~bzr-pqm/bzr/bzr.dev

2070.4.5 by John Arbash Meinel
cleanup copyright line
1
# Copyright (C) 2006 Canonical Ltd
2023.1.2 by ghigo
add help topics module
2
#
3
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
4
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
5
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
6
# (at your option) any later version.
7
#
8
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
9
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
10
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
11
# GNU General Public License for more details.
12
#
13
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
14
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
15
# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA  02111-1307  USA
16
17
"""A collection of extra help information for using bzr.
18
19
Help topics are meant to be help for items that aren't commands, but will
20
help bzr become fully learnable without referring to a tutorial.
21
"""
22
2070.4.13 by John Arbash Meinel
Switch help_topics to use a Registry.
23
from bzrlib import registry
24
25
26
class HelpTopicRegistry(registry.Registry):
2070.4.15 by John Arbash Meinel
Fixes from Martin
27
    """A Registry customized for handling help topics."""
2070.4.13 by John Arbash Meinel
Switch help_topics to use a Registry.
28
29
    def register(self, topic, detail, summary):
30
        """Register a new help topic.
31
32
        :param topic: Name of documentation entry
33
        :param detail: Function or string object providing detailed
34
            documentation for topic.  Function interface is detail(topic).
35
            This should return a text string of the detailed information.
36
        :param summary: String providing single-line documentation for topic.
37
        """
38
        # The detail is stored as the 'object' and the 
39
        super(HelpTopicRegistry, self).register(topic, detail, info=summary)
40
41
    def register_lazy(self, topic, module_name, member_name, summary):
42
        """Register a new help topic, and import the details on demand.
43
44
        :param topic: Name of documentation entry
45
        :param module_name: The module to find the detailed help.
46
        :param member_name: The member of the module to use for detailed help.
47
        :param summary: String providing single-line documentation for topic.
48
        """
2070.4.15 by John Arbash Meinel
Fixes from Martin
49
        super(HelpTopicRegistry, self).register_lazy(topic, module_name,
50
                                                     member_name, info=summary)
2070.4.13 by John Arbash Meinel
Switch help_topics to use a Registry.
51
52
    def get_detail(self, topic):
53
        """Get the detailed help on a given topic."""
54
        obj = self.get(topic)
55
        if callable(obj):
56
            return obj(topic)
57
        else:
58
            return obj
59
60
    def get_summary(self, topic):
61
        """Get the single line summary for the topic."""
62
        return self.get_info(topic)
63
64
65
topic_registry = HelpTopicRegistry()
2023.1.2 by ghigo
add help topics module
66
67
68
#----------------------------------------------------
69
2070.4.13 by John Arbash Meinel
Switch help_topics to use a Registry.
70
def _help_on_topics(dummy):
2023.1.2 by ghigo
add help topics module
71
    """Write out the help for topics to outfile"""
72
2070.4.13 by John Arbash Meinel
Switch help_topics to use a Registry.
73
    topics = topic_registry.keys()
2070.4.2 by John Arbash Meinel
cleanup help_topics.py
74
    lmax = max(len(topic) for topic in topics)
2023.1.4 by ghigo
the ''bzr help topics'' output is shorter
75
        
2070.4.13 by John Arbash Meinel
Switch help_topics to use a Registry.
76
    out = []
2023.1.2 by ghigo
add help topics module
77
    for topic in topics:
2070.4.13 by John Arbash Meinel
Switch help_topics to use a Registry.
78
        summary = topic_registry.get_summary(topic)
79
        out.append("%-*s %s\n" % (lmax, topic, summary))
80
    return ''.join(out)
81
82
83
def _help_on_revisionspec(name):
2376.4.34 by Jonathan Lange
Remove spurious quote mark in docstring.
84
    """Write the summary help for all documented topics to outfile."""
2023.1.2 by ghigo
add help topics module
85
    import bzrlib.revisionspec
86
2070.4.13 by John Arbash Meinel
Switch help_topics to use a Registry.
87
    out = []
88
    out.append("\nRevision prefix specifier:"
89
               "\n--------------------------\n")
2023.1.2 by ghigo
add help topics module
90
91
    for i in bzrlib.revisionspec.SPEC_TYPES:
2070.4.14 by John Arbash Meinel
Switch revisionspec to use the help defined as help_txt rather than the doc string
92
        doc = i.help_txt
93
        if doc == bzrlib.revisionspec.RevisionSpec.help_txt:
2023.1.2 by ghigo
add help topics module
94
            doc = "N/A\n"
2070.4.2 by John Arbash Meinel
cleanup help_topics.py
95
        while (doc[-2:] == '\n\n' or doc[-1:] == ' '):
2023.1.2 by ghigo
add help topics module
96
            doc = doc[:-1]
97
2070.4.13 by John Arbash Meinel
Switch help_topics to use a Registry.
98
        out.append("  %s %s\n\n" % (i.prefix, doc))
99
100
    return ''.join(out)
2023.1.2 by ghigo
add help topics module
101
2241.2.11 by ghigo
On the basis of Robert Collins and John Arbash Meinel
102
2241.2.5 by ghigo
add the topics transport
103
def _help_on_transport(name):
104
    from bzrlib.transport import (
105
        transport_list_registry,
106
    )
107
    import textwrap
108
109
    def add_string(proto, help, maxl, prefix_width=20):
110
       help_lines = textwrap.wrap(help, maxl - prefix_width)
111
       line_with_indent = '\n' + ' ' * prefix_width
112
       help_text = line_with_indent.join(help_lines)
113
       return "%-20s%s\n" % (proto, help_text)
114
2241.2.8 by ghigo
- rename transport urlspec
115
    def sort_func(a,b):
116
        a1 = a[:a.rfind("://")]
117
        b1 = b[:b.rfind("://")]
118
        if a1>b1:
119
            return +1
120
        elif a1<b1:
121
            return -1
122
        else:
123
            return 0
124
2241.2.6 by ghigo
removed unused code
125
    out = []
2241.2.5 by ghigo
add the topics transport
126
    protl = []
127
    decl = []
128
    protos = transport_list_registry.keys( )
2241.2.8 by ghigo
- rename transport urlspec
129
    protos.sort(sort_func)
2241.2.5 by ghigo
add the topics transport
130
    for proto in protos:
131
        shorthelp = transport_list_registry.get_help(proto)
132
        if not shorthelp:
133
            continue
134
        if proto.endswith("://"):
135
            protl.extend(add_string(proto, shorthelp, 79))
136
        else:
137
            decl.extend(add_string(proto, shorthelp, 79))
138
139
2241.2.11 by ghigo
On the basis of Robert Collins and John Arbash Meinel
140
    out = "\nSupported URL prefix\n--------------------\n" + \
141
            ''.join(protl)
142
143
    if len(decl):
144
        out += "\nSupported modifiers\n-------------------\n" + \
145
            ''.join(decl)
2241.2.5 by ghigo
add the topics transport
146
147
    return out
148
2023.1.2 by ghigo
add help topics module
149
150
_basic_help= \
151
"""Bazaar -- a free distributed version-control tool
152
http://bazaar-vcs.org/
153
154
Basic commands:
155
  bzr init           makes this directory a versioned branch
156
  bzr branch         make a copy of another branch
157
158
  bzr add            make files or directories versioned
159
  bzr ignore         ignore a file or pattern
160
  bzr mv             move or rename a versioned file
161
162
  bzr status         summarize changes in working copy
163
  bzr diff           show detailed diffs
164
165
  bzr merge          pull in changes from another branch
166
  bzr commit         save some or all changes
167
168
  bzr log            show history of changes
169
  bzr check          validate storage
170
171
  bzr help init      more help on e.g. init command
172
  bzr help commands  list all commands
173
  bzr help topics    list all help topics
174
"""
175
176
1551.9.32 by Aaron Bentley
Add global option help
177
_global_options =\
178
"""Global Options
179
180
These options may be used with any command, and may appear in front of any
181
command.  (e.g. "bzr --quiet help").
182
183
--quiet        Suppress informational output; only print errors and warnings
184
--version      Print the version number
185
186
--no-aliases   Do not process command aliases when running this command
187
--builtin      Use the built-in version of a command, not the plugin version.
188
               This does not suppress other plugin effects
189
--no-plugins   Do not process any plugins
190
2247.1.1 by John Arbash Meinel
fix --Derror => -Derror (trivial)
191
-Derror        Instead of normal error handling, always print a traceback on
1551.9.32 by Aaron Bentley
Add global option help
192
               error.
193
--profile      Profile execution using the hotshot profiler
194
--lsprof       Profile execution using the lsprof profiler
195
--lsprof-file  Profile execution using the lsprof profiler, and write the
2493.2.7 by Aaron Bentley
Add info to --lsprof-file entry in global options
196
               results to a specified file.  If the filename ends with ".txt",
197
               text format will be used.  If the filename ends with
198
               ".callgrind", output will be formatted for use with KCacheGrind.
199
               Otherwise, the output will be a pickle.
200
201
See doc/developers/profiling.txt for more information on profiling.
1551.9.32 by Aaron Bentley
Add global option help
202
203
Note: --version must be supplied before any command.
204
"""
205
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
206
_checkouts = \
207
"""Checkouts
208
2245.7.2 by James Westby
Update the checkouts help topic with the comments from Aaron.
209
Checkouts are source trees that are connected to a branch, so that when
210
you commit in the source tree, the commit goes into that branch.  They
211
allow you to use a simpler, more centralized workflow, ignoring some of
212
Bazaar's decentralized features until you want them. Using checkouts
213
with shared repositories is very similar to working with SVN or CVS, but
214
doesn't have the same restrictions.  And using checkouts still allows
215
others working on the project to use whatever workflow they like.
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
216
217
A checkout is created with the bzr checkout command (see "help checkout").
2245.7.2 by James Westby
Update the checkouts help topic with the comments from Aaron.
218
You pass it a reference to another branch, and it will create a local copy
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
219
for you that still contains a reference to the branch you created the
2245.7.2 by James Westby
Update the checkouts help topic with the comments from Aaron.
220
checkout from (the master branch). Then if you make any commits they will be
221
made on the other branch first. This creates an instant mirror of your work, or
222
facilitates lockstep development, where each developer is working together,
223
continuously integrating the changes of others.
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
224
225
However the checkout is still a first class branch in Bazaar terms, so that
2245.7.2 by James Westby
Update the checkouts help topic with the comments from Aaron.
226
you have the full history locally.  As you have a first class branch you can
227
also commit locally if you want, for instance due to the temporary loss af a
228
network connection. Use the --local option to commit to do this. All the local
229
commits will then be made on the master branch the next time you do a non-local
230
commit.
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
231
232
If you are using a checkout from a shared branch you will periodically want to
233
pull in all the changes made by others. This is done using the "update"
2245.7.2 by James Westby
Update the checkouts help topic with the comments from Aaron.
234
command. The changes need to be applied before any non-local commit, but
235
Bazaar will tell you if there are any changes and suggest that you use this
236
command when needed.
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
237
238
It is also possible to create a "lightweight" checkout by passing the
239
--lightweight flag to checkout. A lightweight checkout is even closer to an
240
SVN checkout in that it is not a first class branch, it mainly consists of the
241
working tree. This means that any history operations must query the master
242
branch, which could be slow if a network connection is involved. Also, as you
243
don't have a local branch, then you cannot commit locally.
244
2374.1.1 by Ian Clatworthy
Help and man page fixes
245
Lightweight checkouts work best when you have fast reliable access to the
2245.7.2 by James Westby
Update the checkouts help topic with the comments from Aaron.
246
master branch. This means that if the master branch is on the same disk or LAN
247
a lightweight checkout will be faster than a heavyweight one for any commands
248
that modify the revision history (as only one copy branch needs to be updated).
249
Heavyweight checkouts will generally be faster for any command that uses the
250
history but does not change it, but if the master branch is on the same disk
251
then there wont be a noticeable difference.
252
253
Another possible use for a checkout is to use it with a treeless repository
2370.1.2 by Ian Clatworthy
Minor fixes to help on checkouts
254
containing your branches, where you maintain only one working tree by
2245.7.2 by James Westby
Update the checkouts help topic with the comments from Aaron.
255
switching the master branch that the checkout points to when you want to 
256
work on a different branch.
257
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
258
Obviously to commit on a checkout you need to be able to write to the master
2370.1.2 by Ian Clatworthy
Minor fixes to help on checkouts
259
branch. This means that the master branch must be accessible over a writeable
2245.7.2 by James Westby
Update the checkouts help topic with the comments from Aaron.
260
protocol , such as sftp://, and that you have write permissions at the other
261
end. Checkouts also work on the local file system, so that all that matters is
262
file permissions.
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
263
264
You can change the master of a checkout by using the "bind" command (see "help
265
bind"). This will change the location that the commits are sent to. The bind
2245.7.2 by James Westby
Update the checkouts help topic with the comments from Aaron.
266
command can also be used to turn a branch into a heavy checkout. If you
267
would like to convert your heavy checkout into a normal branch so that every
268
commit is local, you can use the "unbind" command.
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
269
2245.7.2 by James Westby
Update the checkouts help topic with the comments from Aaron.
270
Related commands:
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
271
272
  checkout    Create a checkout. Pass --lightweight to get a lightweight
273
              checkout
274
  update      Pull any changes in the master branch in to your checkout
275
  commit      Make a commit that is sent to the master branch. If you have
276
              a heavy checkout then the --local option will commit to the 
277
              checkout without sending the commit to the master
278
  bind        Change the master branch that the commits in the checkout will
279
              be sent to
280
  unbind      Turn a heavy checkout into a standalone branch so that any
281
              commits are only made locally
282
"""
283
2401.2.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic for repositories.
284
_repositories = \
285
"""Repositories
286
2604.2.1 by Robert Collins
(robertc) Introduce a pack command.
287
Repositories in Bazaar are where committed information is stored. There is
288
a repository associated with every branch.
289
290
Repositories are a form of database. Bzr will usually maintain this for
291
good performance automatically, but in some situations (e.g. when doing
292
very many commits in a short time period) you may want to ask bzr to 
293
optimise the database indices. This can be done by the 'bzr pack' command.
294
295
By default just running 'bzr init' will create a repository within the new
296
branch but it is possible to create a shared repository which allows multiple
297
branches to share their information in the same location. When a new branch is
298
created it will first look to see if there is a containing shared repository it
299
can use.
2485.1.2 by James Westby
Update with comments from review, thanks to John and Aaron.
300
301
When two branches of the same project share a repository, there is
302
generally a large space saving. For some operations (e.g. branching
303
within the repository) this translates in to a large time saving.
2401.2.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic for repositories.
304
305
To create a shared repository use the init-repository command (or the alias
2485.1.2 by James Westby
Update with comments from review, thanks to John and Aaron.
306
init-repo). This command takes the location of the repository to create. This
307
means that 'bzr init-repository repo' will create a directory named 'repo',
308
which contains a shared repository. Any new branches that are created in this
309
directory will then use it for storage.
2401.2.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic for repositories.
310
311
It is a good idea to create a repository whenever you might create more
312
than one branch of a project. This is true for both working areas where you
313
are doing the development, and any server areas that you use for hosting
2485.1.2 by James Westby
Update with comments from review, thanks to John and Aaron.
314
projects. In the latter case, it is common to want branches without working
315
trees. Since the files in the branch will not be edited directly there is no
316
need to use up disk space for a working tree. To create a repository in which
317
the branches will not have working trees pass the '--no-trees' option to
318
'init-repository'.
2401.2.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic for repositories.
319
320
Related commands:
321
322
  init-repository   Create a shared repository. Use --no-trees to create one
2485.1.2 by James Westby
Update with comments from review, thanks to John and Aaron.
323
                    in which new branches won't get a working tree.
2401.2.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic for repositories.
324
"""
325
2485.1.2 by James Westby
Update with comments from review, thanks to John and Aaron.
326
2401.2.2 by James Westby
Add a working-trees help topic.
327
_working_trees = \
328
"""Working Trees
329
2485.1.2 by James Westby
Update with comments from review, thanks to John and Aaron.
330
A working tree is the contents of a branch placed on disk so that you can
2401.2.2 by James Westby
Add a working-trees help topic.
331
see the files and edit them. The working tree is where you make changes to a
332
branch, and when you commit the current state of the working tree is the
333
snapshot that is recorded in the commit.
334
2485.1.2 by James Westby
Update with comments from review, thanks to John and Aaron.
335
When you push a branch to a remote system, a working tree will not be
336
created. If one is already present the files will not be updated. The
337
branch information will be updated and the working tree will be marked
338
as out-of-date. Updating a working tree remotely is difficult, as there
339
may be uncommitted changes or the update may cause content conflicts that are
340
difficult to deal with remotely.
2401.2.2 by James Westby
Add a working-trees help topic.
341
342
If you have a branch with no working tree you can use the 'checkout' command
343
to create a working tree. If you run 'bzr checkout .' from the branch it will
2485.1.2 by James Westby
Update with comments from review, thanks to John and Aaron.
344
create the working tree. If the branch is updated remotely, you can update the
345
working tree by running 'bzr update' in that directory.
2401.2.2 by James Westby
Add a working-trees help topic.
346
347
If you have a branch with a working tree that you do not want the 'remove-tree'
348
command will remove the tree if it is safe. This can be done to avoid the
349
warning about the remote working tree not being updated when pushing to the
350
branch. It can also be useful when working with a '--no-trees' repository
351
(see 'bzr help repositories').
352
353
If you want to have a working tree on a remote machine that you push to you
354
can either run 'bzr update' in the remote branch after each push, or use some
355
other method to update the tree during the push. There is an 'rspush' plugin
356
that will update the working tree using rsync as well as doing a push. There
357
is also a 'push-and-update' plugin that automates running 'bzr update' via SSH
358
after each push.
359
360
Useful commands:
361
362
  checkout     Create a working tree when a branch does not have one.
363
  remove-tree  Removes the working tree from a branch when it is safe to do so.
364
  update       When a working tree is out of sync with it's associated branch
365
               this will update the tree to match the branch.
366
"""
367
2520.1.1 by Daniel Watkins
Added 'help status-flags'.
368
_status_flags = \
369
"""Status Flags
370
371
Status flags are used to summarise changes to the working tree in a concise
372
manner.  They are in the form:
373
   xxx   <filename>
374
where the columns' meanings are as follows.
375
376
Column 1: versioning / renames
377
  + File versioned
378
  - File unversioned
379
  R File renamed
380
  ? File unknown
381
  C File has conflicts
382
  P Entry for a pending merge (not a file)
383
384
Column 2: Contents
385
  N File created
386
  D File deleted
387
  K File kind changed
388
  M File modified
389
390
Column 3: Execute
391
  * The execute bit was changed
392
"""
393
1551.9.32 by Aaron Bentley
Add global option help
394
2070.4.13 by John Arbash Meinel
Switch help_topics to use a Registry.
395
topic_registry.register("revisionspec", _help_on_revisionspec,
396
                        "Explain how to use --revision")
397
topic_registry.register('basic', _basic_help, "Basic commands")
398
topic_registry.register('topics', _help_on_topics, "Topics list")
2204.4.1 by Aaron Bentley
Add 'formats' help topic
399
def get_format_topic(topic):
2204.4.7 by Aaron Bentley
restore register_lazy, remove register_factory, other updates
400
    from bzrlib import bzrdir
2204.4.1 by Aaron Bentley
Add 'formats' help topic
401
    return bzrdir.format_registry.help_topic(topic)
2204.4.10 by Aaron Bentley
Capitalize 'D' in 'directory formats'
402
topic_registry.register('formats', get_format_topic, 'Directory formats')
1551.9.34 by Aaron Bentley
Fix NEWS and whitespace
403
topic_registry.register('global-options', _global_options,
1551.9.32 by Aaron Bentley
Add global option help
404
                        'Options that can be used with any command')
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
405
topic_registry.register('checkouts', _checkouts,
406
                        'Information on what a checkout is')
2241.2.8 by ghigo
- rename transport urlspec
407
topic_registry.register('urlspec', _help_on_transport,
2241.2.5 by ghigo
add the topics transport
408
                        "Supported transport protocols")
2520.1.1 by Daniel Watkins
Added 'help status-flags'.
409
topic_registry.register('status-flags', _status_flags,
410
                        "Help on status flags")
2376.4.36 by Jonathan Lange
Provide really basic help topic for our bug tracker support.
411
def get_bugs_topic(topic):
412
    from bzrlib import bugtracker
413
    return bugtracker.tracker_registry.help_topic(topic)
414
topic_registry.register('bugs', get_bugs_topic, 'Bug tracker support')
2401.2.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic for repositories.
415
topic_registry.register('repositories', _repositories,
416
                        'Basic information on shared repositories.')
2401.2.2 by James Westby
Add a working-trees help topic.
417
topic_registry.register('working-trees', _working_trees,
418
                        'Information on working trees')
2245.7.1 by James Westby
Add a help topic describing checkouts and how they work.
419
2432.1.1 by Robert Collins
Add a HelpTopicContext object.
420
2432.1.15 by Robert Collins
Rename Context (in bzrlib.help) to Index, for a clearer name.
421
class HelpTopicIndex(object):
422
    """A index for bzr help that returns topics."""
2432.1.8 by Robert Collins
HelpTopicContext now returns RegisteredTopic objects for get_topics calls.
423
2432.1.17 by Robert Collins
Add prefixes to HelpIndexes.
424
    def __init__(self):
425
        self.prefix = ''
426
2432.1.8 by Robert Collins
HelpTopicContext now returns RegisteredTopic objects for get_topics calls.
427
    def get_topics(self, topic):
428
        """Search for topic in the HelpTopicRegistry.
429
430
        :param topic: A topic to search for. None is treated as 'basic'.
431
        :return: A list which is either empty or contains a single
432
            RegisteredTopic entry.
433
        """
434
        if topic is None:
435
            topic = 'basic'
436
        if topic in topic_registry:
437
            return [RegisteredTopic(topic)]
438
        else:
439
            return []
440
441
442
class RegisteredTopic(object):
443
    """A help topic which has been registered in the HelpTopicRegistry.
444
445
    These topics consist of nothing more than the name of the topic - all
446
    data is retrieved on demand from the registry.
447
    """
448
449
    def __init__(self, topic):
450
        """Constructor.
451
452
        :param topic: The name of the topic that this represents.
453
        """
454
        self.topic = topic
2432.1.10 by Robert Collins
Add get_help_text() to RegisteredTopic to get the help as a string.
455
2432.1.22 by Robert Collins
Teach RegisteredTopic to support the additional_see_also list of related help terms.
456
    def get_help_text(self, additional_see_also=None):
457
        """Return a string with the help for this topic.
458
459
        :param additional_see_also: Additional help topics to be
460
            cross-referenced.
461
        """
462
        result = topic_registry.get_detail(self.topic)
2432.1.25 by Robert Collins
Return plugin module docstrings for 'bzr help plugin'.
463
        # there is code duplicated here and in bzrlib/plugin.py's 
464
        # matching Topic code. This should probably be factored in
465
        # to a helper function and a common base class.
2432.1.22 by Robert Collins
Teach RegisteredTopic to support the additional_see_also list of related help terms.
466
        if additional_see_also is not None:
467
            see_also = sorted(set(additional_see_also))
468
        else:
469
            see_also = None
470
        if see_also:
471
            result += '\nSee also: '
472
            result += ', '.join(see_also)
473
            result += '\n'
474
        return result
2432.1.27 by Robert Collins
Add a get_help_topic method to RegisteredTopic.
475
476
    def get_help_topic(self):
477
        """Return the help topic this can be found under."""
478
        return self.topic
2485.1.1 by James Westby
Update the help topics to the latest bzr.dev.
479