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This document describes the key classes and concepts within Bazaar. It is
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intended to be useful to people working on the Bazaar codebase, or to
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people writing plugins. People writing plugins may also like to read the
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guide to `Integrating with Bazaar <integration.html>`_ for some specific
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people writing plugins.
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If you have any questions, or if something seems to be incorrect, unclear
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or missing, please talk to us in ``irc://irc.freenode.net/#bzr``, or write
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to the Bazaar mailing list.
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When using bzrlib within the ``bzr`` program (for instance as a bzr
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plugin), bzrlib's global state is already available for use.
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To use bzrlib outside of ``bzr`` some global state needs to be setup.
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bzrlib needs ways to handle user input, passwords, a place to emit
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progress bars, logging setup appropriately for your program. The easiest
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way to set all this up in the same fashion ``bzr`` does is to call
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``bzrlib.initialize``. This returns a context manager within which bzrlib
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functions will work correctly. See the pydoc for ``bzrlib.initialize`` for
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more information. In Python 2.4 the ``with`` keyword is not supported and
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so you need to use the context manager manually::
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# This sets up your ~/.bzr.log, ui factory and so on and so forth. It is
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# not safe to use as a doctest.
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library_state = bzrlib.initialize()
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library_state.__enter__()
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library_state.__exit__(None, None, None)
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to the Bazaar mailing list. To propose a correction or addition to this
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document, send a merge request or new text to the mailing list.
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The current version of this document is available in the file
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``doc/developers/overview.txt`` in the source tree, and available online
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within the developer documentation, <http://doc.bazaar-vcs.org/developers/>.
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Essential Domain Classes
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########################
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The core domain objects within the bazaar model are:
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Transports are explained below. See http://bazaar-vcs.org/Classes/
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for an introduction to the other key classes.
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The ``Transport`` layer handles access to local or remote directories.
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Each Transport object acts as a logical connection to a particular
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is also in the form of URL components.
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A workingtree is a special type of Tree that's associated with a working
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directory on disk, where the user can directly modify the files.
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* Maintaining a WorkingTree on disk at a file path.
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* Maintaining the basis inventory (the inventory of the last commit done)
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* Maintaining the working inventory.
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* Maintaining the pending merges list.
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* Maintaining the stat cache.
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* Maintaining the last revision the working tree was updated to.
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* Knows where its Branch is located.
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* an MutableInventory
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* local access to the working tree
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A Branch is a key user concept - its a single line of history that one or
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more people have been committing to.
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A Branch is responsible for:
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* Holding user preferences that are set in a Branch.
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* Holding the 'tip': the last revision to be committed to this Branch. (And the revno of that revision.)
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* Knowing how to open the Repository that holds its history.
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* Allowing write locks to be taken out to prevent concurrent alterations to the branch.
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* URL access to its base directory.
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* A Transport to access its files.
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* A Repository to hold its history.
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Repositories store committed history: file texts, revisions, inventories,
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and graph relationships between them. A repository holds a bag of
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revision data that can be pointed to by various branches:
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* Maintains storage of various history data at a URL:
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* Revisions (Must have a matching inventory)
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* Inventories for each Revision. (Must have all the file texts available).
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* Synchronizes concurrent access to the repository by different
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processes. (Most repository implementations use a physical
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mutex only for a short period, and effectively support multiple readers
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and graph relationships between them.
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Stacked Repositories
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A repository can be configured to refer to a list of "fallback"
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repositories. If a particular revision is not present in the original