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# Copyright (C) 2006 Canonical Ltd
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# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
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# (at your option) any later version.
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# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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# GNU General Public License for more details.
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# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
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# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
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"""A collection of extra help information for using bzr.
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Help topics are meant to be help for items that aren't commands, but will
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help bzr become fully learnable without referring to a tutorial.
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Limited formatting of help text is permitted to make the text useful
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both within the reference manual (reStructuredText) and on the screen.
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The help text should be reStructuredText with formatting kept to a
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minimum and, in particular, no headings. The onscreen renderer applies
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the following simple rules before rendering the text:
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1. A '::' appearing on the end of a line is replaced with ':'.
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2. Lines starting with a ':' have it stripped.
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These rules mean that literal blocks and field lists respectively can
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be used in the help text, producing sensible input to a manual while
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rendering on the screen naturally.
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from bzrlib import registry
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# Section identifiers (map topics to the right place in the manual)
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SECT_COMMAND = "command"
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SECT_CONCEPT = "concept"
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SECT_HIDDEN = "hidden"
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SECT_PLUGIN = "plugin"
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class HelpTopicRegistry(registry.Registry):
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"""A Registry customized for handling help topics."""
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def register(self, topic, detail, summary, section=SECT_LIST):
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"""Register a new help topic.
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:param topic: Name of documentation entry
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:param detail: Function or string object providing detailed
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documentation for topic. Function interface is detail(topic).
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This should return a text string of the detailed information.
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See the module documentation for details on help text formatting.
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:param summary: String providing single-line documentation for topic.
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:param section: Section in reference manual - see SECT_* identifiers.
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# The detail is stored as the 'object' and the metadata as the info
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info=(summary,section)
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super(HelpTopicRegistry, self).register(topic, detail, info=info)
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def register_lazy(self, topic, module_name, member_name, summary,
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"""Register a new help topic, and import the details on demand.
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:param topic: Name of documentation entry
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:param module_name: The module to find the detailed help.
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:param member_name: The member of the module to use for detailed help.
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:param summary: String providing single-line documentation for topic.
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:param section: Section in reference manual - see SECT_* identifiers.
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# The detail is stored as the 'object' and the metadata as the info
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info=(summary,section)
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super(HelpTopicRegistry, self).register_lazy(topic, module_name,
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member_name, info=info)
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def get_detail(self, topic):
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"""Get the detailed help on a given topic."""
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def get_summary(self, topic):
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"""Get the single line summary for the topic."""
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info = self.get_info(topic)
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def get_section(self, topic):
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"""Get the section for the topic."""
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info = self.get_info(topic)
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def get_topics_for_section(self, section):
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"""Get the set of topics in a section."""
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for topic in self.keys():
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if section == self.get_section(topic):
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topic_registry = HelpTopicRegistry()
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#----------------------------------------------------
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def _help_on_topics(dummy):
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"""Write out the help for topics to outfile"""
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topics = topic_registry.keys()
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lmax = max(len(topic) for topic in topics)
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summary = topic_registry.get_summary(topic)
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out.append("%-*s %s\n" % (lmax, topic, summary))
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def _help_on_revisionspec(name):
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"""Generate the help for revision specs."""
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import bzrlib.revisionspec
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out.append("Revision Identifiers\n")
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out.append("A revision, or a range bound, can be one of the following.\n")
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details.append("\nFurther details are given below.\n")
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# The help text is indented 4 spaces - this re cleans that up below
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indent_re = re.compile(r'^ ', re.MULTILINE)
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for i in bzrlib.revisionspec.SPEC_TYPES:
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if doc == bzrlib.revisionspec.RevisionSpec.help_txt:
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# Extract out the top line summary from the body and
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# clean-up the unwanted whitespace
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summary,doc = doc.split("\n", 1)
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#doc = indent_re.sub('', doc)
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while (doc[-2:] == '\n\n' or doc[-1:] == ' '):
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# Note: The leading : here are HACKs to get reStructuredText
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# 'field' formatting - we know that the prefix ends in a ':'.
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out.append(":%s\n\t%s" % (i.prefix, summary))
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details.append(":%s\n%s" % (i.prefix, doc))
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return '\n'.join(out + details)
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def _help_on_transport(name):
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from bzrlib.transport import (
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transport_list_registry,
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def add_string(proto, help, maxl, prefix_width=20):
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help_lines = textwrap.wrap(help, maxl - prefix_width)
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line_with_indent = '\n' + ' ' * prefix_width
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help_text = line_with_indent.join(help_lines)
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return "%-20s%s\n" % (proto, help_text)
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a1 = a[:a.rfind("://")]
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b1 = b[:b.rfind("://")]
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protos = transport_list_registry.keys( )
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protos.sort(sort_func)
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shorthelp = transport_list_registry.get_help(proto)
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if proto.endswith("://"):
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protl.append(add_string(proto, shorthelp, 79))
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decl.append(add_string(proto, shorthelp, 79))
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out = "URL Identifiers\n\n" + \
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"Supported URL prefixes::\n\n " + \
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out += "\nSupported modifiers::\n\n " + \
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"""Bazaar -- a free distributed version-control tool
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http://bazaar-vcs.org/
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bzr init makes this directory a versioned branch
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bzr branch make a copy of another branch
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bzr add make files or directories versioned
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bzr ignore ignore a file or pattern
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bzr mv move or rename a versioned file
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bzr status summarize changes in working copy
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bzr diff show detailed diffs
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bzr merge pull in changes from another branch
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bzr commit save some or all changes
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bzr log show history of changes
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bzr check validate storage
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bzr help init more help on e.g. init command
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bzr help commands list all commands
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bzr help topics list all help topics
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These options may be used with any command, and may appear in front of any
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command. (e.g. "bzr --quiet help").
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--quiet Suppress informational output; only print errors and warnings.
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--version Print the version number.
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--no-aliases Do not process command aliases when running this command.
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--builtin Use the built-in version of a command, not the plugin version.
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This does not suppress other plugin effects.
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--no-plugins Do not process any plugins.
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-Devil Capture call sites that do expensive or badly-scaling
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-Derror Instead of normal error handling, always print a traceback on
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-Dhooks Trace hook execution.
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-Dhpss Trace smart protocol requests and responses.
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-Dindex Trace major index operations.
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-Dlock Trace when lockdir locks are taken or released.
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--profile Profile execution using the hotshot profiler.
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--lsprof Profile execution using the lsprof profiler.
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--lsprof-file Profile execution using the lsprof profiler, and write the
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results to a specified file. If the filename ends with ".txt",
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text format will be used. If the filename either starts with
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"callgrind.out" or end with ".callgrind", the output will be
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formatted for use with KCacheGrind. Otherwise, the output
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See doc/developers/profiling.txt for more information on profiling.
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Note: --version must be supplied before any command.
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Checkouts are source trees that are connected to a branch, so that when
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you commit in the source tree, the commit goes into that branch. They
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allow you to use a simpler, more centralized workflow, ignoring some of
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Bazaar's decentralized features until you want them. Using checkouts
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with shared repositories is very similar to working with SVN or CVS, but
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doesn't have the same restrictions. And using checkouts still allows
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others working on the project to use whatever workflow they like.
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A checkout is created with the bzr checkout command (see "help checkout").
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You pass it a reference to another branch, and it will create a local copy
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for you that still contains a reference to the branch you created the
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checkout from (the master branch). Then if you make any commits they will be
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made on the other branch first. This creates an instant mirror of your work, or
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facilitates lockstep development, where each developer is working together,
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continuously integrating the changes of others.
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However the checkout is still a first class branch in Bazaar terms, so that
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you have the full history locally. As you have a first class branch you can
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also commit locally if you want, for instance due to the temporary loss af a
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network connection. Use the --local option to commit to do this. All the local
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commits will then be made on the master branch the next time you do a non-local
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If you are using a checkout from a shared branch you will periodically want to
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pull in all the changes made by others. This is done using the "update"
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command. The changes need to be applied before any non-local commit, but
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Bazaar will tell you if there are any changes and suggest that you use this
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It is also possible to create a "lightweight" checkout by passing the
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--lightweight flag to checkout. A lightweight checkout is even closer to an
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SVN checkout in that it is not a first class branch, it mainly consists of the
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working tree. This means that any history operations must query the master
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branch, which could be slow if a network connection is involved. Also, as you
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don't have a local branch, then you cannot commit locally.
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Lightweight checkouts work best when you have fast reliable access to the
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master branch. This means that if the master branch is on the same disk or LAN
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a lightweight checkout will be faster than a heavyweight one for any commands
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that modify the revision history (as only one copy branch needs to be updated).
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Heavyweight checkouts will generally be faster for any command that uses the
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history but does not change it, but if the master branch is on the same disk
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then there wont be a noticeable difference.
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Another possible use for a checkout is to use it with a treeless repository
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containing your branches, where you maintain only one working tree by
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switching the master branch that the checkout points to when you want to
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work on a different branch.
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Obviously to commit on a checkout you need to be able to write to the master
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branch. This means that the master branch must be accessible over a writeable
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protocol , such as sftp://, and that you have write permissions at the other
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end. Checkouts also work on the local file system, so that all that matters is
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You can change the master of a checkout by using the "bind" command (see "help
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bind"). This will change the location that the commits are sent to. The bind
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command can also be used to turn a branch into a heavy checkout. If you
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would like to convert your heavy checkout into a normal branch so that every
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commit is local, you can use the "unbind" command.
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checkout Create a checkout. Pass --lightweight to get a lightweight
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update Pull any changes in the master branch in to your checkout
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commit Make a commit that is sent to the master branch. If you have
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a heavy checkout then the --local option will commit to the
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checkout without sending the commit to the master
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bind Change the master branch that the commits in the checkout will
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unbind Turn a heavy checkout into a standalone branch so that any
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commits are only made locally
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Repositories in Bazaar are where committed information is stored. There is
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a repository associated with every branch.
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Repositories are a form of database. Bzr will usually maintain this for
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good performance automatically, but in some situations (e.g. when doing
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very many commits in a short time period) you may want to ask bzr to
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optimise the database indices. This can be done by the 'bzr pack' command.
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By default just running 'bzr init' will create a repository within the new
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branch but it is possible to create a shared repository which allows multiple
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branches to share their information in the same location. When a new branch is
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created it will first look to see if there is a containing shared repository it
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When two branches of the same project share a repository, there is
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generally a large space saving. For some operations (e.g. branching
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within the repository) this translates in to a large time saving.
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To create a shared repository use the init-repository command (or the alias
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init-repo). This command takes the location of the repository to create. This
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means that 'bzr init-repository repo' will create a directory named 'repo',
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which contains a shared repository. Any new branches that are created in this
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directory will then use it for storage.
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It is a good idea to create a repository whenever you might create more
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than one branch of a project. This is true for both working areas where you
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are doing the development, and any server areas that you use for hosting
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projects. In the latter case, it is common to want branches without working
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trees. Since the files in the branch will not be edited directly there is no
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need to use up disk space for a working tree. To create a repository in which
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the branches will not have working trees pass the '--no-trees' option to
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init-repository Create a shared repository. Use --no-trees to create one
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in which new branches won't get a working tree.
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A working tree is the contents of a branch placed on disk so that you can
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see the files and edit them. The working tree is where you make changes to a
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branch, and when you commit the current state of the working tree is the
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snapshot that is recorded in the commit.
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When you push a branch to a remote system, a working tree will not be
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created. If one is already present the files will not be updated. The
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branch information will be updated and the working tree will be marked
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as out-of-date. Updating a working tree remotely is difficult, as there
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may be uncommitted changes or the update may cause content conflicts that are
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difficult to deal with remotely.
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If you have a branch with no working tree you can use the 'checkout' command
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to create a working tree. If you run 'bzr checkout .' from the branch it will
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create the working tree. If the branch is updated remotely, you can update the
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working tree by running 'bzr update' in that directory.
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If you have a branch with a working tree that you do not want the 'remove-tree'
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command will remove the tree if it is safe. This can be done to avoid the
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warning about the remote working tree not being updated when pushing to the
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branch. It can also be useful when working with a '--no-trees' repository
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(see 'bzr help repositories').
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If you want to have a working tree on a remote machine that you push to you
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can either run 'bzr update' in the remote branch after each push, or use some
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other method to update the tree during the push. There is an 'rspush' plugin
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that will update the working tree using rsync as well as doing a push. There
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is also a 'push-and-update' plugin that automates running 'bzr update' via SSH
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checkout Create a working tree when a branch does not have one.
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remove-tree Removes the working tree from a branch when it is safe to do so.
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update When a working tree is out of sync with it's associated branch
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this will update the tree to match the branch.
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Status flags are used to summarise changes to the working tree in a concise
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manner. They are in the form::
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where the columns' meanings are as follows.
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Column 1 - versioning/renames::
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P Entry for a pending merge (not a file)
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Column 2 - contents::
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* The execute bit was changed
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"""Environment Variables
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================ =================================================================
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BZRPATH Path where bzr is to look for shell plugin external commands.
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BZR_EMAIL E-Mail address of the user. Overrides EMAIL.
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EMAIL E-Mail address of the user.
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BZR_EDITOR Editor for editing commit messages. Overrides EDITOR.
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EDITOR Editor for editing commit messages.
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BZR_PLUGIN_PATH Paths where bzr should look for plugins.
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BZR_HOME Directory holding .bazaar config dir. Overrides HOME.
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BZR_HOME (Win32) Directory holding bazaar config dir. Overrides APPDATA and HOME.
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================ =================================================================
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:On Linux: ~/.bazaar/bazaar.conf
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:On Windows: C:\\Documents and Settings\\username\\Application Data\\bazaar\\2.0\\bazaar.conf
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Contains the user's default configuration. The section ``[DEFAULT]`` is
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used to define general configuration that will be applied everywhere.
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The section ``[ALIASES]`` can be used to create command aliases for
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commonly used options.
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A typical config file might look something like::
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email=John Doe <jdoe@isp.com>
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commit = commit --strict
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log10 = log --short -r -10..-1
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topic_registry.register("revisionspec", _help_on_revisionspec,
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"Explain how to use --revision")
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topic_registry.register('basic', _basic_help, "Basic commands", SECT_HIDDEN)
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topic_registry.register('topics', _help_on_topics, "Topics list", SECT_HIDDEN)
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def get_format_topic(topic):
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from bzrlib import bzrdir
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return "Storage Formats\n\n" + bzrdir.format_registry.help_topic(topic)
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topic_registry.register('formats', get_format_topic, 'Directory formats')
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topic_registry.register('global-options', _global_options,
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'Options that can be used with any command')
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topic_registry.register('checkouts', _checkouts,
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'Information on what a checkout is', SECT_CONCEPT)
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topic_registry.register('urlspec', _help_on_transport,
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"Supported transport protocols")
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topic_registry.register('status-flags', _status_flags,
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"Help on status flags")
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def get_bugs_topic(topic):
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from bzrlib import bugtracker
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return "Bug Trackers\n\n" + bugtracker.tracker_registry.help_topic(topic)
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topic_registry.register('bugs', get_bugs_topic, 'Bug tracker support')
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topic_registry.register('repositories', _repositories,
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'Basic information on shared repositories.',
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topic_registry.register('working-trees', _working_trees,
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'Information on working trees', SECT_CONCEPT)
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topic_registry.register('env-variables', _env_variables,
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'Environment variable names and values')
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topic_registry.register('files', _files,
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'Information on configuration and log files')
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class HelpTopicIndex(object):
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"""A index for bzr help that returns topics."""
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def get_topics(self, topic):
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"""Search for topic in the HelpTopicRegistry.
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:param topic: A topic to search for. None is treated as 'basic'.
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:return: A list which is either empty or contains a single
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RegisteredTopic entry.
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if topic in topic_registry:
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return [RegisteredTopic(topic)]
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class RegisteredTopic(object):
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"""A help topic which has been registered in the HelpTopicRegistry.
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These topics consist of nothing more than the name of the topic - all
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data is retrieved on demand from the registry.
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def __init__(self, topic):
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:param topic: The name of the topic that this represents.
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def get_help_text(self, additional_see_also=None, plain=True):
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"""Return a string with the help for this topic.
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:param additional_see_also: Additional help topics to be
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:param plain: if False, raw help (reStructuredText) is
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returned instead of plain text.
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result = topic_registry.get_detail(self.topic)
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# there is code duplicated here and in bzrlib/plugin.py's
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# matching Topic code. This should probably be factored in
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# to a helper function and a common base class.
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if additional_see_also is not None:
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see_also = sorted(set(additional_see_also))
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result += '\n:See also: '
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result += ', '.join(see_also)
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result = help_as_plain_text(result)
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def get_help_topic(self):
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"""Return the help topic this can be found under."""
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def help_as_plain_text(text):
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"""Minimal converter of reStructuredText to plain text."""
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lines = text.splitlines()
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if line.startswith(':'):
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elif line.endswith('::'):
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return "\n".join(result) + "\n"