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A plugin is an external component for Bazaar-NG that is typically made by
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third parties. A plugin is capable of augmenting Bazaar-NG by adding or
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replacing new or current functionality in Bazaar-NG. Plugins often work as
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a way for developers to test new features for Bazaar-NG prior to inclusion
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in the official codebase. Plugins can do a variety of things, including
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overriding commands, adding new commands, providing additional network
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transports, customizing log output. The sky is the limit for the
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customization that can be done through plugins.
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We keep our list of plugins on the http://bazaar-vcs.org/PluginRegistry page.
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Plugins are very similar to bzr core functionality. They can import
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anything in bzrlib. A plugin may simply override standard functionality,
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but most plugins supply new commands.
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To create a command, make a new object that derives from
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`bzrlib.commands.Command`, and name it cmd_foo, where foo is the name of
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your command. If you create a command whose name contains an underscore,
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it will appear in the UI with the underscore turned into a hyphen. For
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example, "cmd_baz_import" will appear as "baz-import". For examples of how
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to write commands, please see builtins.py.
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Once you've created a command you must register the command with
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`bzrlib.commands.register_command(cmd_foo)`. You must register the command
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when your file is imported, otherwise bzr will not see it.
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By default, bzr will scan `bzrlib/plugins` and `~/.bazaar/plugins` for
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plugins. You can override this with `BZR_PLUGIN_PATH`. Plugins may be
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either modules or packages. If your plugin is a single file, you can
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structure it as a module. If it has multiple files, or if you want to
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distribute it as a bzr branch, you should structure it as a package, i.e. a
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directory with an `__init__.py ` file.
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Please feel free to contribute your plugin to BzrTools, if you think it
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would be useful to other people.
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How to Install a plugin
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=======================
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Installing a plugin is very easy! One can either install a plugin
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systemwide or on a user by user basis. Both methods involve create a
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"plugins" directory. Within this directory one can place plugins in
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subdirectories. For example, "plugins/bzrtools/".
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Two locations are currently checked; the bzrlib/plugins directory
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(typically found in /usr/lib/python2.4/site-packages/bzrlib/plugins/) and
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$HOME/.bazaar/plugins/.
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One can additionally override the home plugins by setting the environment
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variable BZR_PLUGIN_PATH to a directory that contains plugins. The
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installation of a plugin can be checked by running **bzr plugins** at
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any time. New commands can be seen by running **bzr help commands**.
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Plugins work particularly well with Bazaar-NG branches. For example, to
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install the bzrtools plugins for your main user account, one can perform
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bzr branch http://panoramicfeedback.com/opensource/bzr/bzrtools
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~/.bazaar/plugins/bzrtools