The Commit Detail shows information pertaining to a single version control commit including attributes like the repository commit ID, full commit message, commit author, date and time of commit, etc. This view also shows the relationship of the commit to other activities like builds, reviews, and work items.
Since EventQ gathers information from disparate sources, we must define the conditions under which EventQ categorizes SCM actions as "commits". Usage of the term "commit" should be construed generically rather than in the context of a specific brand of SCM. For instance, SCMs like Subversion and CVS have a relatively straightforward definition of commit, typically meaning the sending of code changes from working copy to the repository. Git and dynamic version control systems (DVCS) have more nuanced definitions. To be considered a commit in TeamForge EventQ a DVCS action must be public. Therefore, a TeamForge EventQ commit encompasses both a Subversion commit and a Git "push", but doesn't include a Git "commit" (which is local).
The step associated with the current activity is highlighted. To see the detail for a different activity, click on the associated step.
Commit Detail Attribute | Description | Location |
---|---|---|
SCM repository commit ID | The ID marker denoting a particular revision or version of the SCM repository. For Git, this is the full hash. | Commit activity header |
SCM source display name | The user defined "friendly" label for an SCM source repository. | Commit activity header |
Committer | Name and user profile picture of the user responsible for the commit transaction. A default user avatar is depicted if the user has not defined a profile picture in TeamForge. | Commit summary |
Commit message | The committer's explanatory text submitted at commit time. | Commit summary |
Committed At | The date and time of the commit. | Commit summary |
Comment | Comment and user profile picture of the user who created the comment. A default user avatar is depicted if the user has not defined a profile picture in TeamForge. | Comment section |
Work Items — Work items can be directly associated to commits by referencing the work item artifact ID in the commit message. To explicitly link a commit with a work item, prepend to your commit message:
[<artifact_id>]
where the artifact_id is the ID of the work item in the originating source. You may specify more than one work item in your commit message.
The "Files and Operations" section lists all files affected by the commit, and the operations performed on those files. Common SCM operations include add, delete, modify, and rename.