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Publishing a branch
===================
Setting up a central repository
-------------------------------
While the centralized workflow can be used by socially nominating
any branch on any computer as the central one, in practice most
teams have a dedicated server for hosting central branches.
Just as it's best practice to use a shared repository locally,
it's advisable to put central branches in a shared repository.
Note that central shared branches typically only want to
store history, not working copies of files, so their enclosing
repository is usually creating using the ``no-trees`` option, e.g.::
bzr init-repo --no-trees sftp://centralhost/srv/bzr/PROJECT
You can think of this step as similar to setting up a new cvsroot or
Subversion repository. However, Bazaar gives you more flexibility
in how branches may be organised in your repository. See
`Advanced shared repository layouts`_ in the appendices for
guidelines and examples.
Starting a central branch
-------------------------
There are two ways of populating a central branch with some initial
content:
1. Making a local branch and pushing it to a central location
2. Making an empty central branch then committing content to it.
Here is an example of the first way::
bzr init-repo PROJECT (prepare local repository)
bzr init PROJECT/trunk
cd PROJECT/trunk
(copy development files)
cp -ar ~/PROJECT . (copy files in using OS-specific tools)
bzr add (populate repository; start version control)
bzr commit -m "Initial import"
(publish to central repository)
bzr push sftp://centralhost/srv/bzr/PROJECT/trunk
Here is an example of the second way::
bzr init-repo PROJECT (prepare local repository)
cd PROJECT
bzr init sftp://centralhost/srv/bzr/PROJECT/trunk
bzr checkout sftp://centralhost/srv/bzr/PROJECT/trunk
cd trunk
cp -ar ~/PROJECT . (copy files in using OS-specific tools)
bzr add (populate repository; start version control)
bzr commit -m "Initial import"
(publish to central repository)
bzr push sftp://centralhost/srv/bzr/project/trunk
Note that committing inside a working tree created using
the ``checkout`` command implicitly commits the content to
the central location as well as locally. Had we used the
``branch`` command instead of ``checkout`` above, the
content would have only been committed locally.
Working trees that are tightly bound to a central location
like this are called *checkouts*. The rest of this chapter
explains their numerous features in more detail.
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