diff mbox series

[v8,37/37] docs: unify githooks and git-hook manpages

Message ID 20210311021037.3001235-38-emilyshaffer@google.com (mailing list archive)
State New, archived
Headers show
Series config-based hooks | expand

Commit Message

Emily Shaffer March 11, 2021, 2:10 a.m. UTC
By showing the list of all hooks in 'git help hook' for users to refer
to, 'git help hook' becomes a one-stop shop for hook authorship. Since
some may still have muscle memory for 'git help githooks', though,
reference the 'git hook' commands and otherwise don't remove content.

Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com>
---
 Documentation/git-hook.txt     |  11 +
 Documentation/githooks.txt     | 716 +--------------------------------
 Documentation/native-hooks.txt | 708 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 3 files changed, 724 insertions(+), 711 deletions(-)
 create mode 100644 Documentation/native-hooks.txt

Comments

Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason March 12, 2021, 9:29 a.m. UTC | #1
On Thu, Mar 11 2021, Emily Shaffer wrote:

> By showing the list of all hooks in 'git help hook' for users to refer
> to, 'git help hook' becomes a one-stop shop for hook authorship. Since
> some may still have muscle memory for 'git help githooks', though,
> reference the 'git hook' commands and otherwise don't remove content.

I think this should at least have something like what my b6a8d09f6d8 (gc
docs: include the "gc.*" section from "config" in "gc", 2019-04-07) has
on top, i.e.:
    
    diff --git a/Documentation/git-hook.txt b/Documentation/git-hook.txt
    index 4ad31ac360a..5c9af30b43e 100644
    --- a/Documentation/git-hook.txt
    +++ b/Documentation/git-hook.txt
    @@ -150,10 +150,18 @@ message body and cannot be parallelized.
     
     CONFIGURATION
     -------------
    +
    +The below documentation is the same as what's found in
    +linkgit:git-config[1]:
    +
     include::config/hook.txt[]
     
     HOOKS
     -----
    +
    +The below documentation is the same as what's found in
    +linkgit:githooks[5]:
    +
     include::native-hooks.txt[]
     
     GIT

But I also don't think we should demote githooks(5) as the canonical doc
page for the hooks themselves.

If you run this in your terminal:

    man 5 git<TAB>

You'll get:

    gitattributes         gitignore             gitmailmap            gitrepository-layout  
    githooks              git-lfs-config        gitmodules            gitweb.conf 

(Well, maybe not the lfs-part, but whatever...).

We should move more in the direction of splitting up our "file format"
docs from implementation, like the git-hook runner.

I'm somewhat negative on including it at all in git-hook(1). For the
config section it makes sense, and it's consistent with established doc
convention.

But including githooks(5) is around 2/3 of the resulting manpage, I
think just a link is better.
Emily Shaffer March 30, 2021, 12:10 a.m. UTC | #2
On Fri, Mar 12, 2021 at 10:29:52AM +0100, Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason wrote:
> 
> 
> On Thu, Mar 11 2021, Emily Shaffer wrote:
> 
> > By showing the list of all hooks in 'git help hook' for users to refer
> > to, 'git help hook' becomes a one-stop shop for hook authorship. Since
> > some may still have muscle memory for 'git help githooks', though,
> > reference the 'git hook' commands and otherwise don't remove content.
> 
> I think this should at least have something like what my b6a8d09f6d8 (gc
> docs: include the "gc.*" section from "config" in "gc", 2019-04-07) has
> on top, i.e.:

Yeah, this seems reasonable.

>     
>     diff --git a/Documentation/git-hook.txt b/Documentation/git-hook.txt
>     index 4ad31ac360a..5c9af30b43e 100644
>     --- a/Documentation/git-hook.txt
>     +++ b/Documentation/git-hook.txt
>     @@ -150,10 +150,18 @@ message body and cannot be parallelized.
>      
>      CONFIGURATION
>      -------------
>     +
>     +The below documentation is the same as what's found in
>     +linkgit:git-config[1]:
>     +
>      include::config/hook.txt[]
>      
>      HOOKS
>      -----
>     +
>     +The below documentation is the same as what's found in
>     +linkgit:githooks[5]:
>     +
>      include::native-hooks.txt[]
>      
>      GIT
> 
> But I also don't think we should demote githooks(5) as the canonical doc
> page for the hooks themselves.
> 
> If you run this in your terminal:
> 
>     man 5 git<TAB>
> 
> You'll get:
> 
>     gitattributes         gitignore             gitmailmap            gitrepository-layout  
>     githooks              git-lfs-config        gitmodules            gitweb.conf 
> 
> (Well, maybe not the lfs-part, but whatever...).
> 
> We should move more in the direction of splitting up our "file format"
> docs from implementation, like the git-hook runner.
> 
> I'm somewhat negative on including it at all in git-hook(1). For the
> config section it makes sense, and it's consistent with established doc
> convention.
> 
> But including githooks(5) is around 2/3 of the resulting manpage, I
> think just a link is better.

Maybe so. What I really would like would be if `git help githooks` //
`man githooks` opened `git-hook` manpage, but I had trouble getting it to do
that and still publish to the `githooks` manpage (because the command
doc format doesn't match the guide format). (Or, really, if `git help
githooks` didn't exist so we didn't need to split the docs up. But that
ship has sailed.)

Regardless, I won't complain that much about using a link instead. I'll
make this change for v9.

 - Emily
Junio C Hamano April 7, 2021, 2:36 a.m. UTC | #3
Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> writes:

> By showing the list of all hooks in 'git help hook' for users to refer
> to, 'git help hook' becomes a one-stop shop for hook authorship. Since
> some may still have muscle memory for 'git help githooks', though,
> reference the 'git hook' commands and otherwise don't remove content.
>
> Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com>
> ---
>  Documentation/git-hook.txt     |  11 +
>  Documentation/githooks.txt     | 716 +--------------------------------
>  Documentation/native-hooks.txt | 708 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>  3 files changed, 724 insertions(+), 711 deletions(-)
>  create mode 100644 Documentation/native-hooks.txt

While this would be a very good move when this were the only topic
juggling the hook related documentation, in the real world, it
creates rather nasty "ouch, the original hooks document was updated,
and we need to carry these changes over to the new native-hooks
file" conflicts with multiple commits on different topics.

$ git log --oneline --no-merges es/config-hooks..seen Documentation/githooks.txt
2d4e48b8ee fsmonitor--daemon: man page and documentation
23c781f173 githooks.txt: clarify documentation on reference-transaction hook
5f308a89d8 githooks.txt: replace mentions of SHA-1 specific properties
7efc378205 doc: fix some typos

$ git log --oneline --no-merges ^master es/config-hooks..seen Documentation/githooks.txt
2d4e48b8ee fsmonitor--daemon: man page and documentation

As three of the four changes are already in master, it probably is a
good idea to rebase this topic (and redo this step) to update the
native-hooks.txt

I am not sure offhand how ready fsmonitor--daemon stuff is, but if
it takes longer to stabilize than this topic, it might make sense to
hold off the changes to githooks.txt in that topic, until this topic
stabilizes enough to hit at least 'next', preferrably 'master', and
then base that topic (or at least the documentation part of it) on
the final shape of the native-hooks.txt.

Or better ideas?

Thanks.
Jeff Hostetler April 8, 2021, 8:20 p.m. UTC | #4
On 4/6/21 10:36 PM, Junio C Hamano wrote:
> Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> writes:
> 
>> By showing the list of all hooks in 'git help hook' for users to refer
>> to, 'git help hook' becomes a one-stop shop for hook authorship. Since
>> some may still have muscle memory for 'git help githooks', though,
>> reference the 'git hook' commands and otherwise don't remove content.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com>
>> ---
>>   Documentation/git-hook.txt     |  11 +
>>   Documentation/githooks.txt     | 716 +--------------------------------
>>   Documentation/native-hooks.txt | 708 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>>   3 files changed, 724 insertions(+), 711 deletions(-)
>>   create mode 100644 Documentation/native-hooks.txt
> 
> While this would be a very good move when this were the only topic
> juggling the hook related documentation, in the real world, it
> creates rather nasty "ouch, the original hooks document was updated,
> and we need to carry these changes over to the new native-hooks
> file" conflicts with multiple commits on different topics.
> 
> $ git log --oneline --no-merges es/config-hooks..seen Documentation/githooks.txt
> 2d4e48b8ee fsmonitor--daemon: man page and documentation
> 23c781f173 githooks.txt: clarify documentation on reference-transaction hook
> 5f308a89d8 githooks.txt: replace mentions of SHA-1 specific properties
> 7efc378205 doc: fix some typos
> 
> $ git log --oneline --no-merges ^master es/config-hooks..seen Documentation/githooks.txt
> 2d4e48b8ee fsmonitor--daemon: man page and documentation
> 
> As three of the four changes are already in master, it probably is a
> good idea to rebase this topic (and redo this step) to update the
> native-hooks.txt
> 
> I am not sure offhand how ready fsmonitor--daemon stuff is, but if
> it takes longer to stabilize than this topic, it might make sense to
> hold off the changes to githooks.txt in that topic, until this topic
> stabilizes enough to hit at least 'next', preferrably 'master', and
> then base that topic (or at least the documentation part of it) on
> the final shape of the native-hooks.txt.
> 
> Or better ideas?
> 
> Thanks.
> 

I expect the fsmonitor stuff to take a while.  It is rather large
and complicated.  My changes in the Documentation are rather minor.
And I wouldn't want to be the sole reason to hold up Emily's changes.

If it would be helpful, you can add a "revert" commit on top of my
branch for my documentation commit -or- just drop it completely from
my series.  Then I can re-adjust/rebase my doc changes before
I send a V2.

Jeff
Junio C Hamano April 8, 2021, 9:17 p.m. UTC | #5
Jeff Hostetler <git@jeffhostetler.com> writes:

> I expect the fsmonitor stuff to take a while.  It is rather large
> and complicated.  My changes in the Documentation are rather minor.
> And I wouldn't want to be the sole reason to hold up Emily's changes.
>
> If it would be helpful, you can add a "revert" commit on top of my
> branch for my documentation commit -or- just drop it completely from
> my series.  Then I can re-adjust/rebase my doc changes before
> I send a V2.

Sounds like a plan.  I'll drop that step for now before the next
integration cycle.

There is another topic that interacts with es/config-hooks topic
badly (which I haven't resolved) in flight, though.

Thanks.
Emily Shaffer April 8, 2021, 11:46 p.m. UTC | #6
On Tue, Apr 06, 2021 at 07:36:15PM -0700, Junio C Hamano wrote:
> 
> Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> writes:
> 
> > By showing the list of all hooks in 'git help hook' for users to refer
> > to, 'git help hook' becomes a one-stop shop for hook authorship. Since
> > some may still have muscle memory for 'git help githooks', though,
> > reference the 'git hook' commands and otherwise don't remove content.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com>
> > ---
> >  Documentation/git-hook.txt     |  11 +
> >  Documentation/githooks.txt     | 716 +--------------------------------
> >  Documentation/native-hooks.txt | 708 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> >  3 files changed, 724 insertions(+), 711 deletions(-)
> >  create mode 100644 Documentation/native-hooks.txt
> 
> While this would be a very good move when this were the only topic
> juggling the hook related documentation, in the real world, it
> creates rather nasty "ouch, the original hooks document was updated,
> and we need to carry these changes over to the new native-hooks
> file" conflicts with multiple commits on different topics.
> 
> $ git log --oneline --no-merges es/config-hooks..seen Documentation/githooks.txt
> 2d4e48b8ee fsmonitor--daemon: man page and documentation
> 23c781f173 githooks.txt: clarify documentation on reference-transaction hook
> 5f308a89d8 githooks.txt: replace mentions of SHA-1 specific properties
> 7efc378205 doc: fix some typos
> 
> $ git log --oneline --no-merges ^master es/config-hooks..seen Documentation/githooks.txt
> 2d4e48b8ee fsmonitor--daemon: man page and documentation
> 
> As three of the four changes are already in master, it probably is a
> good idea to rebase this topic (and redo this step) to update the
> native-hooks.txt
> 
> I am not sure offhand how ready fsmonitor--daemon stuff is, but if
> it takes longer to stabilize than this topic, it might make sense to
> hold off the changes to githooks.txt in that topic, until this topic
> stabilizes enough to hit at least 'next', preferrably 'master', and
> then base that topic (or at least the documentation part of it) on
> the final shape of the native-hooks.txt.
> 
> Or better ideas?
> 
> Thanks.

I got bitten by this same issue with native-hooks.txt while addressing
comments, too. Another commenter suggested to not inline those hook
definitions into "git help hook" - so I plan to drop that part of this
patch. If it makes it easier for you, I think you could revert this last
commit; if we decide later that we want to have "git help hook" share
the hook definitions after all, I think we should do that separately and
as a quick change not stuck behind 36 other complicated patches.

 - Emily
Junio C Hamano April 9, 2021, 12:03 a.m. UTC | #7
Emily Shaffer <emilyshaffer@google.com> writes:

> I got bitten by this same issue with native-hooks.txt while addressing
> comments, too. Another commenter suggested to not inline those hook
> definitions into "git help hook" - so I plan to drop that part of this
> patch. If it makes it easier for you, I think you could revert this last
> commit; if we decide later that we want to have "git help hook" share
> the hook definitions after all, I think we should do that separately and
> as a quick change not stuck behind 36 other complicated patches.

I've already discarded the step, and then I had to eject the whole
topic from 'seen' for now (see my other message to you earlier
today).  The "other complicated patches" need to be whipped into
shape to be at least in 'next' first; I do not know how close the
last round is from that state.

Thanks.
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/Documentation/git-hook.txt b/Documentation/git-hook.txt
index 81b8e94994..4ad31ac360 100644
--- a/Documentation/git-hook.txt
+++ b/Documentation/git-hook.txt
@@ -17,6 +17,13 @@  DESCRIPTION
 You can list and run configured hooks with this command. Later, you will be able
 to add and modify hooks with this command.
 
+In general, when instructions suggest adding a script to
+`.git/hooks/<something>`, you can specify it in the config instead by running
+`git config --add hook.<something>.command <path-to-script>` - this way you can
+share the script between multiple repos. That is, `cp ~/my-script.sh
+~/project/.git/hooks/pre-commit` would become `git config --add
+hook.pre-commit.command ~/my-script.sh`.
+
 This command parses the default configuration files for sections `hook` and
 `hookcmd`. `hook` is used to describe the commands which will be run during a
 particular hook event; commands are run in the order Git encounters them during
@@ -145,6 +152,10 @@  CONFIGURATION
 -------------
 include::config/hook.txt[]
 
+HOOKS
+-----
+include::native-hooks.txt[]
+
 GIT
 ---
 Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite
diff --git a/Documentation/githooks.txt b/Documentation/githooks.txt
index b63054b947..9a25dfdc3f 100644
--- a/Documentation/githooks.txt
+++ b/Documentation/githooks.txt
@@ -7,15 +7,16 @@  githooks - Hooks used by Git
 
 SYNOPSIS
 --------
+'git hook'
 $GIT_DIR/hooks/* (or \`git config core.hooksPath`/*)
 
 
 DESCRIPTION
 -----------
 
-Hooks are programs you can place in a hooks directory to trigger
-actions at certain points in git's execution. Hooks that don't have
-the executable bit set are ignored.
+Hooks are programs you can specify in your config (see linkgit:git-hook[1]) or
+place in a hooks directory to trigger actions at certain points in git's
+execution. Hooks that don't have the executable bit set are ignored.
 
 By default the hooks directory is `$GIT_DIR/hooks`, but that can be
 changed via the `core.hooksPath` configuration variable (see
@@ -41,714 +42,7 @@  The currently supported hooks are described below.
 
 HOOKS
 -----
-
-applypatch-msg
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-am[1].  It takes a single
-parameter, the name of the file that holds the proposed commit
-log message.  Exiting with a non-zero status causes `git am` to abort
-before applying the patch.
-
-The hook is allowed to edit the message file in place, and can
-be used to normalize the message into some project standard
-format. It can also be used to refuse the commit after inspecting
-the message file.
-
-The default 'applypatch-msg' hook, when enabled, runs the
-'commit-msg' hook, if the latter is enabled.
-
-Hooks run during 'applypatch-msg' will not be parallelized, because hooks are
-expected to edit the file holding the commit log message.
-
-pre-applypatch
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-am[1].  It takes no parameter, and is
-invoked after the patch is applied, but before a commit is made.
-
-If it exits with non-zero status, then the working tree will not be
-committed after applying the patch.
-
-It can be used to inspect the current working tree and refuse to
-make a commit if it does not pass certain test.
-
-The default 'pre-applypatch' hook, when enabled, runs the
-'pre-commit' hook, if the latter is enabled.
-
-Hooks run during 'pre-applypatch' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
-configured to 1.
-
-post-applypatch
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-am[1].  It takes no parameter,
-and is invoked after the patch is applied and a commit is made.
-
-This hook is meant primarily for notification, and cannot affect
-the outcome of `git am`.
-
-Hooks run during 'post-applypatch' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
-configured to 1.
-
-pre-commit
-~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-commit[1], and can be bypassed
-with the `--no-verify` option.  It takes no parameters, and is
-invoked before obtaining the proposed commit log message and
-making a commit.  Exiting with a non-zero status from this script
-causes the `git commit` command to abort before creating a commit.
-
-The default 'pre-commit' hook, when enabled, catches introduction
-of lines with trailing whitespaces and aborts the commit when
-such a line is found.
-
-All the `git commit` hooks are invoked with the environment
-variable `GIT_EDITOR=:` if the command will not bring up an editor
-to modify the commit message.
-
-The default 'pre-commit' hook, when enabled--and with the
-`hooks.allownonascii` config option unset or set to false--prevents
-the use of non-ASCII filenames.
-
-Hooks executed during 'pre-commit' will not be parallelized.
-
-pre-merge-commit
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-merge[1], and can be bypassed
-with the `--no-verify` option.  It takes no parameters, and is
-invoked after the merge has been carried out successfully and before
-obtaining the proposed commit log message to
-make a commit.  Exiting with a non-zero status from this script
-causes the `git merge` command to abort before creating a commit.
-
-The default 'pre-merge-commit' hook, when enabled, runs the
-'pre-commit' hook, if the latter is enabled.
-
-This hook is invoked with the environment variable
-`GIT_EDITOR=:` if the command will not bring up an editor
-to modify the commit message.
-
-If the merge cannot be carried out automatically, the conflicts
-need to be resolved and the result committed separately (see
-linkgit:git-merge[1]). At that point, this hook will not be executed,
-but the 'pre-commit' hook will, if it is enabled.
-
-Hooks executed during 'pre-merge-commit' will not be parallelized.
-
-prepare-commit-msg
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-commit[1] right after preparing the
-default log message, and before the editor is started.
-
-It takes one to three parameters.  The first is the name of the file
-that contains the commit log message.  The second is the source of the commit
-message, and can be: `message` (if a `-m` or `-F` option was
-given); `template` (if a `-t` option was given or the
-configuration option `commit.template` is set); `merge` (if the
-commit is a merge or a `.git/MERGE_MSG` file exists); `squash`
-(if a `.git/SQUASH_MSG` file exists); or `commit`, followed by
-a commit SHA-1 (if a `-c`, `-C` or `--amend` option was given).
-
-If the exit status is non-zero, `git commit` will abort.
-
-The purpose of the hook is to edit the message file in place, and
-it is not suppressed by the `--no-verify` option.  A non-zero exit
-means a failure of the hook and aborts the commit.  It should not
-be used as replacement for pre-commit hook.
-
-The sample `prepare-commit-msg` hook that comes with Git removes the
-help message found in the commented portion of the commit template.
-
-Hooks executed during 'prepare-commit-msg' will not be parallelized, because
-hooks are expected to edit the file containing the commit log message.
-
-commit-msg
-~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-commit[1] and linkgit:git-merge[1], and can be
-bypassed with the `--no-verify` option.  It takes a single parameter,
-the name of the file that holds the proposed commit log message.
-Exiting with a non-zero status causes the command to abort.
-
-The hook is allowed to edit the message file in place, and can be used
-to normalize the message into some project standard format. It
-can also be used to refuse the commit after inspecting the message
-file.
-
-The default 'commit-msg' hook, when enabled, detects duplicate
-`Signed-off-by` trailers, and aborts the commit if one is found.
-
-Hooks executed during 'commit-msg' will not be parallelized, because hooks are
-expected to edit the file containing the proposed commit log message.
-
-post-commit
-~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-commit[1]. It takes no parameters, and is
-invoked after a commit is made.
-
-This hook is meant primarily for notification, and cannot affect
-the outcome of `git commit`.
-
-Hooks executed during 'post-commit' will run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
-configured to 1.
-
-pre-rebase
-~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is called by linkgit:git-rebase[1] and can be used to prevent a
-branch from getting rebased.  The hook may be called with one or
-two parameters.  The first parameter is the upstream from which
-the series was forked.  The second parameter is the branch being
-rebased, and is not set when rebasing the current branch.
-
-Hooks executed during 'pre-rebase' will run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
-configured to 1.
-
-post-checkout
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked when a linkgit:git-checkout[1] or
-linkgit:git-switch[1] is run after having updated the
-worktree.  The hook is given three parameters: the ref of the previous HEAD,
-the ref of the new HEAD (which may or may not have changed), and a flag
-indicating whether the checkout was a branch checkout (changing branches,
-flag=1) or a file checkout (retrieving a file from the index, flag=0).
-This hook cannot affect the outcome of `git switch` or `git checkout`,
-other than that the hook's exit status becomes the exit status of
-these two commands.
-
-It is also run after linkgit:git-clone[1], unless the `--no-checkout` (`-n`) option is
-used. The first parameter given to the hook is the null-ref, the second the
-ref of the new HEAD and the flag is always 1. Likewise for `git worktree add`
-unless `--no-checkout` is used.
-
-This hook can be used to perform repository validity checks, auto-display
-differences from the previous HEAD if different, or set working dir metadata
-properties.
-
-Hooks executed during 'post-checkout' will not be parallelized.
-
-post-merge
-~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-merge[1], which happens when a `git pull`
-is done on a local repository.  The hook takes a single parameter, a status
-flag specifying whether or not the merge being done was a squash merge.
-This hook cannot affect the outcome of `git merge` and is not executed,
-if the merge failed due to conflicts.
-
-This hook can be used in conjunction with a corresponding pre-commit hook to
-save and restore any form of metadata associated with the working tree
-(e.g.: permissions/ownership, ACLS, etc).  See contrib/hooks/setgitperms.perl
-for an example of how to do this.
-
-Hooks executed during 'post-merge' will run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
-configured to 1.
-
-pre-push
-~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is called by linkgit:git-push[1] and can be used to prevent
-a push from taking place.  The hook is called with two parameters
-which provide the name and location of the destination remote, if a
-named remote is not being used both values will be the same.
-
-Information about what is to be pushed is provided on the hook's standard
-input with lines of the form:
-
-  <local ref> SP <local sha1> SP <remote ref> SP <remote sha1> LF
-
-For instance, if the command +git push origin master:foreign+ were run the
-hook would receive a line like the following:
-
-  refs/heads/master 67890 refs/heads/foreign 12345
-
-although the full, 40-character SHA-1s would be supplied.  If the foreign ref
-does not yet exist the `<remote SHA-1>` will be 40 `0`.  If a ref is to be
-deleted, the `<local ref>` will be supplied as `(delete)` and the `<local
-SHA-1>` will be 40 `0`.  If the local commit was specified by something other
-than a name which could be expanded (such as `HEAD~`, or a SHA-1) it will be
-supplied as it was originally given.
-
-If this hook exits with a non-zero status, `git push` will abort without
-pushing anything.  Information about why the push is rejected may be sent
-to the user by writing to standard error.
-
-Hooks executed during 'pre-push' will run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
-configured to 1.
-
-[[pre-receive]]
-pre-receive
-~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] when it reacts to
-`git push` and updates reference(s) in its repository.
-Just before starting to update refs on the remote repository, the
-pre-receive hook is invoked.  Its exit status determines the success
-or failure of the update.
-
-This hook executes once for the receive operation. It takes no
-arguments, but for each ref to be updated it receives on standard
-input a line of the format:
-
-  <old-value> SP <new-value> SP <ref-name> LF
-
-where `<old-value>` is the old object name stored in the ref,
-`<new-value>` is the new object name to be stored in the ref and
-`<ref-name>` is the full name of the ref.
-When creating a new ref, `<old-value>` is 40 `0`.
-
-If the hook exits with non-zero status, none of the refs will be
-updated. If the hook exits with zero, updating of individual refs can
-still be prevented by the <<update,'update'>> hook.
-
-Both standard output and standard error output are forwarded to
-`git send-pack` on the other end, so you can simply `echo` messages
-for the user.
-
-The number of push options given on the command line of
-`git push --push-option=...` can be read from the environment
-variable `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT`, and the options themselves are
-found in `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_0`, `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_1`,...
-If it is negotiated to not use the push options phase, the
-environment variables will not be set. If the client selects
-to use push options, but doesn't transmit any, the count variable
-will be set to zero, `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT=0`.
-
-See the section on "Quarantine Environment" in
-linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] for some caveats.
-
-Hooks executed during 'pre-receive' will not be parallelized.
-
-[[update]]
-update
-~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] when it reacts to
-`git push` and updates reference(s) in its repository.
-Just before updating the ref on the remote repository, the update hook
-is invoked.  Its exit status determines the success or failure of
-the ref update.
-
-The hook executes once for each ref to be updated, and takes
-three parameters:
-
- - the name of the ref being updated,
- - the old object name stored in the ref,
- - and the new object name to be stored in the ref.
-
-A zero exit from the update hook allows the ref to be updated.
-Exiting with a non-zero status prevents `git receive-pack`
-from updating that ref.
-
-This hook can be used to prevent 'forced' update on certain refs by
-making sure that the object name is a commit object that is a
-descendant of the commit object named by the old object name.
-That is, to enforce a "fast-forward only" policy.
-
-It could also be used to log the old..new status.  However, it
-does not know the entire set of branches, so it would end up
-firing one e-mail per ref when used naively, though.  The
-<<post-receive,'post-receive'>> hook is more suited to that.
-
-In an environment that restricts the users' access only to git
-commands over the wire, this hook can be used to implement access
-control without relying on filesystem ownership and group
-membership. See linkgit:git-shell[1] for how you might use the login
-shell to restrict the user's access to only git commands.
-
-Both standard output and standard error output are forwarded to
-`git send-pack` on the other end, so you can simply `echo` messages
-for the user.
-
-The default 'update' hook, when enabled--and with
-`hooks.allowunannotated` config option unset or set to false--prevents
-unannotated tags to be pushed.
-
-Hooks executed during 'update' are run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
-configured to 1.
-
-[[proc-receive]]
-proc-receive
-~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1].  If the server has
-set the multi-valued config variable `receive.procReceiveRefs`, and the
-commands sent to 'receive-pack' have matching reference names, these
-commands will be executed by this hook, instead of by the internal
-`execute_commands()` function.  This hook is responsible for updating
-the relevant references and reporting the results back to 'receive-pack'.
-
-This hook executes once for the receive operation.  It takes no
-arguments, but uses a pkt-line format protocol to communicate with
-'receive-pack' to read commands, push-options and send results.  In the
-following example for the protocol, the letter 'S' stands for
-'receive-pack' and the letter 'H' stands for this hook.
-
-    # Version and features negotiation.
-    S: PKT-LINE(version=1\0push-options atomic...)
-    S: flush-pkt
-    H: PKT-LINE(version=1\0push-options...)
-    H: flush-pkt
-
-    # Send commands from server to the hook.
-    S: PKT-LINE(<old-oid> <new-oid> <ref>)
-    S: ... ...
-    S: flush-pkt
-    # Send push-options only if the 'push-options' feature is enabled.
-    S: PKT-LINE(push-option)
-    S: ... ...
-    S: flush-pkt
-
-    # Receive result from the hook.
-    # OK, run this command successfully.
-    H: PKT-LINE(ok <ref>)
-    # NO, I reject it.
-    H: PKT-LINE(ng <ref> <reason>)
-    # Fall through, let 'receive-pack' to execute it.
-    H: PKT-LINE(ok <ref>)
-    H: PKT-LINE(option fall-through)
-    # OK, but has an alternate reference.  The alternate reference name
-    # and other status can be given in option directives.
-    H: PKT-LINE(ok <ref>)
-    H: PKT-LINE(option refname <refname>)
-    H: PKT-LINE(option old-oid <old-oid>)
-    H: PKT-LINE(option new-oid <new-oid>)
-    H: PKT-LINE(option forced-update)
-    H: ... ...
-    H: flush-pkt
-
-Each command for the 'proc-receive' hook may point to a pseudo-reference
-and always has a zero-old as its old-oid, while the 'proc-receive' hook
-may update an alternate reference and the alternate reference may exist
-already with a non-zero old-oid.  For this case, this hook will use
-"option" directives to report extended attributes for the reference given
-by the leading "ok" directive.
-
-The report of the commands of this hook should have the same order as
-the input.  The exit status of the 'proc-receive' hook only determines
-the success or failure of the group of commands sent to it, unless
-atomic push is in use.
-
-It is forbidden to specify more than one hook for 'proc-receive'. If a
-globally-configured 'proc-receive' must be overridden, use
-'hookcmd.<global-hook>.skip = true' to ignore it.
-
-[[post-receive]]
-post-receive
-~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] when it reacts to
-`git push` and updates reference(s) in its repository.
-It executes on the remote repository once after all the refs have
-been updated.
-
-This hook executes once for the receive operation.  It takes no
-arguments, but gets the same information as the
-<<pre-receive,'pre-receive'>>
-hook does on its standard input.
-
-This hook does not affect the outcome of `git receive-pack`, as it
-is called after the real work is done.
-
-This supersedes the <<post-update,'post-update'>> hook in that it gets
-both old and new values of all the refs in addition to their
-names.
-
-Both standard output and standard error output are forwarded to
-`git send-pack` on the other end, so you can simply `echo` messages
-for the user.
-
-The default 'post-receive' hook is empty, but there is
-a sample script `post-receive-email` provided in the `contrib/hooks`
-directory in Git distribution, which implements sending commit
-emails.
-
-The number of push options given on the command line of
-`git push --push-option=...` can be read from the environment
-variable `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT`, and the options themselves are
-found in `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_0`, `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_1`,...
-If it is negotiated to not use the push options phase, the
-environment variables will not be set. If the client selects
-to use push options, but doesn't transmit any, the count variable
-will be set to zero, `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT=0`.
-
-Hooks executed during 'post-receive' are run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
-configured to 1.
-
-[[post-update]]
-post-update
-~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] when it reacts to
-`git push` and updates reference(s) in its repository.
-It executes on the remote repository once after all the refs have
-been updated.
-
-It takes a variable number of parameters, each of which is the
-name of ref that was actually updated.
-
-This hook is meant primarily for notification, and cannot affect
-the outcome of `git receive-pack`.
-
-The 'post-update' hook can tell what are the heads that were pushed,
-but it does not know what their original and updated values are,
-so it is a poor place to do log old..new. The
-<<post-receive,'post-receive'>> hook does get both original and
-updated values of the refs. You might consider it instead if you need
-them.
-
-When enabled, the default 'post-update' hook runs
-`git update-server-info` to keep the information used by dumb
-transports (e.g., HTTP) up to date.  If you are publishing
-a Git repository that is accessible via HTTP, you should
-probably enable this hook.
-
-Both standard output and standard error output are forwarded to
-`git send-pack` on the other end, so you can simply `echo` messages
-for the user.
-
-Hooks run during 'post-update' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
-configured to 1.
-
-reference-transaction
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by any Git command that performs reference
-updates. It executes whenever a reference transaction is prepared,
-committed or aborted and may thus get called multiple times.
-
-The hook takes exactly one argument, which is the current state the
-given reference transaction is in:
-
-    - "prepared": All reference updates have been queued to the
-      transaction and references were locked on disk.
-
-    - "committed": The reference transaction was committed and all
-      references now have their respective new value.
-
-    - "aborted": The reference transaction was aborted, no changes
-      were performed and the locks have been released.
-
-For each reference update that was added to the transaction, the hook
-receives on standard input a line of the format:
-
-  <old-value> SP <new-value> SP <ref-name> LF
-
-The exit status of the hook is ignored for any state except for the
-"prepared" state. In the "prepared" state, a non-zero exit status will
-cause the transaction to be aborted. The hook will not be called with
-"aborted" state in that case.
-
-Hooks run during 'reference-transaction' will be run in parallel, unless
-hook.jobs is configured to 1.
-
-push-to-checkout
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] when it reacts to
-`git push` and updates reference(s) in its repository, and when
-the push tries to update the branch that is currently checked out
-and the `receive.denyCurrentBranch` configuration variable is set to
-`updateInstead`.  Such a push by default is refused if the working
-tree and the index of the remote repository has any difference from
-the currently checked out commit; when both the working tree and the
-index match the current commit, they are updated to match the newly
-pushed tip of the branch.  This hook is to be used to override the
-default behaviour.
-
-The hook receives the commit with which the tip of the current
-branch is going to be updated.  It can exit with a non-zero status
-to refuse the push (when it does so, it must not modify the index or
-the working tree).  Or it can make any necessary changes to the
-working tree and to the index to bring them to the desired state
-when the tip of the current branch is updated to the new commit, and
-exit with a zero status.
-
-For example, the hook can simply run `git read-tree -u -m HEAD "$1"`
-in order to emulate `git fetch` that is run in the reverse direction
-with `git push`, as the two-tree form of `git read-tree -u -m` is
-essentially the same as `git switch` or `git checkout`
-that switches branches while
-keeping the local changes in the working tree that do not interfere
-with the difference between the branches.
-
-Hooks executed during 'push-to-checkout' will not be parallelized.
-
-pre-auto-gc
-~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by `git gc --auto` (see linkgit:git-gc[1]). It
-takes no parameter, and exiting with non-zero status from this script
-causes the `git gc --auto` to abort.
-
-Hooks run during 'pre-auto-gc' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
-configured to 1.
-
-post-rewrite
-~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by commands that rewrite commits
-(linkgit:git-commit[1] when called with `--amend` and
-linkgit:git-rebase[1]; however, full-history (re)writing tools like
-linkgit:git-fast-import[1] or
-https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo[git-filter-repo] typically
-do not call it!).  Its first argument denotes the command it was
-invoked by: currently one of `amend` or `rebase`.  Further
-command-dependent arguments may be passed in the future.
-
-The hook receives a list of the rewritten commits on stdin, in the
-format
-
-  <old-sha1> SP <new-sha1> [ SP <extra-info> ] LF
-
-The 'extra-info' is again command-dependent.  If it is empty, the
-preceding SP is also omitted.  Currently, no commands pass any
-'extra-info'.
-
-The hook always runs after the automatic note copying (see
-"notes.rewrite.<command>" in linkgit:git-config[1]) has happened, and
-thus has access to these notes.
-
-Hooks run during 'post-rewrite' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
-configured to 1.
-
-The following command-specific comments apply:
-
-rebase::
-	For the 'squash' and 'fixup' operation, all commits that were
-	squashed are listed as being rewritten to the squashed commit.
-	This means that there will be several lines sharing the same
-	'new-sha1'.
-+
-The commits are guaranteed to be listed in the order that they were
-processed by rebase.
-
-sendemail-validate
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-send-email[1].  It takes a single parameter,
-the name of the file that holds the e-mail to be sent.  Exiting with a
-non-zero status causes `git send-email` to abort before sending any
-e-mails.
-
-fsmonitor-watchman
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked when the configuration option `core.fsmonitor` is
-set to `.git/hooks/fsmonitor-watchman` or `.git/hooks/fsmonitor-watchmanv2`
-depending on the version of the hook to use.
-
-Version 1 takes two arguments, a version (1) and the time in elapsed
-nanoseconds since midnight, January 1, 1970.
-
-Version 2 takes two arguments, a version (2) and a token that is used
-for identifying changes since the token. For watchman this would be
-a clock id. This version must output to stdout the new token followed
-by a NUL before the list of files.
-
-The hook should output to stdout the list of all files in the working
-directory that may have changed since the requested time.  The logic
-should be inclusive so that it does not miss any potential changes.
-The paths should be relative to the root of the working directory
-and be separated by a single NUL.
-
-It is OK to include files which have not actually changed.  All changes
-including newly-created and deleted files should be included. When
-files are renamed, both the old and the new name should be included.
-
-Git will limit what files it checks for changes as well as which
-directories are checked for untracked files based on the path names
-given.
-
-An optimized way to tell git "all files have changed" is to return
-the filename `/`.
-
-The exit status determines whether git will use the data from the
-hook to limit its search.  On error, it will fall back to verifying
-all files and folders.
-
-p4-changelist
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by `git-p4 submit`.
-
-The `p4-changelist` hook is executed after the changelist
-message has been edited by the user. It can be bypassed with the
-`--no-verify` option. It takes a single parameter, the name
-of the file that holds the proposed changelist text. Exiting
-with a non-zero status causes the command to abort.
-
-The hook is allowed to edit the changelist file and can be used
-to normalize the text into some project standard format. It can
-also be used to refuse the Submit after inspect the message file.
-
-Run `git-p4 submit --help` for details.
-
-p4-prepare-changelist
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by `git-p4 submit`.
-
-The `p4-prepare-changelist` hook is executed right after preparing
-the default changelist message and before the editor is started.
-It takes one parameter, the name of the file that contains the
-changelist text. Exiting with a non-zero status from the script
-will abort the process.
-
-The purpose of the hook is to edit the message file in place,
-and it is not suppressed by the `--no-verify` option. This hook
-is called even if `--prepare-p4-only` is set.
-
-Run `git-p4 submit --help` for details.
-
-p4-post-changelist
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by `git-p4 submit`.
-
-The `p4-post-changelist` hook is invoked after the submit has
-successfully occurred in P4. It takes no parameters and is meant
-primarily for notification and cannot affect the outcome of the
-git p4 submit action.
-
-Run `git-p4 submit --help` for details.
-
-p4-pre-submit
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked by `git-p4 submit`. It takes no parameters and nothing
-from standard input. Exiting with non-zero status from this script prevent
-`git-p4 submit` from launching. It can be bypassed with the `--no-verify`
-command line option. Run `git-p4 submit --help` for details.
-
-
-
-post-index-change
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-This hook is invoked when the index is written in read-cache.c
-do_write_locked_index.
-
-The first parameter passed to the hook is the indicator for the
-working directory being updated.  "1" meaning working directory
-was updated or "0" when the working directory was not updated.
-
-The second parameter passed to the hook is the indicator for whether
-or not the index was updated and the skip-worktree bit could have
-changed.  "1" meaning skip-worktree bits could have been updated
-and "0" meaning they were not.
-
-Only one parameter should be set to "1" when the hook runs.  The hook
-running passing "1", "1" should not be possible.
-
-Hooks run during 'post-index-change' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs
-is configured to 1.
+include::native-hooks.txt[]
 
 GIT
 ---
diff --git a/Documentation/native-hooks.txt b/Documentation/native-hooks.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..6c4aad83e1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/native-hooks.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,708 @@ 
+applypatch-msg
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-am[1].  It takes a single
+parameter, the name of the file that holds the proposed commit
+log message.  Exiting with a non-zero status causes `git am` to abort
+before applying the patch.
+
+The hook is allowed to edit the message file in place, and can
+be used to normalize the message into some project standard
+format. It can also be used to refuse the commit after inspecting
+the message file.
+
+The default 'applypatch-msg' hook, when enabled, runs the
+'commit-msg' hook, if the latter is enabled.
+
+Hooks run during 'applypatch-msg' will not be parallelized, because hooks are
+expected to edit the file holding the commit log message.
+
+pre-applypatch
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-am[1].  It takes no parameter, and is
+invoked after the patch is applied, but before a commit is made.
+
+If it exits with non-zero status, then the working tree will not be
+committed after applying the patch.
+
+It can be used to inspect the current working tree and refuse to
+make a commit if it does not pass certain test.
+
+The default 'pre-applypatch' hook, when enabled, runs the
+'pre-commit' hook, if the latter is enabled.
+
+Hooks run during 'pre-applypatch' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
+configured to 1.
+
+post-applypatch
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-am[1].  It takes no parameter,
+and is invoked after the patch is applied and a commit is made.
+
+This hook is meant primarily for notification, and cannot affect
+the outcome of `git am`.
+
+Hooks run during 'post-applypatch' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
+configured to 1.
+
+pre-commit
+~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-commit[1], and can be bypassed
+with the `--no-verify` option.  It takes no parameters, and is
+invoked before obtaining the proposed commit log message and
+making a commit.  Exiting with a non-zero status from this script
+causes the `git commit` command to abort before creating a commit.
+
+The default 'pre-commit' hook, when enabled, catches introduction
+of lines with trailing whitespaces and aborts the commit when
+such a line is found.
+
+All the `git commit` hooks are invoked with the environment
+variable `GIT_EDITOR=:` if the command will not bring up an editor
+to modify the commit message.
+
+The default 'pre-commit' hook, when enabled--and with the
+`hooks.allownonascii` config option unset or set to false--prevents
+the use of non-ASCII filenames.
+
+Hooks executed during 'pre-commit' will not be parallelized.
+
+pre-merge-commit
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-merge[1], and can be bypassed
+with the `--no-verify` option.  It takes no parameters, and is
+invoked after the merge has been carried out successfully and before
+obtaining the proposed commit log message to
+make a commit.  Exiting with a non-zero status from this script
+causes the `git merge` command to abort before creating a commit.
+
+The default 'pre-merge-commit' hook, when enabled, runs the
+'pre-commit' hook, if the latter is enabled.
+
+This hook is invoked with the environment variable
+`GIT_EDITOR=:` if the command will not bring up an editor
+to modify the commit message.
+
+If the merge cannot be carried out automatically, the conflicts
+need to be resolved and the result committed separately (see
+linkgit:git-merge[1]). At that point, this hook will not be executed,
+but the 'pre-commit' hook will, if it is enabled.
+
+Hooks executed during 'pre-merge-commit' will not be parallelized.
+
+prepare-commit-msg
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-commit[1] right after preparing the
+default log message, and before the editor is started.
+
+It takes one to three parameters.  The first is the name of the file
+that contains the commit log message.  The second is the source of the commit
+message, and can be: `message` (if a `-m` or `-F` option was
+given); `template` (if a `-t` option was given or the
+configuration option `commit.template` is set); `merge` (if the
+commit is a merge or a `.git/MERGE_MSG` file exists); `squash`
+(if a `.git/SQUASH_MSG` file exists); or `commit`, followed by
+a commit SHA-1 (if a `-c`, `-C` or `--amend` option was given).
+
+If the exit status is non-zero, `git commit` will abort.
+
+The purpose of the hook is to edit the message file in place, and
+it is not suppressed by the `--no-verify` option.  A non-zero exit
+means a failure of the hook and aborts the commit.  It should not
+be used as replacement for pre-commit hook.
+
+The sample `prepare-commit-msg` hook that comes with Git removes the
+help message found in the commented portion of the commit template.
+
+Hooks executed during 'prepare-commit-msg' will not be parallelized, because
+hooks are expected to edit the file containing the commit log message.
+
+commit-msg
+~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-commit[1] and linkgit:git-merge[1], and can be
+bypassed with the `--no-verify` option.  It takes a single parameter,
+the name of the file that holds the proposed commit log message.
+Exiting with a non-zero status causes the command to abort.
+
+The hook is allowed to edit the message file in place, and can be used
+to normalize the message into some project standard format. It
+can also be used to refuse the commit after inspecting the message
+file.
+
+The default 'commit-msg' hook, when enabled, detects duplicate
+`Signed-off-by` trailers, and aborts the commit if one is found.
+
+Hooks executed during 'commit-msg' will not be parallelized, because hooks are
+expected to edit the file containing the proposed commit log message.
+
+post-commit
+~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-commit[1]. It takes no parameters, and is
+invoked after a commit is made.
+
+This hook is meant primarily for notification, and cannot affect
+the outcome of `git commit`.
+
+Hooks executed during 'post-commit' will run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
+configured to 1.
+
+pre-rebase
+~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is called by linkgit:git-rebase[1] and can be used to prevent a
+branch from getting rebased.  The hook may be called with one or
+two parameters.  The first parameter is the upstream from which
+the series was forked.  The second parameter is the branch being
+rebased, and is not set when rebasing the current branch.
+
+Hooks executed during 'pre-rebase' will run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
+configured to 1.
+
+post-checkout
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked when a linkgit:git-checkout[1] or
+linkgit:git-switch[1] is run after having updated the
+worktree.  The hook is given three parameters: the ref of the previous HEAD,
+the ref of the new HEAD (which may or may not have changed), and a flag
+indicating whether the checkout was a branch checkout (changing branches,
+flag=1) or a file checkout (retrieving a file from the index, flag=0).
+This hook cannot affect the outcome of `git switch` or `git checkout`,
+other than that the hook's exit status becomes the exit status of
+these two commands.
+
+It is also run after linkgit:git-clone[1], unless the `--no-checkout` (`-n`) option is
+used. The first parameter given to the hook is the null-ref, the second the
+ref of the new HEAD and the flag is always 1. Likewise for `git worktree add`
+unless `--no-checkout` is used.
+
+This hook can be used to perform repository validity checks, auto-display
+differences from the previous HEAD if different, or set working dir metadata
+properties.
+
+Hooks executed during 'post-checkout' will not be parallelized.
+
+post-merge
+~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-merge[1], which happens when a `git pull`
+is done on a local repository.  The hook takes a single parameter, a status
+flag specifying whether or not the merge being done was a squash merge.
+This hook cannot affect the outcome of `git merge` and is not executed,
+if the merge failed due to conflicts.
+
+This hook can be used in conjunction with a corresponding pre-commit hook to
+save and restore any form of metadata associated with the working tree
+(e.g.: permissions/ownership, ACLS, etc).  See contrib/hooks/setgitperms.perl
+for an example of how to do this.
+
+Hooks executed during 'post-merge' will run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
+configured to 1.
+
+pre-push
+~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is called by linkgit:git-push[1] and can be used to prevent
+a push from taking place.  The hook is called with two parameters
+which provide the name and location of the destination remote, if a
+named remote is not being used both values will be the same.
+
+Information about what is to be pushed is provided on the hook's standard
+input with lines of the form:
+
+  <local ref> SP <local sha1> SP <remote ref> SP <remote sha1> LF
+
+For instance, if the command +git push origin master:foreign+ were run the
+hook would receive a line like the following:
+
+  refs/heads/master 67890 refs/heads/foreign 12345
+
+although the full, 40-character SHA-1s would be supplied.  If the foreign ref
+does not yet exist the `<remote SHA-1>` will be 40 `0`.  If a ref is to be
+deleted, the `<local ref>` will be supplied as `(delete)` and the `<local
+SHA-1>` will be 40 `0`.  If the local commit was specified by something other
+than a name which could be expanded (such as `HEAD~`, or a SHA-1) it will be
+supplied as it was originally given.
+
+If this hook exits with a non-zero status, `git push` will abort without
+pushing anything.  Information about why the push is rejected may be sent
+to the user by writing to standard error.
+
+Hooks executed during 'pre-push' will run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
+configured to 1.
+
+[[pre-receive]]
+pre-receive
+~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] when it reacts to
+`git push` and updates reference(s) in its repository.
+Just before starting to update refs on the remote repository, the
+pre-receive hook is invoked.  Its exit status determines the success
+or failure of the update.
+
+This hook executes once for the receive operation. It takes no
+arguments, but for each ref to be updated it receives on standard
+input a line of the format:
+
+  <old-value> SP <new-value> SP <ref-name> LF
+
+where `<old-value>` is the old object name stored in the ref,
+`<new-value>` is the new object name to be stored in the ref and
+`<ref-name>` is the full name of the ref.
+When creating a new ref, `<old-value>` is 40 `0`.
+
+If the hook exits with non-zero status, none of the refs will be
+updated. If the hook exits with zero, updating of individual refs can
+still be prevented by the <<update,'update'>> hook.
+
+Both standard output and standard error output are forwarded to
+`git send-pack` on the other end, so you can simply `echo` messages
+for the user.
+
+The number of push options given on the command line of
+`git push --push-option=...` can be read from the environment
+variable `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT`, and the options themselves are
+found in `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_0`, `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_1`,...
+If it is negotiated to not use the push options phase, the
+environment variables will not be set. If the client selects
+to use push options, but doesn't transmit any, the count variable
+will be set to zero, `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT=0`.
+
+See the section on "Quarantine Environment" in
+linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] for some caveats.
+
+Hooks executed during 'pre-receive' will not be parallelized.
+
+[[update]]
+update
+~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] when it reacts to
+`git push` and updates reference(s) in its repository.
+Just before updating the ref on the remote repository, the update hook
+is invoked.  Its exit status determines the success or failure of
+the ref update.
+
+The hook executes once for each ref to be updated, and takes
+three parameters:
+
+ - the name of the ref being updated,
+ - the old object name stored in the ref,
+ - and the new object name to be stored in the ref.
+
+A zero exit from the update hook allows the ref to be updated.
+Exiting with a non-zero status prevents `git receive-pack`
+from updating that ref.
+
+This hook can be used to prevent 'forced' update on certain refs by
+making sure that the object name is a commit object that is a
+descendant of the commit object named by the old object name.
+That is, to enforce a "fast-forward only" policy.
+
+It could also be used to log the old..new status.  However, it
+does not know the entire set of branches, so it would end up
+firing one e-mail per ref when used naively, though.  The
+<<post-receive,'post-receive'>> hook is more suited to that.
+
+In an environment that restricts the users' access only to git
+commands over the wire, this hook can be used to implement access
+control without relying on filesystem ownership and group
+membership. See linkgit:git-shell[1] for how you might use the login
+shell to restrict the user's access to only git commands.
+
+Both standard output and standard error output are forwarded to
+`git send-pack` on the other end, so you can simply `echo` messages
+for the user.
+
+The default 'update' hook, when enabled--and with
+`hooks.allowunannotated` config option unset or set to false--prevents
+unannotated tags to be pushed.
+
+Hooks executed during 'update' are run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
+configured to 1.
+
+[[proc-receive]]
+proc-receive
+~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1].  If the server has
+set the multi-valued config variable `receive.procReceiveRefs`, and the
+commands sent to 'receive-pack' have matching reference names, these
+commands will be executed by this hook, instead of by the internal
+`execute_commands()` function.  This hook is responsible for updating
+the relevant references and reporting the results back to 'receive-pack'.
+
+This hook executes once for the receive operation.  It takes no
+arguments, but uses a pkt-line format protocol to communicate with
+'receive-pack' to read commands, push-options and send results.  In the
+following example for the protocol, the letter 'S' stands for
+'receive-pack' and the letter 'H' stands for this hook.
+
+    # Version and features negotiation.
+    S: PKT-LINE(version=1\0push-options atomic...)
+    S: flush-pkt
+    H: PKT-LINE(version=1\0push-options...)
+    H: flush-pkt
+
+    # Send commands from server to the hook.
+    S: PKT-LINE(<old-oid> <new-oid> <ref>)
+    S: ... ...
+    S: flush-pkt
+    # Send push-options only if the 'push-options' feature is enabled.
+    S: PKT-LINE(push-option)
+    S: ... ...
+    S: flush-pkt
+
+    # Receive result from the hook.
+    # OK, run this command successfully.
+    H: PKT-LINE(ok <ref>)
+    # NO, I reject it.
+    H: PKT-LINE(ng <ref> <reason>)
+    # Fall through, let 'receive-pack' to execute it.
+    H: PKT-LINE(ok <ref>)
+    H: PKT-LINE(option fall-through)
+    # OK, but has an alternate reference.  The alternate reference name
+    # and other status can be given in option directives.
+    H: PKT-LINE(ok <ref>)
+    H: PKT-LINE(option refname <refname>)
+    H: PKT-LINE(option old-oid <old-oid>)
+    H: PKT-LINE(option new-oid <new-oid>)
+    H: PKT-LINE(option forced-update)
+    H: ... ...
+    H: flush-pkt
+
+Each command for the 'proc-receive' hook may point to a pseudo-reference
+and always has a zero-old as its old-oid, while the 'proc-receive' hook
+may update an alternate reference and the alternate reference may exist
+already with a non-zero old-oid.  For this case, this hook will use
+"option" directives to report extended attributes for the reference given
+by the leading "ok" directive.
+
+The report of the commands of this hook should have the same order as
+the input.  The exit status of the 'proc-receive' hook only determines
+the success or failure of the group of commands sent to it, unless
+atomic push is in use.
+
+It is forbidden to specify more than one hook for 'proc-receive'. If a
+globally-configured 'proc-receive' must be overridden, use
+'hookcmd.<global-hook>.skip = true' to ignore it.
+
+[[post-receive]]
+post-receive
+~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] when it reacts to
+`git push` and updates reference(s) in its repository.
+It executes on the remote repository once after all the refs have
+been updated.
+
+This hook executes once for the receive operation.  It takes no
+arguments, but gets the same information as the
+<<pre-receive,'pre-receive'>>
+hook does on its standard input.
+
+This hook does not affect the outcome of `git receive-pack`, as it
+is called after the real work is done.
+
+This supersedes the <<post-update,'post-update'>> hook in that it gets
+both old and new values of all the refs in addition to their
+names.
+
+Both standard output and standard error output are forwarded to
+`git send-pack` on the other end, so you can simply `echo` messages
+for the user.
+
+The default 'post-receive' hook is empty, but there is
+a sample script `post-receive-email` provided in the `contrib/hooks`
+directory in Git distribution, which implements sending commit
+emails.
+
+The number of push options given on the command line of
+`git push --push-option=...` can be read from the environment
+variable `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT`, and the options themselves are
+found in `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_0`, `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_1`,...
+If it is negotiated to not use the push options phase, the
+environment variables will not be set. If the client selects
+to use push options, but doesn't transmit any, the count variable
+will be set to zero, `GIT_PUSH_OPTION_COUNT=0`.
+
+Hooks executed during 'post-receive' are run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
+configured to 1.
+
+[[post-update]]
+post-update
+~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] when it reacts to
+`git push` and updates reference(s) in its repository.
+It executes on the remote repository once after all the refs have
+been updated.
+
+It takes a variable number of parameters, each of which is the
+name of ref that was actually updated.
+
+This hook is meant primarily for notification, and cannot affect
+the outcome of `git receive-pack`.
+
+The 'post-update' hook can tell what are the heads that were pushed,
+but it does not know what their original and updated values are,
+so it is a poor place to do log old..new. The
+<<post-receive,'post-receive'>> hook does get both original and
+updated values of the refs. You might consider it instead if you need
+them.
+
+When enabled, the default 'post-update' hook runs
+`git update-server-info` to keep the information used by dumb
+transports (e.g., HTTP) up to date.  If you are publishing
+a Git repository that is accessible via HTTP, you should
+probably enable this hook.
+
+Both standard output and standard error output are forwarded to
+`git send-pack` on the other end, so you can simply `echo` messages
+for the user.
+
+Hooks run during 'post-update' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
+configured to 1.
+
+reference-transaction
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by any Git command that performs reference
+updates. It executes whenever a reference transaction is prepared,
+committed or aborted and may thus get called multiple times.
+
+The hook takes exactly one argument, which is the current state the
+given reference transaction is in:
+
+    - "prepared": All reference updates have been queued to the
+      transaction and references were locked on disk.
+
+    - "committed": The reference transaction was committed and all
+      references now have their respective new value.
+
+    - "aborted": The reference transaction was aborted, no changes
+      were performed and the locks have been released.
+
+For each reference update that was added to the transaction, the hook
+receives on standard input a line of the format:
+
+  <old-value> SP <new-value> SP <ref-name> LF
+
+The exit status of the hook is ignored for any state except for the
+"prepared" state. In the "prepared" state, a non-zero exit status will
+cause the transaction to be aborted. The hook will not be called with
+"aborted" state in that case.
+
+Hooks run during 'reference-transaction' will be run in parallel, unless
+hook.jobs is configured to 1.
+
+push-to-checkout
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-receive-pack[1] when it reacts to
+`git push` and updates reference(s) in its repository, and when
+the push tries to update the branch that is currently checked out
+and the `receive.denyCurrentBranch` configuration variable is set to
+`updateInstead`.  Such a push by default is refused if the working
+tree and the index of the remote repository has any difference from
+the currently checked out commit; when both the working tree and the
+index match the current commit, they are updated to match the newly
+pushed tip of the branch.  This hook is to be used to override the
+default behaviour.
+
+The hook receives the commit with which the tip of the current
+branch is going to be updated.  It can exit with a non-zero status
+to refuse the push (when it does so, it must not modify the index or
+the working tree).  Or it can make any necessary changes to the
+working tree and to the index to bring them to the desired state
+when the tip of the current branch is updated to the new commit, and
+exit with a zero status.
+
+For example, the hook can simply run `git read-tree -u -m HEAD "$1"`
+in order to emulate `git fetch` that is run in the reverse direction
+with `git push`, as the two-tree form of `git read-tree -u -m` is
+essentially the same as `git switch` or `git checkout`
+that switches branches while
+keeping the local changes in the working tree that do not interfere
+with the difference between the branches.
+
+Hooks executed during 'push-to-checkout' will not be parallelized.
+
+pre-auto-gc
+~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by `git gc --auto` (see linkgit:git-gc[1]). It
+takes no parameter, and exiting with non-zero status from this script
+causes the `git gc --auto` to abort.
+
+Hooks run during 'pre-auto-gc' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
+configured to 1.
+
+post-rewrite
+~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by commands that rewrite commits
+(linkgit:git-commit[1] when called with `--amend` and
+linkgit:git-rebase[1]; however, full-history (re)writing tools like
+linkgit:git-fast-import[1] or
+https://github.com/newren/git-filter-repo[git-filter-repo] typically
+do not call it!).  Its first argument denotes the command it was
+invoked by: currently one of `amend` or `rebase`.  Further
+command-dependent arguments may be passed in the future.
+
+The hook receives a list of the rewritten commits on stdin, in the
+format
+
+  <old-sha1> SP <new-sha1> [ SP <extra-info> ] LF
+
+The 'extra-info' is again command-dependent.  If it is empty, the
+preceding SP is also omitted.  Currently, no commands pass any
+'extra-info'.
+
+The hook always runs after the automatic note copying (see
+"notes.rewrite.<command>" in linkgit:git-config[1]) has happened, and
+thus has access to these notes.
+
+Hooks run during 'post-rewrite' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs is
+configured to 1.
+
+The following command-specific comments apply:
+
+rebase::
+	For the 'squash' and 'fixup' operation, all commits that were
+	squashed are listed as being rewritten to the squashed commit.
+	This means that there will be several lines sharing the same
+	'new-sha1'.
++
+The commits are guaranteed to be listed in the order that they were
+processed by rebase.
+
+sendemail-validate
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by linkgit:git-send-email[1].  It takes a single parameter,
+the name of the file that holds the e-mail to be sent.  Exiting with a
+non-zero status causes `git send-email` to abort before sending any
+e-mails.
+
+fsmonitor-watchman
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked when the configuration option `core.fsmonitor` is
+set to `.git/hooks/fsmonitor-watchman` or `.git/hooks/fsmonitor-watchmanv2`
+depending on the version of the hook to use.
+
+Version 1 takes two arguments, a version (1) and the time in elapsed
+nanoseconds since midnight, January 1, 1970.
+
+Version 2 takes two arguments, a version (2) and a token that is used
+for identifying changes since the token. For watchman this would be
+a clock id. This version must output to stdout the new token followed
+by a NUL before the list of files.
+
+The hook should output to stdout the list of all files in the working
+directory that may have changed since the requested time.  The logic
+should be inclusive so that it does not miss any potential changes.
+The paths should be relative to the root of the working directory
+and be separated by a single NUL.
+
+It is OK to include files which have not actually changed.  All changes
+including newly-created and deleted files should be included. When
+files are renamed, both the old and the new name should be included.
+
+Git will limit what files it checks for changes as well as which
+directories are checked for untracked files based on the path names
+given.
+
+An optimized way to tell git "all files have changed" is to return
+the filename `/`.
+
+The exit status determines whether git will use the data from the
+hook to limit its search.  On error, it will fall back to verifying
+all files and folders.
+
+p4-changelist
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by `git-p4 submit`.
+
+The `p4-changelist` hook is executed after the changelist
+message has been edited by the user. It can be bypassed with the
+`--no-verify` option. It takes a single parameter, the name
+of the file that holds the proposed changelist text. Exiting
+with a non-zero status causes the command to abort.
+
+The hook is allowed to edit the changelist file and can be used
+to normalize the text into some project standard format. It can
+also be used to refuse the Submit after inspect the message file.
+
+Run `git-p4 submit --help` for details.
+
+p4-prepare-changelist
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by `git-p4 submit`.
+
+The `p4-prepare-changelist` hook is executed right after preparing
+the default changelist message and before the editor is started.
+It takes one parameter, the name of the file that contains the
+changelist text. Exiting with a non-zero status from the script
+will abort the process.
+
+The purpose of the hook is to edit the message file in place,
+and it is not suppressed by the `--no-verify` option. This hook
+is called even if `--prepare-p4-only` is set.
+
+Run `git-p4 submit --help` for details.
+
+p4-post-changelist
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by `git-p4 submit`.
+
+The `p4-post-changelist` hook is invoked after the submit has
+successfully occurred in P4. It takes no parameters and is meant
+primarily for notification and cannot affect the outcome of the
+git p4 submit action.
+
+Run `git-p4 submit --help` for details.
+
+p4-pre-submit
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked by `git-p4 submit`. It takes no parameters and nothing
+from standard input. Exiting with non-zero status from this script prevent
+`git-p4 submit` from launching. It can be bypassed with the `--no-verify`
+command line option. Run `git-p4 submit --help` for details.
+
+
+
+post-index-change
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+This hook is invoked when the index is written in read-cache.c
+do_write_locked_index.
+
+The first parameter passed to the hook is the indicator for the
+working directory being updated.  "1" meaning working directory
+was updated or "0" when the working directory was not updated.
+
+The second parameter passed to the hook is the indicator for whether
+or not the index was updated and the skip-worktree bit could have
+changed.  "1" meaning skip-worktree bits could have been updated
+and "0" meaning they were not.
+
+Only one parameter should be set to "1" when the hook runs.  The hook
+running passing "1", "1" should not be possible.
+
+Hooks run during 'post-index-change' will be run in parallel, unless hook.jobs
+is configured to 1.
+