Use conventional-commits-parser for parsing commits for validation, this is being done
in anticipation of relying on this parser for release note creation. Unifying how commits
are parsed will provide the most consistency in our tooling.
PR Close#41286
When attempting to actually rely on `parseCommitMessagesForRange`, it became apparent
that the function really belongs in the parse file, rather than utils.
PR Close#39747
When creating a commit with the git cli, git pre-populates the editor
used to enter the commit message with some comments (i.e. lines starting
with `#`). These comments contain helpful instructions or information
regarding the changes that are part of the commit. As happens with all
commit message comments, they are removed by git and do not end up in
the final commit message.
However, the file that is passed to the `commit-msg` to be validated
still contains these comments. This may affect the outcome of the commit
message validation. In such cases, the author will not realize that the
commit message is not in the desired format until the linting checks
fail on CI (which validates the final commit messages and is not
affected by this issue), usually several minutes later.
Possible ways in which the commit message validation outcome can be
affected:
- The minimum body length check may pass incorrectly, even if there is
no actual body, because the comments are counted as part of the body.
- The maximum line length check may fail incorrectly due to a very long
line in the comments.
This commit fixes the problem by removing comment lines before
validating a commit message.
Fixes#37865
PR Close#38438