zephyr/.gitlint
Anas Nashif 3085ce074d gitlint: match max title length restriction with checkpatch
Match the restriction on title length with checkpatch, since we document
that we follow the Linux style and checkpatch was there before gitlint.

Fixes #14652

Signed-off-by: Anas Nashif <anas.nashif@intel.com>
2019-05-29 14:43:16 -04:00

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# All these sections are optional, edit this file as you like.
[general]
ignore=title-trailing-punctuation, T3, title-max-length, T1, body-hard-tab, B3, B1
# verbosity should be a value between 1 and 3, the commandline -v flags take precedence over this
verbosity = 3
# By default gitlint will ignore merge commits. Set to 'false' to disable.
ignore-merge-commits=true
# Enable debug mode (prints more output). Disabled by default
debug = false
# Set the extra-path where gitlint will search for user defined rules
# See http://jorisroovers.github.io/gitlint/user_defined_rules for details
extra-path=scripts/gitlint
[title-max-length-no-revert]
line-length=75
[body-min-line-count]
min-line-count=1
[body-max-line-count]
max-line-count=200
[title-starts-with-subsystem]
regex = ^(?!subsys:)(([^:]+):)(\s([^:]+):)*\s(.+)$
[title-must-not-contain-word]
# Comma-separated list of words that should not occur in the title. Matching is case
# insensitive. It's fine if the keyword occurs as part of a larger word (so "WIPING"
# will not cause a violation, but "WIP: my title" will.
words=wip
[title-match-regex]
# python like regex (https://docs.python.org/2/library/re.html) that the
# commit-msg title must be matched to.
# Note that the regex can contradict with other rules if not used correctly
# (e.g. title-must-not-contain-word).
#regex=^US[0-9]*
[max-line-length-with-exceptions]
# B1 = body-max-line-length
line-length=72
[body-min-length]
min-length=3
[body-is-missing]
# Whether to ignore this rule on merge commits (which typically only have a title)
# default = True
ignore-merge-commits=false
[body-changed-file-mention]
# List of files that need to be explicitly mentioned in the body when they are changed
# This is useful for when developers often erroneously edit certain files or git submodules.
# By specifying this rule, developers can only change the file when they explicitly reference
# it in the commit message.
#files=gitlint/rules.py,README.md