~bzr-pqm/bzr/bzr.dev

1185.1.29 by Robert Collins
merge merge tweaks from aaron, which includes latest .dev
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***********************
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Reference for Bazaar-NG
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***********************
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:Author: Martin Pool
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:Copyright: Copyright 2004, 2005 Martin Pool; GNU GPL v2
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.. contents::
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Generalities
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------------
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Note that this document refers to many features which are not
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implemented yet.  Some may never be implemented.
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The top level command is ``bzr``.  Everything else is invoked as a
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subcommand of that, as is common in version control systems.
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A source directory containing some files to be versioned is called a
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*tree*; this contains a number of *files* and possibly some
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subdirectories.  The point of bzr is to keep track of the *versions*
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(or *revisions*) of the tree at various points in time.  A sequence of
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versions of a tree form a *branch*.  All branches begin with the empty
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directory, called the null revision.  Two branches may have some
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revisions in common and then *diverge* later -- which is why they're
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called branches.  We can distinguish the *working copy* of the files,
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which is available for modification, from their previous versions.
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Each file has a unique *file-id*, which remains the same for the life
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of the file, even when files are renamed.  Files also have a *kind*,
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which can currently be *file* or *directory*, and which cannot change
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for any file-id.
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The difference between two revisions is a *changeset*.  Changesets
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include the textual changes to files, the affected file-ids, the date
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of the change, the author, the name of the branch.  Changesets have a
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globally unique identifier.
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A changeset committed to a branch is *local* to that branch; otherwise
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it is foreign.  (Note that a changeset may be local to several
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different branches if it was created prior to their divergence.)
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Changesets may include a note that they *incorporate* other
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changesets; this is used when changes are merged from one branch into
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another.  After changes have been merged but before they are committed
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they are listed as *pending merges*; when they are committed they are
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listed within their changeset.
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All files in a versioned directory can be divided into four classes:
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Versioned
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  Anything assigned a file-id.  Changes to these files are tracked.
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Control
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  Anything under ``.bzr/``.  Should not be edited by users.
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Ignored
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  Anything matching an ignore pattern.  As the name suggests, ignored
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  by Bazaar.
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Unknown
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  Everything else.  Generally ignored, except that they are reported
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  as 'unknown' and can be added by a recursive add_.
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We say a tree, or a file, is *unmodified* if it is the same as in the
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most recent version, or *modified* otherwise.
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*Committing* creates a new revision equal to the current state of the
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tree.  Immediately after committing, all files are unmodified, since
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they are the same as the just-committed state.
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File states
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-----------
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A file is in exactly one of these *states*.  These are identified by
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single characters which should be familiar to people used to svn/cvs.
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?, Unknown
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    Not versioned, ignored, or control.
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    Typically new files that should be versioned or
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    ignored but have not been marked as either yet.
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., Up-to-date
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    This versioned file is the same as in the last revision on this
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    branch.  (The file had the same name and text and properties in
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    the previous revision.)
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A, Added
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    This file will be added by the next commit.  (The file ID was not
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    present in the previous revision.)
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M, Modified
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    This file has been changed from the previous revision and will be
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    recorded in the next commit.  (The file had the same name but
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    different text in the previous revision.)  Directories have no 
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    text and so can never be in this state.
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D, Deleted
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    This file has been removed from the inventory or deleted in the 
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    working copy and will be removed in the next revision.
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R, Renamed
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    This file had a different name in the previous revision; the next
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    commit will record the new name.  The file text may also have been
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    modified.
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These are only summaries, not complete descriptions.  For example the
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'D' state does not distinguish between a file removed by the remove_
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command and one whose text has been deleted.  (There should perhaps be
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a variation of the ``info`` command, or a ``file-info`` that shows
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enough details.)
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A directory may be up-to-date even if some files inside it have
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different states.
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.. _pinned: pinned.html
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Global options
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--------------
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These can be applied to many or all commands.
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--help     Show help, either globally or for the selected command.
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-v, --verbose  Show progress/explanatory information.  This is good if
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               for example using a slow network and you want to see
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               that something is happening.
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--debug    Show way too much detail about files being opened, locking,
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           etc.  Intended for
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--silent   Show nothing but errors.  (Perhaps unnecessary; you could
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           just redirect stdout to /dev/null.)
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--version  Show version and quit.
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--dry-run         Show what would be done, but don't make any
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                  permanent changes.
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--directory DIR   Operate in given directory rather than cwd.
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                  (Perhaps this should be ``-d``, but that might be
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                  better saved for ``--delete``.  Perhaps -b?)
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--recurse, -R     When a directory name is given, operate not only on
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                  that directory but also any files or directories
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                  contained within it.
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                  (XXX: Should this be on by default?  It will often
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                  be what people want, but also possibly more
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                  surprising.  If it is, we will want a
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                  ``--no-recurse``.)
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--force           Relax safety checks.
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--format=FORMAT
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   Choose output format; options might include XML, YAML, text.
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--id-only
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    Only update the inventory, don't touch the working copy.  (May
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    need a better name.)
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--show-ids
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    List file ids, as well as names.
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init
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----
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Create bzr control files in the current directory::
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    bzr init
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Use this, followed by add_ and then commit_ to import or start a new
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project.
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add
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---
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Add one or more files or directories to the branch::
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    bzr add FILE...
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Each added file is assigned a new file-id, and will be in the Added
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state.  They will be recorded in the next commit that covers that
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file, and then in the Up-to-date state.
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|File state   |Action                                           |
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+=============+=================================================+
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|?            |New file id given to file; now in A state        |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|I            |"Adding previously ignored file"; now in A       |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|Z, ZM        |Add file with new ID; now in A state.            |
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|             |(To get the old ID back, use revert_ on that     |
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|             |file.)                                           |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|U, A, M, R,  |Warning "already added"; no change               |
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|RM           |                                                 |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|!, D         |Error "no such file"; no change                  |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|#            |Error "cannot add control file"; no change       |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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--id ID
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      Add file with given ID rather than a random UUID.  Error if this
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      id is assigned to any other file.  (not implemented yet)
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--recurse
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    Add directory and all Unknown children, recursively.  This
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    includes U children of previously-added subdirectories.
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    (not implemented yet)
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This command will add any new source files, except for those matching
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ignore rules::
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  $ bzr add --recurse .
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(Note: I hope this might satisfy people who are fond of arch
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name-based tagging, and who dislike individually adding & removing
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files.  All they need to do is set up the appropriate ignore patterns,
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then 'add -R .' and they're done.)
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remove
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------
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Make a file no longer be versioned, and record its deletion from the
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inventory::
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    $ bzr remove FILE...
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This does not remove the working copy.  If you wish to both remove the
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working copy and unregister the file, you can simply delete it using
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regular ``rm``.  This is the opposite of add_.
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:State table:
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+--------------+--------------------------------------------------+
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| File state   | Action                                           |
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+==============+==================================================+
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| M, R, RM, .  | File to D state.                                 |
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+--------------+--------------------------------------------------+
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| A            | File back to I or ? state                        |
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+--------------+--------------------------------------------------+
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| I, ?, Z, ZM  | Error, no change                                 |
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+--------------+--------------------------------------------------+
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| !            | Change to D                                      |
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+--------------+--------------------------------------------------+
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| D            | Warning "already deleted"                        |
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+--------------+--------------------------------------------------+
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| #            | "Cannot remove control file"                     |
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+--------------+--------------------------------------------------+
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diff
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----
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Show all changes compared to the pristine as a text changeset.
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--full      Include details for even binary files, uuencoded.  Makes the
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            diff long but lossless.
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export
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------
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::
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    bzr export TO-DIR
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Copy the tree, but leave out Bazaar-NG control files.  This includes copying
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uncommitted changes.
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This is equivalent to copying the branch and then deleting the control
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directory (except more efficient).
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Should this also delete any other control files like ``.bzrignore``?
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status
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------
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Show which files are added/deleted/modified/unknown/missing/etc, as in
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subversion.
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Given the ``--check`` option, returns non-zero if there are any
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uncommitted changes.
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info
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----
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Display various information items about the branch.  Can be given
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various options to pull out particular fields for easier use in
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scripts.
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Should include:
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* branch name
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* parent
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* number of revisions
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* number of files that are versioned/modified/deleted/added/unknown
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* number of versioned directories
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* branch format version
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* number of people who have made commits
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* date of last commit
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delta
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-----
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Compute a two-way non-history-sensitive delta from one branch or
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version to another.  Basically a smart diff between the two.
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(Perhaps this should just be a ``--format`` option to diff_?)
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merge
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-----
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Merge changes in from another branch, and leave them uncommitted in
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this tree::
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   merge [FROM-BRANCH]
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This makes a note of the revisions which were merged.
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A range of revisions may be specified to cherry-pick changes from that
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branch, or to merge changes only up to a certain point.
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Merge refuses to run if there are uncommitted changes unless forced,
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so that merged changes don't get mixed up with your own changes.
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You can use a merge rather than an update to accomplish any of several
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things:
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* Merge in a patch, but modify it to either suit your taste or fix
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  textual or semantic conflicts.
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* Collapse several merged patches into a single changeset.  A feature
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  may go through many revisions when being developed on its own
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  branch, but you might want to hide that detail when it merges onto a
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  main branch.
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--revision RANGE  Merge only selected revisions, rather than
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                  everything that's not present yet.
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Before a merge is committed, it may be reversed with the revert_
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command.
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sync
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----
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::
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    sync [OTHER-BRANCH]
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--revision RANGE  Pull only selected revisions.
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Synchronize mirrored branches.
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A mirror branch is a branch that strictly follows a parent branch,
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without any changes being committed to it.  This is useful in several
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ways:
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* Moving a backup of a branch onto another machine to protect against
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  disk failure or laptop theft.
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* Making the complete history of a upstream branch available for
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  offline use.
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The result is the same as copying the whole branch, but it is more
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efficient for remote branches because only newly-added changesets are
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moved.   The result is similar to rsync except it respects Bzr locking.
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The same command can be used for push mirrors (changesets are moved
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from this branch to the other) or pull mirrors (vice versa).  Bzr
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automatically determines which to do by looking at which branch has
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more patches.   (Perhaps it would be clearer to have separate *push*
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and *pull* commands?)
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This command can only be used when the history of one branch is a
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subset of the other.  If you commit different changes to both
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branches, then ``sync`` will say that the branches have diverged and
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it will refuse to run.  This command also refuses to run if the
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destination branch has any uncommitted changes.  Uncommitted changes
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on the origin are not copied.
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Method:
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* Get the ordered list of change ids on both branches.
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* One list should be a prefix of the other; if not, fail.  The shorter
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  list will be the destination branch.
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* Check the destination has no uncommitted changes.
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* For each change present only in the origin, download it to the
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  destination, add to the changeset history and update the tree and
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  control files.
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commit
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------
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::
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   commit MESSAGE [WHAT]
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Commit changes from the working copy into the branch.  By default
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commits everything, but can be given a list of files directories or
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files.
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Partial commits (not implemented yet) should ideally be allowed even when the partial thing
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you want to commit is an add, delete or rename.  Partial commits are
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**not** allowed if patches have been merged in this change.
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Method:
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* check preconditions
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* get log, if not present or given on command line
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* re-check preconditions
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* calculate diff from pristine to working copy
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* store this diff, plus headers, into the patches directory
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* add the diff to the list of applied patches
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* update pristine tree
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Commit can optionally run some pre-commit and post-commit hooks,
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passing them the delta which will be applied; this might mail the
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delta or apply it to an export and run a test case there.
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:State table:
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|File state   |After commit                                     |
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+=============+=================================================+
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|?, I, #      |Unchanged                                        |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|A, M, R, RM  |Recorded, U                                      |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|D            |Gone                                             |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|Z, ZM        |Recorded, working copy remains as I or ?         |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|!            |Error "file is missing"; must be deleted or      |
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|             |reverted before commit                           |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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lint
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----
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Check for problems in the working copy.
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|File state   |Lint output                                      |
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+=============+=================================================+
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|?            |"Unknown file, please add/ignore/remove"         |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|Z, ZM        |"Zombie file, please add/ignore/remove/revert"   |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|!            |"File is missing, please recreate, delete or     |
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|             |revert."                                         |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|A, M, D, R,  |No output                                        |
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|RM, #, I     |                                                 |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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check
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-----
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Run various consistency/sanity checks on the branch.  These might
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include:
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* Make sure all patches named by the inventory exist.
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* No patch IDs are duplicated.
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* Make sure hash of each patch is correct.
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* Starting at zero, apply each patch and make sure it does not
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  conflict.
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* All files named in inventory are reasonable.
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* No file IDs are duplicated in inventory.
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* Possibly many more.
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* No patches are in both ``patch-history`` and ``merged-patches``.
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* The patches in the bag are exactly those listed in ``patch-history``.
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Maybe add a separate option to say that you believe the tree is clean.
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backout
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-------
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Reverse the changes made by previous changesets::
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   bzr backout REVISION
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   bzr backout REV1 REV2
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If a single revision is given, that single changeset is backed out.
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If two revisions are given, all changes in that range are backed out.
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The change that is reversed need not be the most recently committed
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change, but if there are revisions after the ones to be reverse which
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depend on them this command may cause conflicts.
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This undoes the changes but remembers that it was once applied, so it
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will not be merged again.  Anyone who pulls from later versions of
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this tree will also have that patch reversed.
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You can backout a backout patch, etc, which will restore the previous changes.
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This leaves the changeset prepared but not committed; after doing this
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you should commit it if you want.
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You can also backout only the parts of  a changeset touching a
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particular file or subdirectory::
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  bzr reverse foo.c@31
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revert
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------
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Undo changes to the working copy of files or directories, and discard
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any pending merge notes::
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  $ bzr revert [FILE...]
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If no files are specified, the entire tree is reverted, which is
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equivalent to specifying the top-level directory.  In either case, the
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list of pending merges is also cleared.
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This does not affect history, only the working copy.  A corollary is
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that if no changes have been made to the working copy, this does
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nothing.
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If a file was Modified, it is returned to the last committed state,
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reversing changes to the working copy.  If the file has been Added, it
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is un-added but the working copy is not removed, so it returns to
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either the Unknown or Ignored state.  If the file has been Deleted, it
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is resurrected and returns to the Up-to-date state.  If the file is
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Unknown, Ignored, or a Control file then it is not changed and a
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warning is issued::
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  bzr: warning: cannot revert ignored file foo.c
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If the file has been Renamed, it is returned to its original name and
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any textual changes are reversed.  This may cause an error if the
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rename clashes with an existing file::
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  bzr: error: cannot revert foo.c to old name bar.c: file exists
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If a directory is listed, by default only changes to the directory
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itself are undone.
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Ideally this would not lose any changes, but rather just set them
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aside, so that the revert command would be undoable.  One way is to
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follow Arch and write out the discarded changes to a changeset file
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which can be either re-applied or discarded at a later date.  This
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very nicely allows for arbitrarily nested undo.  A simpler
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intermediate mechanism would be to just move the discarded files to
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GNU-style tilde backups.
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--merges        Clear the list of pending merges.  If files are
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                specified, their text is also reverted, otherwise no
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                files are changed.
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--id-only       Don't touch the working text, only the inventory.
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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| File state  | Actions                                         |
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+=============+=================================================+
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| A           | Returned to ? or I state, working text unchanged|
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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| D           | Working copy restored, returned to U            |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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| Z           | Returned to U                                   |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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| ZM          | Working copy restored to previous               |
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|             | version, returned to U                          |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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| R           | Moved back to old                               |
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|             | name.                                           |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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| RM          | Moved back to old name and restored to previous |
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|             | text.                                           |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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|I, #, ?      | "Cannot revert"                                 |
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+-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
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log
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---
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Show a log of changes::
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    bzr log
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By default shows all changes on this branch.
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The default format shows merged changes indented under the change that
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merged them.
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Alternatively changes can be sorted by date disregarding merges, which
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shows the order in which they were written not the order they were
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merged.  Changes which were merged are flagged as such.  Such an order
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is needed for a GNU-style ChangeLog.  The option is comparable to
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choosing a threaded or unthreaded display in an email client, and
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should perhaps have those names.
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Another option is to show just short descriptions of the merged
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changes, similar to arch.
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The log can be filtered in any of these ways:
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* Logs touching a particular file or directory.
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* Changes touching a particular file-id, regardless of what name it
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  had in the past.
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* Changes by a particular author.
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* Changes from a particular branch name (not necessarily the same
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  branch).
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Another option is to also include diffs (which may make it quite
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large).
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ignore
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------
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Mark a file pattern to be ignored and not versioned::
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    bzr ignore PATTERN
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The pattern should be quoted on Unix to protect it against shell
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expansion.
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The pattern is appended to ``.bzr-ignore``.  This file is created if
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it does not already exist, and added if it is not already versioned.
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bzr prints a message showing the pattern added so that people can see
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where to go to remove it::
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    $ bzr ignore \*.pyc
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    bzr: notice: created .bzr-ignored
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    bzr: notice: added pattern '*.pyc' to .bzr-ignore
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    $ bzr status
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    A      .bzr-ignore
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If the wrong pattern is added it can be removed by either editing
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``.bzr-ignore`` or by reverting__ that file.
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__ revert_
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is
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--
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Test various predicates against a branch, similar to the Unix shell
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``test`` command::
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    bzr is TEST [ARGS]
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Takes a third-level command:
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``clean``
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  Tree has no uncommitted changes.
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``in-tree``
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  Pwd is in a versioned tree.
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``in-control-dir``
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  Pwd is inside a Bazaar-NG control directory (and therefore should
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  not be modified directly).
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``tree-top``
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  Pwd is the top of a working tree.
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protect
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-------
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(Proposed idea, may not be implemented or may need a better name.)
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Sets a voluntary write-protect flag on a branch, to protect against
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accidental changes::
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    bzr protect
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    bzr unprotect
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This is typically used on branches functioning as tags, which should
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not normally be committed to or updated.
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There may, in the future, be a mechanism to allow only particular
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users to protect/unprotect a branch.
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uncommit
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--------
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(It is not certain this command will be implemented.)
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This command removes the most recent revision from the branch::
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    bzr uncommit
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This does not affect the working copy, which can be fixed up and a new
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commit run.  The new commit will have a different revision ID.
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Removal of the revision will not propagate to any other branches.
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The command may be repeated to successively remove more and more
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revisions.
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This command should perhaps have a more obviously dangerous name,
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since it can lose information or cause confusion.
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By default the revision is removed from the history, but its text is
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left in the store, which allows some chance of recovery.
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You cannot partially uncommit; you can however uncommit the whole
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revision and then re-commit just part of it.
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:Use cases:
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    `Wrong commit message`_
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.. _`Wrong commit message`: use-cases.html#wrong-commit-message
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find
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----
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Finds files, versions, etc in a branch::
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   bzr find [OPERATORS]
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The behaviour is similar to regular unix *find*, but this understands
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about bzr versioning.  Eventually this may gain all the
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and/or/grouping options of Unix find, but not yet.
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This does not have the quirky syntax of unix find, but rather just
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specifies commands as regular words.
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Operators:
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* ``directory``
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* ``file``
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* ``unknown``
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* ``ignored``
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By default the operators are anded together; there is also an ``or``
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operator.
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If no action is specified, just prints the file name.  Other actions:
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``print``
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    Print just the filename.
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``printf``
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    Print various fields about the object, using a formating system.
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``exec``
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    Execute a command on the file.
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