pre-commit is a framework to run hooks written in many languages, and it manages the language toolchain and dependencies for running the hooks.
prek is a reimagined version of pre-commit, built in Rust. It is designed to be a faster, dependency-free and drop-in alternative for it, while also providing some additional long-requested features.
Warning
prek is not production-ready yet. Some subcommands and languages are not implemented. See the current gaps for drop-in parity: TODO.
It's already being adopted by some projects, please give it a try - we'd love your feedback!
- 🚀 A single binary with no dependencies, does not require Python or any other runtime.
- ⚡ About 10x faster than pre-commit and uses only half the disk space.
- 🔄 Fully compatible with the original pre-commit configurations and hooks.
- 🏗️ Built-in support for monorepos (i.e. workspace mode).
- 🐍 Integration with uv for managing Python virtual environments and dependencies.
- 🛠️ Improved toolchain installations for Python, Node.js, Go, Rust and Ruby, shared between hooks.
- 📦 Built-in Rust-native implementation of some common hooks.
prek is designed as a drop-in replacement:
- Install prek
- Replace pre-commit with prek in your commands
- Your existing .pre-commit-config.yaml works unchanged
For configuring .pre-commit-config.yaml and writing hooks, you can refer to the pre-commit documentation as prek is fully compatible with it.
- It is about 10x faster than pre-commit and uses only half the disk space.
- It redesigned how hook environments and toolchains are managed, they are all shared between hooks, which reduces the disk space usage and speeds up the installation process.
- Repositories are cloned in parallel, and hooks are installed in parallel if their dependencies are disjoint.
- It uses uv for creating Python virtualenvs and installing dependencies, which is known for its speed and efficiency.
- It implements some common hooks in Rust, built in prek, which are faster than their Python counterparts.
- No need to install Python or any other runtime, just download a single binary.
- No hassle with your Python version or virtual environments, prek automatically installs the required Python version and creates a virtual environment for you.
- Built-in support for workspaces (or monorepos), each subproject can have its own .pre-commit-config.yaml file.
- prek run has some nifty improvements over pre-commit run, such as:
- prek run --directory <dir> runs hooks for files in the specified directory, no need to use git ls-files -- <dir> | xargs pre-commit run --files anymore.
- prek run --last-commit runs hooks for files changed in the last commit.
- prek run [HOOK] [HOOK] selects and runs multiple hooks.
- prek list command lists all available hooks, their ids, and descriptions, providing a better overview of the configured hooks.
- prek provides shell completions for prek run <hook_id> command, making it easier to run specific hooks without remembering their ids.
For more detailed improvements prek offers, take a look at Difference from pre-commit.
prek is pretty new, but it is already being used or recommend by some projects and organizations:
Standalone installerprek provides a standalone installer script to download and install the tool,
On Linux and macOS:
On Windows:
prek is published as Python binary wheel to PyPI, you can install it using pip, uv (recommended), or pipx:
To use prek with mise:
CargoBuild from source using Cargo (Rust 1.89+ is required):
prek release artifacts can be downloaded directly from the GitHub releases.
If installed via the standalone installer, prek can update itself to the latest version:
This project is heavily inspired by the original pre-commit tool, and it wouldn't be possible without the hard work of the maintainers and contributors of that project.
And a special thanks to the Astral team for their remarkable projects, particularly uv, from which I've learned a lot on how to write efficient and idiomatic Rust code.