Git Hook in GitKraken Client with Husky and Nvm

Davide Imola
3 min readJan 8, 2022

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Photo by Gabriel Heinzer on Unsplash

One of my favorite features of Git is Git hooks because they can let you check different things in your code such as linting, compiling, and testing before any Git action in your repository.

In my ideal project setup, I always set some sort of pre-commit Git hooks to run before committing to the repository, because I do not have failing tests, wrong code listing, or build errors while my code is deployed on Git.

Of course, as a user of GitKraken Client, I want to fire them through the software and know if I can commit something or not.

Git hooks: What are They?

They are a way to fire off custom scripts when certain actions occur. We have two different groups of Git hooks: client-side and server-side. Client-side Git hooks are triggered by operations like committing and merging, while server-side Git hooks run on network operations such as push.

The following video explains the basics of Git hooks.

What are Git Hooks?

What is GitKraken Client?

I think of GitKraken Client as a lifesaver in my software engineer career. For those who do not know what it is, is a famous and fantastic Git GUI to perform several actions over Git.

I use it in combination with the Git CLI because it simplifies various actions such as switching through Git profiles, viewing history, complex Git operations like rebase and conflict resolver, and so on.

If you want you can take try it for free by using my referral link.

Husky Configuration

The Husky configuration is pretty simple to achieve, first of all, it requires the installation of the husky package by executing it in your terminal.

# NPM
npm install husky -D
# YARN
yarn add -D husky

After this thing, we have to add a simple script in our package.json like the following.

{
"name": "my-package",
"scripts": {
+ "prepare": "husky install"
}
}

And after that run the following script for installing all the required Husky dependencies.

# NPM
npm run prepare
# YARN
yarn run prepare

After preparing the project with Husky we can add a new simple hook by running the following commands.

npx husky add .husky/pre-commit "npm test"

This will add a new pre-commit Git hook that runs all the tests after the Git commit request.

Configuring GitKraken Client

GitKraken Client does not need any particular configurations after the release of v7.7.2, where they added the support for cors.hooksPath supported by Husky too since version 5, but if you are using an old version and considering updating it or viewing this solution, it might help you.

GitKraken Client and Husky NVM issue

While using my current workflow, I encountered a problem within GitKraken Client and Node Version Manager. I have discovered GitKraken Client can not execute my Git hooks and I have found in the GitKraken Client logs that npx does not exist in PATH.

Node version manager work by modifying the PATH when the terminal is started. For this reason, GUI clients usually do not work well whit those managers as they are not sourcing .zshrc or .bashrc files where nvm is initialized.

The solution is to create a .huskyrc with the following content.

# ~/.huskyrc
export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm"
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh"

Conclusions

I hope this post can help everyone interested in git hooks to implement interesting automation within their git workflow to achieve better results on their code.

Finally, I have fixed my hook workflow and learned something new about Git and NVM, useful things for my future career.

Originally published at https://www.davideimola.com on January 8, 2022.

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Davide Imola
Davide Imola

Written by Davide Imola

DevOps Engineer @ RedCarbon • Community Manager @ Schrödinger Hat • Public Speaker and Trainer • Open Source Evangelist

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