近期检查SVN时发现备份好的文件体积异常庞大。才跑2个月备份出来的大小就有4G多。仔细查询发现很多很多IDE自动生成的二进制文件。。。我类个去。好吧,开发不自觉就只有强制限制了。
google的时候发现这篇文章:http://blog.csdn.net/clever101/article/details/8560833
自己动手丰衣足食。脚本如下:
#!/bin/bash export LANG="zh_CN.UTF-8" #确保中文日志显示正常,便于统计日志 REPOS="$1" TXN="$2" #限制日志长度 LENGTH=10 SVNLOOK="/usr/local/csvn/bin/svnlook" BLACKLIST="target build classes bin/target .* *.iml *.ipr *.iws *.class " function error_exit(){ echo -e "1.Not allowed empty log " >&2 echo -e "2.Logs must be greater than ${LENGTH} characters or chinese" >&2 exit 1 } function blacklist_exit(){ if [ ! -z "${INBLACKLIST}" ] ;then echo -e "some files in the blacklist , please cheack again !" >&2 echo -e "blacklist:\n ${BLACKLIST}" >&2 exit 1 fi } # 获取字符数量(包括换行符) TEMP_LENGTH=`${SVNLOOK} log -t "${TXN}" "${REPOS}"|sed ‘s/\s*$//g‘|sed ‘s/^\s*//g‘| wc --chars` # 统计换行符 TEMP_LINE=`${SVNLOOK} log -t "${TXN}" "${REPOS}"| wc --lines` # 真实字符数量 LOGMSG_LENGTH=`expr ${TEMP_LENGTH} - ${TEMP_LINE}` # 文件黑名单过滤 # 过滤文件夹 INBLACKLIST="`${SVNLOOK} changed -t "${TXN}" "${REPOS}" | grep "/target/"`" #文件夹前后必须有/,否则匹配会有误伤 blacklist_exit INBLACKLIST="`${SVNLOOK} changed -t "${TXN}" "${REPOS}" | grep "/build/"`" blacklist_exit INBLACKLIST="`${SVNLOOK} changed -t "${TXN}" "${REPOS}" | grep "/classes/"`" blacklist_exit INBLACKLIST="`${SVNLOOK} changed -t "${TXN}" "${REPOS}" | grep "/bin/target/"`" blacklist_exit # 过滤所有已点开头的文件和文件夹 INBLACKLIST="`${SVNLOOK} changed -t "${TXN}" "${REPOS}" | grep "/\."`" blacklist_exit # 过滤文件尾缀 INBLACKLIST="`${SVNLOOK} changed -t "${TXN}" "${REPOS}" | grep "\.iml$"`" blacklist_exit INBLACKLIST="`${SVNLOOK} changed -t "${TXN}" "${REPOS}" | grep "\.ipr$"`" blacklist_exit INBLACKLIST="`${SVNLOOK} changed -t "${TXN}" "${REPOS}" | grep "\.iws$"`" blacklist_exit INBLACKLIST="`${SVNLOOK} changed -t "${TXN}" "${REPOS}" | grep "\.class$"`" blacklist_exit # 判断日志长度是否满足要求 if [ "${LOGMSG_LENGTH}" -lt ${LENGTH} ];then error_exit fi exit 0
不知道为啥,不能在返回的日志中加入中文,否则小乌龟报编码无法解析。去官方询问也没人回答,蛋疼。
工作随笔——pre-commit钩子限制日志长度和提交的文件类型,布布扣,bubuko.com
工作随笔——pre-commit钩子限制日志长度和提交的文件类型
原文:http://www.cnblogs.com/zz0412/p/3885333.html