~bzr-pqm/bzr/bzr.dev

3535.3.1 by Ian Clatworthy
Add user doc for stacked branches
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Using stacked branches
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======================
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What is a stacked branch?
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-------------------------
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A stacked branch is a branch that knows how to find revisions
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in another branch. Stacked branches store just the
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unique revisions, making them faster to create and more
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storage efficient. In these respects, stacked branches are
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similar to shared repositories. However, stacked branches have
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additional benefits:
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* The new branch can be in a completely different location to the
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  branch being stacked on.
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* Deleting the stacked branch really deletes the revisions (rather
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  than leaving them in a shared repository).
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* Security is improved over shared repositories, because the stacked-on
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  repository can be physically readonly to developers committing to stacked
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  branches.
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These benefits make stacked branches ideal for various scenarios
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including experimental branches and code hosting sites.
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Creating a stacked branch
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To create a stacked branch, use the ``stacked`` option of the branch command.
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For example::
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  bzr branch --stacked source-url my-dir
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This will create ``my-dir`` as a stacked branch with no local revisions.
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If it is defined, the public branch associated with ``source-url`` will be
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used as the *stacked-on* location. Otherwise, ``source-url`` will be the
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*stacked-on* location.
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Creating a stacked checkout
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---------------------------
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Direct creation of a stacked checkout is expected to be supported soon.
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In the meantime, a two step process is required:
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1. Create a stacked branch as shown above.
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2. Convert the branch into a checkout using either the ``reconfigure``
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   or ``bind`` command.
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Pushing a stacked branch
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Most changes on most projects build on an existing branch such as the
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*development trunk* or *current stable* branch. Creating a new
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branch stacked on one of these is easy to do using the ``push``
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command like this::
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  bzr push --stacked-on reference-url my-url
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This creates a new branch at ``my-url`` that is stacked on ``reference-url``
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and only contains the revisions in the current branch that are not already
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in the branch at ``reference-url``.
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If the local branch was created as a stacked branch, then you can
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use the ``--stacked`` option to ``push`` and the *stacked-on* location
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will be implicit. For example::
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  bzr branch --stacked source-url my-dir
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  cd my-dir
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  (hack, hack, hack)
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  bzr commit -m "fix bug"
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  bzr push --stacked
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Limitations of stacked branches
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-------------------------------
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The important thing to remember about a stacked branch is that the
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stacked-on branch needs to be available for almost all operations. This is
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not an issue when both branches are local or both branches are on the
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same server.
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Changing branch stacking
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Stacking of existing branches can be changed using the ``bzr reconfigure``
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command to either stack on an existing branch, or to turn off stacking.
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Be aware that when ``bzr reconfigure --unstacked`` is used, bzr will
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copy all the referenced data from the stacked-on repository into the
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previously stacked repository.  For large repositories this may take
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considerable time and may substantially increase the size of the
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repository.