--- title: Commit Messages --- For our commit messages we follow the style provided by [Conventional Commits](https://conventionalcommits.org). Not all of those suggestions are appropriate for Privacy Guides, so the main ones we use are: ## Update to existing text This example could be used for an item already on the site, but includes a minor update to the description. ```text update: Add mention of security audit (#0000) ``` ## Addition or removal of recommendations/pages This example is for the addition or removal of an item. You may elaborate why it was removed in the commit paragraph below. Note the extra `!` to draw attention to a major change. ```text update!: Remove foobar (#0000) Foobar was removed due to it having numerious security issues and being unmaintained. ``` You can actually add a `!` to *any* of the types on this page to denote particularly large changes, but this is generally where it will be most appropriate. ## Commit message with correction We use `fix` for simple things like spelling mistakes or site related bugs. These things will usually have the `correction` or `bug` label on GitHub. ```text fix: Correct spelling on XYZ page (#0000) ``` ## Feature/enhancement For new features or enhancements to the site, e.g. things that have the `enhancements` label on GitHub, it may be appropriate to signify these with: ```text feat: Add blah blah (#0000) This change adds the forum topics to the main page ``` ## Development-related types These commit types are typically used for changes that won't be visible to the general audience. We use `docs:` to denote changes to the developer documentation for this website, including (but not limited to) for example the README file, or most pages in `/docs/about` or `/docs/meta`: ```text docs: Update Git commit message guidelines (#0000) ``` We use `build:` for commits related to our build process, mainly dependency updates. ```text build: Bump modules/mkdocs-material from 463e535 to 621a5b8 ``` We use `ci:` for commits related to GitHub Actions, DevContainers, or other automated build platforms. ```text ci: Update Netlify config (#0000) ``` We use `refactor:` for changes which neither fix a bug nor add a feature. ```text refactor: Move docs/assets to theme/assets ```