~bzr-pqm/bzr/bzr.dev

1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
1
.. This file is in Python ReStructuredText format - it can be formatted
2
.. into HTML or text.  In the future we plan to extract the example commands
3
.. and automatically test them.
4
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
5
.. This text was previously on the wiki at 
6
.. http://bazaar.canonical.com/IntroductionToBzr
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
7
.. but has been moved into the source tree so it can be kept in sync with
8
.. the source and possibly automatically checked.
9
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
10
===============
11
Bazaar Tutorial
12
===============
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
13
2495.4.8 by Matthew Fuller
Bump document version from 0.8 to 0.16.
14
Current for bzr-0.16, 2007-05
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
15
16
17
Introduction
18
============
19
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
20
If you are already familiar with decentralized revision control, then
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
21
please feel free to skip ahead to "Introducing Yourself to Bazaar". If,
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
22
on the other hand, you are familiar with revision control but not
23
decentralized revision control, then please start at "How DRCS is
24
different." Otherwise, get some coffee or tea, get comfortable and get
25
ready to catch up. 
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
26
27
The Purposes of Revision Control
28
================================
29
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
30
Odds are that you have worked on some sort of textual data -- the sources
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
31
to a program, web sites or the config files that Unix system
32
administrators have to deal with in /etc. The chances are also good that
33
you have made some sort of mistake that you deeply regretted. Perhaps you
34
deleted the configuration file for your mailserver or perhaps mauled the
35
source code for a pet project. Whatever happened, you have just deleted
36
important information that you would desperately like to get back. If this
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
37
has ever happened to you, then you are probably ready for Bazaar.
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
38
39
Revision control systems (which I'll henceforth call RCS) such as
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
40
Bazaar give you the ability to track changes for a directory by turning
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
41
it into something slightly more complicated than a directory that we call
42
a **branch**. The branch not only stores how the directory looks right
43
now, but also how it looked at various points in the past. Then, when you
44
do something you wish you hadn't, you can restore the directory to the way
45
it looked at some point in the past.
46
47
Revision control systems give users the ability to save changes to a
48
branch by "committing a **revision**". The revision created is essentially
49
a summary of the changes that were made since the last time the tree was
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
50
saved. 
51
52
These revisions have other uses as well. For example, one can comment
53
revisions to record what the recent set of changes meant by providing an
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
54
optional log message. Real life log messages include things like "Fixed
55
the web template to close the table" and "Added sftp suppport. Fixes #595"
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
56
	
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
57
We keep these logs so that if later there is some sort of problem with
58
sftp, we can figure out when the problem probably happened. 
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
59
60
How DRCS is Different
61
---------------------
62
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
63
Many Revision Control Systems (RCS) are stored on servers. If one wants to
64
work on the code stored within an RCS, then one needs to connect to the
65
server and "checkout" the code. Doing so gives one a directory in which a
66
person can make changes and then commit. The RCS client then connects to
67
the RCS server and stores the changes. This method is known as the
68
centralized model. 
69
70
The centralized model can have some drawbacks. A centralized RCS requires
71
that one is able to connect to the server whenever one wants to do version
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
72
control work. This can be a bit of a problem if your server is on some other
73
machine on the internet and you are not. Or, worse yet, you **are** on the
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
74
internet but the server is missing!
75
76
Decentralized Revision Control Systems (which I'll call DRCS after this
77
point) deal with this problem by keeping branches on the same machine as
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
78
the client. In Bazaar's case, the branch is kept in the same place as
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
79
the code that is being version controlled. This allows the user to save
80
his changes (**commit**) whenever he wants -- even if he is offline. The
81
user only needs internet access when he wants to access the changes in
82
someone else's branch that are somewhere else.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
83
84
 
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
85
A common requirement that many people have is the need to keep track of
86
the changes for a directory such as file and subdirectory changes.
87
Performing this tracking by hand is a awkward process that over time
88
becomes unwieldy. That is, until one considers version control tools such
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
89
as Bazaar. These tools automate the process of storing data by creating
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
90
a **revision** of the directory tree whenever the user asks. 
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
91
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
92
Revision control software such as Bazaar can do much more than just
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
93
storage and performing undo.  For example, with Bazaar a developer can
2293.1.6 by Brad Crittenden
post review changes
94
take the modifications in one branch of software and apply them to a
95
related branch -- even if those changes exist in a branch owned by
96
somebody else. This allows developers to cooperate without giving
97
write access to the repository.
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
98
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
99
Bazaar remembers the ''ancestry'' of a revision: the previous revisions
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
100
that it is based upon.  A single revision may have more than one direct
101
descendant, each with different changes, representing a divergence in the
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
102
evolution of the tree. By branching, Bazaar allows multiple people to
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
103
cooperate on the evolution of a project, without all needing to work in
104
strict lock-step.  Branching can be useful even for a single developer.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
105
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
106
Introducing yourself to Bazaar
107
==============================
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
108
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
109
Bazaar installs a single new command, **bzr**.  Everything else is a
2070.4.3 by John Arbash Meinel
code and doc cleanup
110
subcommand of this.  You can get some help with ``bzr help``. Some arguments 
111
are grouped in topics: ``bzr help topics`` to see which topics are available.
2023.1.1 by ghigo
add topics help
112
There will be more in the future.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
113
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
114
One function of a version control system is to keep track of who changed
115
what.  In a decentralized system, that requires an identifier for each
116
author that is globally unique.  Most people already have one of these: an
117
email address. Bzr is smart enough to automatically generate an email
118
address by looking up your username and hostname. If you don't like the
1861.2.6 by Alexander Belchenko
branding: change Bazaar-NG to Bazaar
119
guess that Bazaar makes, then three options exist:
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
120
1816.2.9 by Robey Pointer
in the tutorial, steer users first toward using 'whoami' to set their email
121
 1. Set an email address via ``bzr whoami``.  This is the simplest way.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
122
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
123
    To set a global identity, use::
124
 
2393.1.1 by Elliot Murphy
Use double quotes instead of single quotes for bzr whoami examples to keep
125
    % bzr whoami "Your Name <email@example.com>"
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
126
 
127
    If you'd like to use a different address for a specific branch, enter
128
    the branch folder and use::
129
 
2393.1.1 by Elliot Murphy
Use double quotes instead of single quotes for bzr whoami examples to keep
130
    % bzr whoami --branch "Your Name <email@example.com>"
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
131
 
132
 #. Setting the email address in the ``~/.bazaar/bazaar.conf`` [1]_ by adding the following lines.
133
    Please note that  ``[DEFAULT]`` is case sensitive::
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
134
    [DEFAULT]
135
    email= Your Name <email@isp.com>
136
 
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
137
    As above, you can override this settings on a branch by branch basis by
138
    creating a branch section in ``~/.bazaar/locations.conf`` and adding the
139
    following lines::
140
    [/the/path/to/the/branch]
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
141
    email=Your Name <email@isp.com>
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
142
143
144
 #. Overriding the two previous options by setting the global environment
145
    variable ``$BZREMAIL`` or ``$EMAIL`` (``$BZREMAIL`` will take precedence) 
146
    to your full email address.
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
147
1836.1.9 by John Arbash Meinel
Add global ignore information to the tutorial.
148
.. [1] On Windows, the users configuration files can be found in the
149
   application data directory. So instead of ``~/.bazaar/branch.conf``
150
   the configuration file can be found as: 
151
   ``C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Application Data\Bazaar\2.0\branch.conf``.
152
   The same is true for ``locations.conf``, ``ignore``, and the
153
   ``plugins`` directory.
154
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
155
Creating a branch
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
156
=================
157
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
158
History is by default stored in the .bzr directory of the branch. In a
159
future version of Bazaar, there will be a facility to store it in a
160
separate repository, which may be remote.  We create a new branch by
2293.1.6 by Brad Crittenden
post review changes
161
running ``bzr init`` in an existing directory::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
162
163
    % mkdir tutorial
164
    % cd tutorial
165
    % ls -a
166
    ./  ../
167
    % pwd
168
    /home/mbp/work/bzr.test/tutorial
169
    %
170
    % bzr init
171
    % ls -aF
172
    ./  ../  .bzr/
173
    %
174
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
175
As with CVS, there are three classes of file: unknown, ignored, and
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
176
versioned.  The **add** command makes a file versioned: that is, changes
177
to it will be recorded by the system::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
178
179
    % echo 'hello world' > hello.txt
180
    % bzr status
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
181
    unknown:
182
      hello.txt
183
    % bzr add hello.txt
184
    added hello.txt
2495.4.1 by Matthew Fuller
Get rid of references to 'bzr unknowns'.
185
    % bzr status
186
    added:
187
      hello.txt
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
188
189
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
190
If you add the wrong file, simply use **bzr remove** to make it
2495.4.2 by Matthew Fuller
rm does sometimes remove the file now. Try and make that a little
191
unversioned again.  This does not delete the working copy in this case,
192
though it may in others [2]_.
193
194
.. [2] ``bzr remove`` will remove the working copy if it is currently
195
   versioned, but has no changes from the last committed version.  You
196
   can force the file to always be kept with the ``--keep`` option to
197
   ``bzr remove``, or force it to always be deleted with ``--force``.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
198
199
Branch locations
200
================
201
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
202
All history is stored in a branch, which is just an on-disk directory
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
203
containing control files.  By default there is no separate repository or
204
database as used in svn or svk. You can choose to create a repository if
205
you want to (see the **bzr init-repo** command). You may wish to do this
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
206
if you have very large branches, or many branches of a moderately sized
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
207
project.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
208
209
You'll usually refer to branches on your computer's filesystem just by
210
giving the name of the directory containing the branch.  bzr also supports
2293.1.6 by Brad Crittenden
post review changes
211
accessing branches over http and sftp, for example::
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
212
1861.2.8 by Alexander Belchenko
More branding: bazaar-ng -> Bazaar; bazaar-ng.org -> bazaar-vcs.org
213
    % bzr log http://bazaar-vcs.org/bzr/bzr.dev/
2293.1.6 by Brad Crittenden
post review changes
214
    % bzr log sftp://bazaar-vcs.org/bzr/bzr.dev/
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
215
2293.1.6 by Brad Crittenden
post review changes
216
By installing bzr plugins you can also access branches using the rsync
217
protocol.
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
218
2495.4.3 by Matthew Fuller
X-ref "Publishing your branch" section from the discussion of branch
219
See the `Publishing your branch`_ section for more about how to put your
220
branch at a given location.
221
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
222
Reviewing changes
223
=================
224
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
225
Once you have completed some work, you will want to **commit** it to the
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
226
version history.  It is good to commit fairly often: whenever you get a
227
new feature working, fix a bug, or improve some code or documentation.
228
It's also a good practice to make sure that the code compiles and passes
229
its test suite before committing, to make sure that every revision is a
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
230
known-good state.  You can also review your changes, to make sure you're
231
committing what you intend to, and as a chance to rethink your work before
232
you permanently record it. 
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
233
234
Two bzr commands are particularly useful here: **status** and **diff**.  
235
236
bzr status
237
----------
238
239
The **status** command tells you what changes have been made to the
240
working directory since the last revision::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
241
242
    % bzr status
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
243
    modified:
244
       foo
245
2495.4.9 by Matthew Fuller
Don't point people at the nonexistent 'status --all'.
246
**bzr status** hides "boring" files that are either unchanged or ignored.
247
The status command can optionally be given the name of some files or
248
directories to check.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
249
250
bzr diff
251
--------
252
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
253
The **diff** command shows the full text of changes to all files as a
254
standard unified diff.  This can be piped through many programs such as
255
''patch'', ''diffstat'', ''filterdiff'' and ''colordiff''::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
256
257
    % bzr diff
2495.4.4 by Matthew Fuller
Adjust diff output to look like diff output looks.
258
    === added file 'hello.txt'
259
    --- hello.txt   1970-01-01 00:00:00 +0000
260
    +++ hello.txt   2005-10-18 14:23:29 +0000
261
    @@ -0,0 +1,1 @@
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
262
    +hello world
263
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
264
265
With the ''-r'' option, the tree is compared to an earlier revision, or
266
the differences between two versions are shown::
267
268
    % bzr diff -r 1000..          # everything since r1000
269
    % bzr diff -r 1000..1100      # changes from 1000 to 1100
270
271
The --diff-options option causes bzr to run the external diff program,
272
passing options.  For example::
273
274
    % bzr diff --diff-options --side-by-side foo
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
275
1694.2.3 by Martin Pool
Add -p0, -p1 options for diff.
276
Some projects prefer patches to show a prefix at the start of the path for
277
old and new files.  The --prefix option can be used to provide such a prefix. 
278
As a shortcut, ``bzr diff -p1`` produces a form that works with the 
279
command ``patch -p1``.
280
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
281
Committing changes
282
==================
283
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
284
When the working tree state is satisfactory, it can be **committed** to
285
the branch, creating a new revision holding a snapshot of that state.  
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
286
287
bzr commit
288
----------
289
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
290
The **commit** command takes a message describing the changes in the
291
revision.  It also records your userid, the current time and timezone, and
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
292
the inventory and contents of the tree.  The commit message is specified
293
by the ''-m'' or ''--message'' option. You can enter a multi-line commit
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
294
message; in most shells you can enter this just by leaving the quotes open
295
at the end of the line.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
296
297
::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
298
299
    % bzr commit -m "added my first file"
300
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
301
You can also use the -F option to take the message from a file.  Some
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
302
people like to make notes for a commit message while they work, then
303
review the diff to make sure they did what they said they did.  (This file
304
can also be useful when you pick up your work after a break.)
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
305
306
Message from an editor
307
======================
308
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
309
If you use neither the `-m` nor the `-F` option then bzr will open an
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
310
editor for you to enter a message.  The editor to run is controlled by
2135.1.2 by Matthew Fuller
Mention $VISUAL here, and play with the wording of the other ways of
311
your `$VISUAL` or `$EDITOR` environment variable, which can be overridden
312
by the `editor` setting in to ~/.bazaar/bazaar.conf; `$BZR_EDITOR` will
313
override either of the above mentioned editor options.  If you quit the
314
editor without making any changes, the commit will be cancelled.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
315
316
Selective commit
317
----------------
318
319
If you give file or directory names on the commit command line then only
320
the changes to those files will be committed.  For example::
321
322
    % bzr commit -m "documentation fix" commit.py
323
324
By default bzr always commits all changes to the tree, even if run from a
325
subdirectory.  To commit from only the current directory down, use::
326
327
    % bzr commit .
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
328
329
330
Removing uncommitted changes
331
============================
332
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
333
If you've made some changes and don't want to keep them, use the
334
**revert** command to go back to the previous head version.  It's a good
335
idea to use **bzr diff** first to see what will be removed. By default the
336
revert command reverts the whole tree; if file or directory names are
337
given then only those ones will be affected. **revert** also clears the
338
list of pending merges revisions.
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
339
340
Ignoring files
341
==============
342
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
343
Many source trees contain some files that do not need to be versioned,
344
such as editor backups, object or bytecode files, and built programs.  You
345
can simply not add them, but then they'll always crop up as unknown files.
346
You can also tell bzr to ignore these files by adding them to a file
347
called ''.bzrignore'' at the top of the tree.
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
348
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
349
This file contains a list of file wildcards (or "globs"), one per line.
350
Typical contents are like this::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
351
352
    *.o
353
    *~
354
    *.tmp
355
    *.py[co]
356
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
357
If a glob contains a slash, it is matched against the whole path from the
358
top of the tree; otherwise it is matched against only the filename.  So
359
the previous example ignores files with extension ``.o`` in all
360
subdirectories, but this example ignores only config.h at the top level
361
and HTML files in ``doc/``::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
362
363
    ./config.h
364
    doc/*.html
365
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
366
To get a list of which files are ignored and what pattern they matched,
367
use ''bzr ignored''::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
368
369
    % bzr ignored
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
370
    config.h                 ./config.h
371
    configure.in~            *~
372
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
373
It is OK to have either an ignore pattern match a versioned file, or to
374
add an ignored file.  Ignore patterns have no effect on versioned files;
375
they only determine whether unversioned files are reported as unknown or
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
376
ignored.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
377
1836.1.9 by John Arbash Meinel
Add global ignore information to the tutorial.
378
The ``.bzrignore`` file should normally be versioned, so that new copies
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
379
of the branch see the same patterns::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
380
381
    % bzr add .bzrignore
382
    % bzr commit -m "Add ignore patterns"
383
384
1836.1.9 by John Arbash Meinel
Add global ignore information to the tutorial.
385
Global Ignores
386
--------------
387
388
There are some ignored files which are not project specific, but more user
389
specific. Things like editor temporary files, or personal temporary files.
390
Rather than add these ignores to every project, bzr supports a global
391
ignore file in ``~/.bazaar/ignore`` [1]_. It has the same syntax as the
392
per-project ignore file.
393
394
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
395
Examining history
396
=================
397
398
bzr log
399
-------
400
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
401
The **bzr log** command shows a list of previous revisions. The **bzr log
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
402
--forward** command does the same in chronological order to get most
403
recent revisions printed at last.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
404
405
As with bzr diff, bzr log supports the -r argument::
406
407
    % bzr log -r 1000..          # Revision 1000 and everything after it
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
408
    % bzr log -r ..1000          # Everything up to and including r1000
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
409
    % bzr log -r 1000..1100      # changes from 1000 to 1100
410
    % bzr log -r 1000            # The changes in only revision 1000
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
411
412
413
Branch statistics
414
=================
415
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
416
The **bzr info** command shows some summary information about the working
417
tree and the branch history.  
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
418
419
420
Versioning directories
421
======================
422
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
423
bzr versions files and directories in a way that can keep track of renames
424
and intelligently merge them::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
425
426
    % mkdir src
427
    % echo 'int main() {}' > src/simple.c
428
    % bzr add src
1740.4.1 by Matthew Fuller
Make status output actually look like status output.
429
    added src
430
    added src/simple.c
431
    % bzr status
432
    added:
433
      src/
434
      src/simple.c
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
435
436
437
Deleting and removing files
438
===========================
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
439
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
440
You can delete files or directories by just deleting them from the working
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
441
directory.  This is a bit different to CVS, which requires that you also
442
do **cvs remove**.
443
2495.4.5 by Matthew Fuller
Another place where we need to clarify that 'rm' may or may not delete
444
    **bzr remove** makes the file un-versioned, but may or may not delete
445
    the working copy [2]_.  This is useful when you add the wrong file,
446
    or decide that a file should actually not be versioned. 
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
447
448
::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
449
450
    % rm -r src
451
    % bzr remove -v hello.txt
452
    ?       hello.txt
453
    % bzr status
1740.4.1 by Matthew Fuller
Make status output actually look like status output.
454
    removed:
455
      hello.txt
456
      src/
457
      src/simple.c
458
    unknown:
459
      hello.txt
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
460
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
461
If you remove the wrong file by accident, you can use **bzr revert** to
462
restore it.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
463
464
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
465
Branching
466
=========
467
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
468
Often rather than starting your own project, you will want to submit a
2495.4.6 by Matthew Fuller
Reorganize some text to emphasize 'bzr branch' over grabbing a tarball
469
change to an existing project.  To do this, you'll need to get a copy of
470
the existing branch.  Because this new copy is potentially a new branch,
471
the command is called **branch**::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
472
1861.2.8 by Alexander Belchenko
More branding: bazaar-ng -> Bazaar; bazaar-ng.org -> bazaar-vcs.org
473
    % bzr branch http://bazaar-vcs.org/bzr/bzr.dev 
1185.1.13 by Robert Collins
and the tutorial patch came back, the very next day
474
    % cd bzr.dev
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
475
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
476
This copies down the complete history of this branch, so we can do all
477
operations on it locally: log, annotate, making and merging branches.
478
There will be an option to get only part of the history if you wish.
479
2495.4.6 by Matthew Fuller
Reorganize some text to emphasize 'bzr branch' over grabbing a tarball
480
You can also get a copy of an existing branch by copying its directory,
481
expanding a tarball, or by a remote copy using something like rsync.
482
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
483
Following upstream changes
484
==========================
485
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
486
You can stay up-to-date with the parent branch by "pulling" in their
487
changes::
974.1.26 by aaron.bentley at utoronto
merged mbp@sourcefrog.net-20050817233101-0939da1cf91f2472
488
489
    % bzr pull
490
1649.1.1 by Robert Collins
* 'pull' and 'push' now normalise the revision history, so that any two
491
After this change, the local directory will be a mirror of the source. This
492
includes the ''revision-history'' - which is a list of the commits done in 
493
this branch, rather than merged from other branches.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
494
1649.1.1 by Robert Collins
* 'pull' and 'push' now normalise the revision history, so that any two
495
This command only works if your local (destination) branch is either an
496
older copy of the parent branch with no new commits of its own, or if the
497
most recent commit in your local branch has been merged into the parent
498
branch.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
499
500
Merging from related branches
501
=============================
502
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
503
If two branches have diverged (both have unique changes) then **bzr
504
merge** is the appropriate command to use. Merge will automatically
505
calculate the changes that exist in the branch you're merging from that
506
are not in your branch and attempt to apply them in your branch.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
507
508
::
509
510
  % bzr merge URL
511
512
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
513
If there is a conflict during a merge, 3 files with the same basename
514
are created. The filename of the common base is appended with ".BASE",
515
the filename of the file containing your changes is appended with
516
".THIS" and the filename with the changes from the other tree is
517
appended with ".OTHER".  Using a program such as kdiff3, you can now
518
comfortably merge them into one file.  In order to commit you have to
2293.1.6 by Brad Crittenden
post review changes
519
rename the merged file (".THIS") to the original file name.  To
520
complete the conflict resolution you must use the resolve command,
521
which will remove the ".OTHER" and ".BASE" files.  As long as there
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
522
exist files with .BASE, .THIS or .OTHER the commit command will
2293.1.6 by Brad Crittenden
post review changes
523
report an error.
2293.1.1 by Brad Crittenden
Corrected some trivial grammar and spelling mistakes.
524
525
::
526
527
  % kdiff3 file.BASE file.OTHER file.THIS
528
  % mv file.THIS file
529
  % bzr resolve file
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
530
531
[**TODO**: explain conflict markers within files]
532
533
534
Publishing your branch
535
======================
1610.2.1 by James Blackwell
Copied in docs for wiki & First round cleanup
536
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
537
You don't need a special server to publish a bzr branch, just a normal web
538
server.  Just mirror the files to your server, including the .bzr
539
directory.  One can push a branch (or the changes for a branch) by one of
540
the following three methods:
541
2495.4.7 by Matthew Fuller
De-emphasize the heck out of manually rsync'ing for 'push', and
542
* The best method is to use bzr itself to do it.
543
544
  ::
545
546
    % bzr push sftp://servername.com/path/to/directory 
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
547
2293.1.6 by Brad Crittenden
post review changes
548
  (The destination directory must already exist unless the
549
  ``--create-prefix`` option is used.)
1669.1.1 by Martin Pool
Reflow tutorial.txt to fit on 80-col screen (Malone #39657)
550
2495.4.7 by Matthew Fuller
De-emphasize the heck out of manually rsync'ing for 'push', and
551
* Another option is the rspush plugin that comes with BzrTools, which
552
  uses rsync to push the changes to the revision history and the working
553
  tree.
1536.1.1 by Martin Pool
Move in tutorial text from wiki.
554
2495.4.7 by Matthew Fuller
De-emphasize the heck out of manually rsync'ing for 'push', and
555
You can also use copy the files around manually, by sending a tarball, or
556
using rsync, or other related file transfer methods.  This is usually
557
less safe than using ``push``, but may be faster or easier in some
558
situations.
1910.1.3 by Aaron Bentley
Update NEWS and tutorial to describe merge --uncommitted
559
560
Moving changes between trees 
561
============================
562
563
It happens to the best of us: sometimes you'll make changes in the wrong
564
tree.  Maybe because you've accidentally started work in the wrong directory,
565
maybe because as you're working, the change turns out to be bigger than you
566
expected, so you start a new branch for it.
567
568
To move your changes from one tree to another, use
569
570
::
571
572
  % cd NEWDIR
573
  % bzr merge --uncommitted OLDDIR
574
575
This will apply all of the uncommitted changes you made in OLDDIR to NEWDIR.
576
It will not apply committed changes, even if they could be applied to NEWDIR
577
with a regular merge.  The changes will remain in OLDDIR, but you can use **bzr
578
revert OLDDIR** to remove them, once you're satisfied with NEWDIR.
579
580
NEWDIR does not have to be a copy of OLDDIR, but they should be related.
581
The more different they are, the greater the chance of conflicts.