Is it possible to make a reference to an issue in Gitlab from a commit message? I haven't found anything on the web.
There should be a way to reference a GitLab issue from a commit message, simply with #xx
(id of the issue).
Consider "Default closing pattern value "
For example the following commit message:
Awesome commit message Fix #20, Fixes #21 and Closes group/otherproject#22. This commit is also related to #17 and fixes #18, #19 and https://gitlab.example.com/group/otherproject/issues/23.
will close #18, #19, #20, and #21 in the project this commit is pushed to, as well as #22 and #23 in
group/otherproject
.#17 won't be closed as it does not match the pattern.
It works with multi-line commit messages as well as one-liners when used with
git commit -m
.
See also "Tutorial: It's all connected in GitLab"
Add references in issue or merge request descriptions or in comments.
This will update the issue with info about anything related.
- To reference an issue:
#123
- To reference a MR:
!123
- To reference a snippet
$123
pierreb adds in the comments:
Although this is not specifically asked in the original question, it may be worth adding that one can also cross-reference a previous commit in a new commit message in Gitlab.
You do it by copying the hash from the commit message you want to reference and simply pasting it in the new commit message.
Something along these lines:This is related with commit 7as7b101
You can see (much) more in:
andrybak adds in the comments:
"You do it by copying the hash from the commit message you want to reference and simply pasting it in the new commit message."
There is also a special, more human-readable format:
git log -1 --format=reference <abbrev-hash> (<title-line>, <short-author-date>)
This format is used to refer to another commit in a commit message and is the same as
--pretty='format:%C(auto)%h (%s, %ad)'
.
By default, the date is formatted with--date=short
unless another--date option
is explicitly specified.
As with anyformat:
with format placeholders, its output is not affected by other options like--decorate
and--walk-reflogs
.
Fr0zenFyr adds in the comments:
Similarly, even a closed issue can be referenced like
Related to #78 and #93
.