amend
Rewriting a range of commits is easy too, once you know how. That’s a job for the filter-branch
command, like this:
git filter-branch --msg-filter 'printf "THE_PREFIX " && cat' sha1..HEAD
The --msg-filter
flag is to rewrite the commit messages. The argument within the single quotes is the shell commands to execute to manipulate the message, received from stdin
. In this example we use the printf
command to print the prefix and a space character, and then the cat
command to print the rest of the commit message. (Note that printf
is like the less portable echo -n
.)
The last argument is the range of commits. This is sweet and perfect in this use case of working on a feature branch that started from a commit.