1
# Copyright (C) 2006 Canonical Ltd
3
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
4
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
5
# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
6
# (at your option) any later version.
8
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
9
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
10
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
11
# GNU General Public License for more details.
13
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
14
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
15
# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
17
"""A collection of extra help information for using bzr.
19
Help topics are meant to be help for items that aren't commands, but will
20
help bzr become fully learnable without referring to a tutorial.
23
from bzrlib import registry
26
class HelpTopicRegistry(registry.Registry):
27
"""A Registry customized for handling help topics."""
29
def register(self, topic, detail, summary):
30
"""Register a new help topic.
32
:param topic: Name of documentation entry
33
:param detail: Function or string object providing detailed
34
documentation for topic. Function interface is detail(topic).
35
This should return a text string of the detailed information.
36
:param summary: String providing single-line documentation for topic.
38
# The detail is stored as the 'object' and the
39
super(HelpTopicRegistry, self).register(topic, detail, info=summary)
41
def register_lazy(self, topic, module_name, member_name, summary):
42
"""Register a new help topic, and import the details on demand.
44
:param topic: Name of documentation entry
45
:param module_name: The module to find the detailed help.
46
:param member_name: The member of the module to use for detailed help.
47
:param summary: String providing single-line documentation for topic.
49
super(HelpTopicRegistry, self).register_lazy(topic, module_name,
50
member_name, info=summary)
52
def get_detail(self, topic):
53
"""Get the detailed help on a given topic."""
60
def get_summary(self, topic):
61
"""Get the single line summary for the topic."""
62
return self.get_info(topic)
65
topic_registry = HelpTopicRegistry()
68
#----------------------------------------------------
70
def _help_on_topics(dummy):
71
"""Write out the help for topics to outfile"""
73
topics = topic_registry.keys()
74
lmax = max(len(topic) for topic in topics)
78
summary = topic_registry.get_summary(topic)
79
out.append("%-*s %s\n" % (lmax, topic, summary))
83
def _help_on_revisionspec(name):
84
""""Write the summary help for all documented topics to outfile."""
85
import bzrlib.revisionspec
88
out.append("\nRevision prefix specifier:"
89
"\n--------------------------\n")
91
for i in bzrlib.revisionspec.SPEC_TYPES:
93
if doc == bzrlib.revisionspec.RevisionSpec.help_txt:
95
while (doc[-2:] == '\n\n' or doc[-1:] == ' '):
98
out.append(" %s %s\n\n" % (i.prefix, doc))
104
"""Bazaar -- a free distributed version-control tool
105
http://bazaar-vcs.org/
108
bzr init makes this directory a versioned branch
109
bzr branch make a copy of another branch
111
bzr add make files or directories versioned
112
bzr ignore ignore a file or pattern
113
bzr mv move or rename a versioned file
115
bzr status summarize changes in working copy
116
bzr diff show detailed diffs
118
bzr merge pull in changes from another branch
119
bzr commit save some or all changes
121
bzr log show history of changes
122
bzr check validate storage
124
bzr help init more help on e.g. init command
125
bzr help commands list all commands
126
bzr help topics list all help topics
133
These options may be used with any command, and may appear in front of any
134
command. (e.g. "bzr --quiet help").
136
--quiet Suppress informational output; only print errors and warnings
137
--version Print the version number
139
--no-aliases Do not process command aliases when running this command
140
--builtin Use the built-in version of a command, not the plugin version.
141
This does not suppress other plugin effects
142
--no-plugins Do not process any plugins
144
-Derror Instead of normal error handling, always print a traceback on
146
--profile Profile execution using the hotshot profiler
147
--lsprof Profile execution using the lsprof profiler
148
--lsprof-file Profile execution using the lsprof profiler, and write the
149
results to a specified file.
151
Note: --version must be supplied before any command.
157
Checkouts are source trees that are connected to a branch, so that when
158
you commit in the source tree, the commit goes into that branch. They
159
allow you to use a simpler, more centralized workflow, ignoring some of
160
Bazaar's decentralized features until you want them. Using checkouts
161
with shared repositories is very similar to working with SVN or CVS, but
162
doesn't have the same restrictions. And using checkouts still allows
163
others working on the project to use whatever workflow they like.
165
A checkout is created with the bzr checkout command (see "help checkout").
166
You pass it a reference to another branch, and it will create a local copy
167
for you that still contains a reference to the branch you created the
168
checkout from (the master branch). Then if you make any commits they will be
169
made on the other branch first. This creates an instant mirror of your work, or
170
facilitates lockstep development, where each developer is working together,
171
continuously integrating the changes of others.
173
However the checkout is still a first class branch in Bazaar terms, so that
174
you have the full history locally. As you have a first class branch you can
175
also commit locally if you want, for instance due to the temporary loss af a
176
network connection. Use the --local option to commit to do this. All the local
177
commits will then be made on the master branch the next time you do a non-local
180
If you are using a checkout from a shared branch you will periodically want to
181
pull in all the changes made by others. This is done using the "update"
182
command. The changes need to be applied before any non-local commit, but
183
Bazaar will tell you if there are any changes and suggest that you use this
186
It is also possible to create a "lightweight" checkout by passing the
187
--lightweight flag to checkout. A lightweight checkout is even closer to an
188
SVN checkout in that it is not a first class branch, it mainly consists of the
189
working tree. This means that any history operations must query the master
190
branch, which could be slow if a network connection is involved. Also, as you
191
don't have a local branch, then you cannot commit locally.
193
Lightwieght checkouts work best when you have fast reliable access to the
194
master branch. This means that if the master branch is on the same disk or LAN
195
a lightweight checkout will be faster than a heavyweight one for any commands
196
that modify the revision history (as only one copy branch needs to be updated).
197
Heavyweight checkouts will generally be faster for any command that uses the
198
history but does not change it, but if the master branch is on the same disk
199
then there wont be a noticeable difference.
201
Another possible use for a checkout is to use it with a treeless repository
202
containing your branches, where you maintain only only one working tree by
203
switching the master branch that the checkout points to when you want to
204
work on a different branch.
206
Obviously to commit on a checkout you need to be able to write to the master
207
branch. This means that the master branch must be accessable over a writeable
208
protocol , such as sftp://, and that you have write permissions at the other
209
end. Checkouts also work on the local file system, so that all that matters is
212
You can change the master of a checkout by using the "bind" command (see "help
213
bind"). This will change the location that the commits are sent to. The bind
214
command can also be used to turn a branch into a heavy checkout. If you
215
would like to convert your heavy checkout into a normal branch so that every
216
commit is local, you can use the "unbind" command.
220
checkout Create a checkout. Pass --lightweight to get a lightweight
222
update Pull any changes in the master branch in to your checkout
223
commit Make a commit that is sent to the master branch. If you have
224
a heavy checkout then the --local option will commit to the
225
checkout without sending the commit to the master
226
bind Change the master branch that the commits in the checkout will
228
unbind Turn a heavy checkout into a standalone branch so that any
229
commits are only made locally
233
topic_registry.register("revisionspec", _help_on_revisionspec,
234
"Explain how to use --revision")
235
topic_registry.register('basic', _basic_help, "Basic commands")
236
topic_registry.register('topics', _help_on_topics, "Topics list")
237
def get_format_topic(topic):
238
from bzrlib import bzrdir
239
return bzrdir.format_registry.help_topic(topic)
240
topic_registry.register('formats', get_format_topic, 'Directory formats')
241
topic_registry.register('global-options', _global_options,
242
'Options that can be used with any command')
243
topic_registry.register('checkouts', _checkouts,
244
'Information on what a checkout is')