pre-receive-reject-binaries - A configurable Git hook to intelligently reject binary pushes
pre-receive-reject-binaries --help
pre-receive-reject-binaries --man
# To actually make this hook do anything wrap it in a shellscript
# that does this
pre-receive-reject-binaries --dry-run=0
# Do whatever we would have done but fail in cases where we'd
# succeed, for testing purposes
pre-receive-reject-binaries --dry-run=0 --always-fail
# By default we only emit NOTICE level output on STDERR, that can
# be made a lot more verbose with DEBUG or TRACE. We can also pipe
# DEBUG or TRACE output to a log command, see
# hook.pre-receive-reject-binaries.log-command.
pre-receive-reject-binaries --dry-run=0 --log-level=TRACE
This is a Git hook meant to be set up as a pre-receive
hook (see githooks(5)
) that'll reject the addition of binary data to a repository, either all binary additions if they on a per-commit basis go above a given size.
The general strategy of this hook is that when we get a push for a given "master" branch we'll do a log --stat
of $branch..$to
and find all the commits that add binary data, and how much they add.
Each commit in the push is then given a quota of how much binary data is allowed, if any commit goes above that quota the entire push is rejected. Depending on the configuration (see below) the user is allowed to force the push to go through by amending the commit message to include some string saying they forced it through.
To entirely reject binary pushes you can set the size limit to 0 and don't define an override message to allow users to push those changes manually.
You can also allow some amount of binary data in the repository per-commit, e.g. to allow committing small icons but not giant images.
Of course someone could be clever and commit a bunch of huge Base64-encoded data that wouldn't be detected by Git as binary, or manually split up huge binary data into multiple commits, each of whom don't go above the configured limit.
This hook is not meant to stop a dedicated attacker from enlarging your Git history, it's meant to stop someone who doesn't know better ("what do you mean people have to download my binary data on every checkout, forever?!") from accidentally messing up the history.
We only care about updates to the "master" branch for two reasons, one is that if you're e.g. doing some temporary work and committing some binaries to a custom branch temporarily that's fine as long as that branch doesn't make it to "master", and eventually gets deleted from $whatever.git.
The other is that if you we were to reject pushes to other branches, especially newly created ones we'd have to deal with the special case of deciding what to use as the merge-base for that branch. Do we use the "master" branch? do we validate the entire history? Easier to just not deal with it. Want the hook to do something smart about that? Patches welcome.
Keep in mind though that this is deliberately written to be fast on humongous repositories, so anything that breaks that promise would have to at least be optional.
We do handle the initial push to the "master" branch itself by just validating the entire history being pushed.
Our only dependencies are a working perl interpreter. We only depend on modules that have shipped with perl itself forever, so this hook should just work out of the box on any *nix-like OS that has perl installed.
To enable it for a given bare repository you want to push to just create a hook/pre-receive with something like:
#!/bin/sh
/path/to/where/you/cloned-pre-receive-reject-binaries/pre-receive-reject-binaries --dry-run=0
See "CONFIGURATION" below for how to configure it. We shell out to git config
so you can enable this configuration per-repository, or globally (via e.g. /etc/gitconfig) or any combination of the two.
Here's an example of what a typical configuration for this hook might look like:
[hook "pre-receive-reject-binaries"]
master-branch-name = master
max-per-commit-size-increase = 1024
commit-override-message = "YES I WANT TO FOREVER INCREASE THE SIZE OF core.git BY ADDING {BYTES} BYTES OF BINARY DATA TO IT!"
support-contact = "git@lists.example.com or the 'support' Jabber channel"
log-command = /gitroot/contrib/hooks/pre-receive-reject-binaries/log-command
log-command-level = TRACE
blocked-push-command = /gitroot/contrib/hooks/pre-receive-reject-binaries/blocked-push-command
unblocked-push-command = /gitroot/contrib/hooks/pre-receive-reject-binaries/unblocked-push-command
For example commands for the *-command
switches see the examples/ directory in the pre-receive-reject-binaries Git distribution for an example of what the author uses this hook for.
Detailed documentation about each option below:
The master
branch name you want to not allow binary pushes to. Usually master
, can also be trunk
or whatever.
If a given commit adds files whose cumulative file size is above this we reject it. In bytes.
If there actually is a good reason to go above the configured limits they can be overridden.
To do this the commit message of any offending commit needs to be changed to include this string. Occurrences of {BYTES}
in the will be replaced by however many bytes are being added. E.g. this can be set to:
YES I WANT TO FOREVER INCREASE THE SIZE OF $whatever.git BY ADDING %BYTES% BYTES OF BINARY TO IT!
If that string is present in the commit message we'll ignore that commit for the purposes of computing the size of the commit. To not allow any overrides just don't set this.
A string we'll use when we reject the push as the support contact, e.g. an E-Mail address or Jabber channel.
An executable script that we'll pipe all our output into. Useful for e.g. spewing all output users see into a log.
The log level we'll use for the output given to the "hook.pre-receive-reject-binaries.log-command". Can be NOTICE
, DEBUG
or TRACE
. The NOTICE
messages are the messages we show to users, anything above that is verbose output mainly intended to debug this script.
A command we'll run whenever this hook blocks a push, it'll get all the output we emit piped into it. Useful for e.g. sending a mail whenever we have a blocked push.
A command we'll run if we have a push that we would have rejected, but was unblocked through via the facility described in "hook.pre-receive-reject-binaries.commit-override-message". If that's not enabled we won't be calling this.
Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avar@cpan.org>
This software is copyright (c) 2014 by Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason <avar@cpan.org>
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.