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Review Hooks

roborev runs reviews in the background. Without hooks, you find out about results by checking the TUI or running roborev status. Hooks close that gap -- they run shell commands automatically when reviews finish, so you can get notified, create issues, update dashboards, or trigger downstream workflows without polling.

Common use cases:

  • Desktop notifications so you know when a review is ready
  • Issue creation when reviews find problems (GitHub/GitLab/Jira via shell)
  • Beads integration to auto-create tracked issues for review failures and findings (built-in, zero config)
  • Chat notifications to Slack, Discord, or Teams channels
  • Logging review outcomes to a file or external service
  • CI-like workflows that run scripts when reviews pass or fail

Quick Start

The simplest useful hook is a desktop notification. Add this to ~/.roborev/config.toml to get notified whenever any review finishes:

# macOS
[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = "osascript -e 'display notification \"Review done for {repo_name} ({sha}): {verdict}\" with title \"roborev\"'"

# Linux (requires libnotify)
[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = "notify-send roborev 'Review done for {repo_name}: {verdict}'"

No daemon restart needed -- hooks are picked up via hot-reload.

Configuration

Hooks are configured as [[hooks]] entries in your global ~/.roborev/config.toml or per-repo .roborev.toml. Each hook has an event to match and either a command to run or a built-in type.

[[hooks]]
event = "review.failed"
command = "/path/to/my-script.sh {job_id}"

[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = "echo {repo_name} {sha} {verdict} >> ~/review-log.txt"

[[hooks]]
event = "review.*"
branches = ["main", "release/*"]
type = "kata"
Field Type Description
event string Event pattern to match (see Events)
branches array Optional branch allowlist using path.Match globs. Empty or omitted means all branches
command string Shell command to run, with {var} template interpolation
type string Built-in hook type: "beads", "kata", or "webhook". Empty or "command" runs command
url string Webhook destination URL (required when type = "webhook")
project string Kata hook project override. Defaults to the repo's .kata.toml binding
labels array Extra labels for Kata-created issues. roborev is always added
priority integer Kata issue priority (0-4). Omit to use roborev's defaults

Global vs Per-Repo Hooks

Global hooks (~/.roborev/config.toml) fire for every repo. Use these for notifications, logging, or anything that applies everywhere.

Per-repo hooks (.roborev.toml) fire only for that repo. Use these for repo-specific workflows like creating issues in the right tracker.

Both fire for matching events -- per-repo hooks run in addition to global hooks, not instead of them. This means you can have a global notification hook and a per-repo issue-creation hook, and both will fire.

# ~/.roborev/config.toml -- fires for all repos
[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = "echo {repo_name} {sha} {verdict} >> ~/roborev-events.log"

[[hooks]]
event = "review.failed"
command = "echo {repo_name} {sha} {error} >> ~/roborev-events.log"
# ~/code/myproject/.roborev.toml -- fires only for this repo
[[hooks]]
event = "review.failed"
type = "beads"

Events

Event When it fires
review.started A review job starts processing
review.completed A review finishes successfully (verdict is P for pass or F for fail)
review.failed A review job fails after exhausting retries (agent error, timeout, etc.)
review.canceled A running review is canceled. Canceling a still-queued job emits no event
review.closed A review is marked closed
review.reopened A closed review is reopened
review.* Wildcard: matches any review. event

Note the distinction between review.completed with verdict F (the review ran successfully and found issues) and review.failed (the review job itself errored out). For terminal notifications only, configure separate review.completed and review.failed hooks. review.* also matches started, canceled, closed, and reopened events, which is useful for webhooks and built-ins that ignore irrelevant event types internally.

Branch Filtering

Add branches to any hook to run it only for selected branches:

[[hooks]]
event = "review.*"
branches = ["main", "release/*"]
command = "notify-send roborev 'Review event on {repo_name}: {sha}'"

Patterns use Go's path.Match rules: main matches exactly, release/* matches release/1.2, and an invalid pattern is ignored. If branches is set and roborev cannot determine a branch for the event, the hook does not run.

For local reviews, the matched branch is the job's local branch. For daemon CI pull-request reviews, the matched branch is the PR base/target branch, not the contributor's head branch. This means branches = ["main"] fires for PRs targeting main, which is usually what protected-branch integrations want.

Template Variables

Use {var} syntax in your command string to inject event data. Variables are automatically shell-escaped (single-quoted) to prevent injection, so do not wrap placeholders in your own quotes:

# Good -- placeholders are auto-escaped
command = "echo {error}"

# Bad -- wrapping in quotes produces nested quoting
command = 'echo "{error}"'
Variable Description Available
{job_id} Review job ID (numeric, not quoted) Always
{repo} Absolute repo path Always
{repo_name} Display name for the repo Always
{sha} Commit SHA or git ref Always
{agent} Agent that ran the review (e.g., codex, claude-code) Always
{verdict} P (pass) or F (fail) review.completed only
{findings} Full review output from the agent review.completed only
{error} Error message describing why the job failed review.failed only

Variables that aren't available for a given event type interpolate to an empty string ('').

Built-in: Beads Integration

If you use beads for issue tracking, roborev has a built-in hook type that creates issues automatically when reviews surface problems. This is the recommended way to track review findings without manual triage.

# .roborev.toml
[[hooks]]
event = "review.failed"
type = "beads"

[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
type = "beads"

What the type = "beads" hook does for each event:

Event Verdict Action
review.failed n/a Creates a priority-1 issue: "Review failed for {repo} ({sha}): run roborev show {job_id}"
review.completed F (fail) Creates a priority-2 issue: "Review findings for {repo} ({sha}): roborev show {job_id} / one-shot fix with roborev fix {job_id}"
review.completed P (pass) No action

The hook runs in the repo's working directory so bd finds the correct .beads/ database. Issue titles include the roborev show command so you can jump straight to the full review.

Built-in: Kata Integration

If you use Kata for task tracking, roborev can file review failures and findings as Kata issues. For an overview of both directions of the integration, see Kata. To enable the hook:

[[hooks]]
event = "review.*"
type = "kata"
branches = ["main"]
labels = ["from-review"]
priority = 2

What the type = "kata" hook does for each event:

Event Verdict Action
review.failed n/a Creates a priority-1 Kata issue for the failed review job
review.completed F (fail) Creates a priority-2 Kata issue for the review findings, including roborev show and roborev fix commands
review.completed P (pass) No action

The Kata hook runs in the repo's working directory and uses the repo's committed .kata.toml binding by default. Set project = "myproj" to override the target project. Every issue receives the roborev label plus a marker label (review-failed or review-finding) and any extra labels you configure. roborev uses an idempotency key per job/event so reruns do not create duplicate Kata issues.

The kata CLI must be on PATH. If it is missing, or the repo is not bound to a Kata project, the hook is skipped. If you explicitly configured the hook but Kata fails because the binding is broken or the CLI command fails, the daemon logs the error so the integration does not fail silently.

Built-in: Webhook Integration

Use type = "webhook" to POST the review event as JSON to an external endpoint. This is useful for connecting roborev to dashboards, chatbots, or any service that accepts webhook payloads.

[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
type = "webhook"
url = "https://example.com/roborev-webhook"

[[hooks]]
event = "review.failed"
type = "webhook"
url = "https://example.com/roborev-webhook"

The webhook sends a JSON POST with a 5-second timeout. The payload is the full review event as JSON (type, ts, job_id, job_uuid, repo, repo_name, sha, branch, agent, verdict, findings, error, worktree_path), with unset fields omitted. See Event Fields for field semantics. The url field is treated as sensitive and is masked in roborev config list output. Webhook URLs are redacted in daemon logs (only the scheme and host are shown).

Webhook delivery is asynchronous and never blocks the review pipeline. Failed deliveries are logged but do not retry.

Custom Beads Commands

If you want different behavior (different priority, labels, or formatting), write your own beads command using template variables:

[[hooks]]
event = "review.failed"
command = "bd create 'Agent error on {sha}: run roborev show {job_id}' -p 1"

[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = "test {verdict} = F && bd create 'Review findings on {sha}: roborev show {job_id}' -p 3"

Examples

Desktop Notifications

Get notified when reviews finish so you don't have to keep checking:

# macOS -- uses built-in osascript
[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = "osascript -e 'display notification \"Review {verdict} for {repo_name}\" with title \"roborev\"'"

# Linux -- requires libnotify (notify-send)
[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = "notify-send -u normal roborev 'Review {verdict} for {repo_name} ({sha})'"

Slack Notifications

Post to a Slack channel when reviews fail. Set SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL in your environment:

[[hooks]]
event = "review.failed"
command = """curl -sf -X POST \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -d '{"text":"roborev: review failed for {repo_name} ({sha}). Run `roborev show {job_id}` for details."}' \
  $SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL"""

For both failures and findings, use two hooks:

[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = """test {verdict} = F && curl -sf -X POST \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -d '{"text":"roborev: review findings in {repo_name} ({sha}). Run `roborev show {job_id}`."}' \
  $SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL"""

[[hooks]]
event = "review.failed"
command = """curl -sf -X POST \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -d '{"text":"roborev: review failed for {repo_name} ({sha}). Run `roborev show {job_id}`."}' \
  $SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL"""

GitHub Issues

Create a GitHub issue when a review finds problems. Requires the gh CLI:

[[hooks]]
event = "review.failed"
command = "gh issue create --title 'roborev: review failed for {sha}' --body 'Review job {job_id} failed. Run `roborev show {job_id}` for details.' --label bug"

Event Logging

Log all review outcomes to a file for auditing or metrics:

# Global -- logs events from all repos
[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = "printf '%s %s %s %s %s\\n' $(date -Iseconds) {repo_name} {sha} {agent} {verdict} >> ~/.roborev/events.log"

[[hooks]]
event = "review.failed"
command = "printf '%s %s %s %s %s\\n' $(date -Iseconds) {repo_name} {sha} {agent} {error} >> ~/.roborev/events.log"

Running a Script

For complex logic, point the hook at a script. The working directory is the repo, so you have access to the git tree:

[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = "~/.roborev/hooks/on-review.sh {job_id} {verdict} {sha}"
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# ~/.roborev/hooks/on-review.sh
job_id=$1 verdict=$2 sha=$3

if [ "$verdict" = "F" ]; then
    roborev show --job "$job_id" >> ~/reviews/findings.log
fi

Conditional Hooks

Shell features work in commands since they run via sh -c. Use &&, ||, or test to add conditions:

# Only notify on failures, not passes
[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = "test {verdict} = F && notify-send roborev 'Findings in {repo_name}'"

# Run different scripts based on verdict
[[hooks]]
event = "review.completed"
command = "test {verdict} = P && ~/hooks/on-pass.sh {job_id} || ~/hooks/on-fail.sh {job_id}"

Behavior

  • Hooks run asynchronously in goroutines and never block the review pipeline
  • Hook errors are logged to the daemon log but never cause a review to fail
  • Each hook's working directory is set to the repo path, so repo-relative commands work
  • Commands run via sh -c, so shell features (pipes, redirects, &&, ||) work
  • Hooks pick up config changes via hot-reload -- no daemon restart needed
  • Multiple hooks can match the same event; they all fire independently
  • Branch filters fail closed: if a hook has a non-empty branches list and the event has no branch, the hook does not run

Git Hooks

In addition to review event hooks, roborev installs git hooks to integrate with your development workflow. These are managed automatically by roborev init.

Post-Rewrite Hook

The post-rewrite hook preserves review history when you rebase or amend commits. Without it, rebasing would orphan your reviews because the commit SHAs change.

When git runs rebase or commit --amend, the hook receives the old and new SHA pairs and calls roborev remap. For each pair, roborev:

  1. Computes the patch ID for both the old and new commits
  2. If the patch content is identical (only the SHA changed), updates the review record to point to the new SHA
  3. If the patch content differs (the rebase modified the commit), leaves the review untouched

This means reviews survive clean rebases automatically. If you rebase and resolve conflicts that change a commit's diff, the review for that commit is not remapped (since the code it reviewed no longer matches).

The hook runs silently. If roborev is not on PATH or the daemon is not running, the hook exits without error and does not block git operations.

Debugging

Hook output and errors appear in the daemon log. To watch hooks fire in real time:

# Follow the daemon log (the daemon writes to stderr)
roborev daemon run 2>&1 | grep -i hook

If a hook isn't firing, check:

  1. The event field matches the event type (use review.* to catch everything)
  2. The config file is valid TOML (cat ~/.roborev/config.toml | toml-lint or similar)
  3. The command works when run manually from the repo directory
  4. The daemon has reloaded the config (check roborev status for the config reload counter)