1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
|
*************************
What's New in Bazaar 2.3?
*************************
Bazaar 2.3 has been released on the 3rd of February 2011 and marks the start
of another long-term-stable series. From here, we will only make bugfix
releases on the 2.3 series (2.3.1, etc), while 2.4 will become our new
development series. The 2.1 and 2.2 series will also continue to get
bugfixes. (Currently 2.0 is planned to be EOLed circa September 2011.)
This document accumulates a high level summary of what's changed.
See the
:doc:`../release-notes/index` for a full list.
Users are encouraged to upgrade from the other stable series. This document
outlines the improvements in Bazaar 2.3 vs Bazaar 2.2. As well as summarizing
improvements made to the core product, it highlights enhancements within the
broader Bazaar world of potential interest to those upgrading.
Bazaar 2.3.1 includes all the fixes in the un-released 2.0.7, 2.1.4 and 2.2.5
versions that weren't included in 2.3.0 and fixes some bugs on its own.
Bazaar 2.3.2 is a bugfix release that was never released.
Bazaar 2.3.3 is a bugfix release including the fixes in 2.3.2 and
fixing the test helpers deprecated by python-2.7.
See the :doc:`../release-notes/index` for details.
Bazaar 2.3 is fully compatible both locally and on the network with 2.0, 2.1,
and 2.2. It can read and write repositories generated by all previous
versions.
Changed Behaviour
*****************
* Committing a new revision in a stacked branch is now supported, as long as
you are using the current repository format (2a). It will preserve the
stacking invariants, etc, so that fetching after commit is guaranteed to
work. (John Arbash Meinel, #375013)
* Support for some old development formats have been removed:
``development-rich-root``, ``development6-rich-root``, and
``development7-rich-root``. These formats were always labelled experimental
and not used unless the user specifically asked for them. If you have
repositories using these old formats you should upgrade them to ``2a`` using
Bazaar 2.2. (Andrew Bennetts)
* The default ``ignore`` file created by Bazaar will contain ``__pycache__``,
which is the name of the directory that will be used by Python to store
bytecode files.
(Andrea Corbellini, #626687)
* The default sort order for the ``bzr tags`` command now uses a natural sort
where numeric substrings are sorted numerically. The previous default was
"asciibetical" where tags were sorted by the characters they contained. To
get the old behavior, one can use ``bzr tags --sort=alpha``.
(Neil Martinsen-Burrell, #640760)
* On platforms other than Windows and Mac OS X, Bazaar will use configuration
files that live in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/bazaar if that directory exists. This
allows interested individuals to conform to the XDG Base Directory
specification. The plugin location has not changed and is still
~/.bazaar/plugins. To use a different directory for plugins, use the
environment variable BZR_PLUGIN_PATH. (Neil Martinsen-Burrell, #195397)
* ``bzr upgrade`` now operates recursively when run on a shared
repository, automatically upgrading the branches within it, and has
grown additional options for showing what it will do and cleaning up
after itself. (Ian Clatworthy, Matthew Fuller, #89830, #374734, #422450)
Launchpad integration
*********************
* The ``lp:`` prefix will now use your known username (from
``bzr launchpad-login``) to expand ``~`` to your username. For example:
``bzr launchpad-login user && bzr push lp:~/project/branch`` will now
push to ``lp:~user/project/branch``. (John Arbash Meinel)
* Launchpad has announced that the ``edge.launchpad.net`` instance is
deprecated and may be shut down in the future
<http://blog.launchpad.net/general/edge-is-deprecated>. Bazaar has therefore
been updated in this release to talk to the main (``launchpad.net``) servers,
rather than the ``edge`` ones.
Performance improvements
************************
* ``bzr revert`` and ``bzr status`` are up to 15% faster on large trees
with many changes by not repeatedly building a list of all file-ids.
(Andrew Bennetts)
* ``bzr send`` uses less memory.
(John Arbash Meinel, #614576)
* Fetches involving stacked branches and branches with tags now do slightly less
I/O, and so does branching from an existing branch. This also improves the
network performance of these operations. (Andrew Bennetts)
* Inventory entries now consume less memory (on 32-bit Ubuntu file entries
have dropped from 68 bytes to 40, and directory entries from 120 bytes
to 48). This affects most operations, and depending on the size of the
tree may substantially improve the speed of operations like ``bzr
commit``. (Andrew Bennetts)
* Lower memory consumption when reading many chk index pages. Helpful for
things like ``bzr co`` or ``bzr ls -R`` on large trees.
(John Arbash Meinel)
* When building new working trees, default to reading from the repository
rather than the source tree unless explicitly requested. (via
``--files-from`` and ``--hardlink`` for ``bzr branch`` and
``bzr checkout``. Generally, 2a format repositories extract
content faster than seeking and reading content from another tree,
especially in cold-cache situations. (John Arbash Meinel, #607298)
New revision specifiers
***********************
* The ``mainline`` revision specifier has been added. It takes another revision
spec as its input, and selects the revision which merged that revision into
the mainline.
For example, ``bzr log -vp -r mainline:1.2.3`` will show the log of the
revision that merged revision 1.2.3 into mainline, along with its status
output and diff. (Aaron Bentley)
* The ``annotate`` revision specifier has been added. It takes a path and a
line as its input (in the form ``path:line``), and selects the revision which
introduced that line of that file.
For example: ``bzr log -vp -r annotate:bzrlib/transform.py:500`` will select
the revision that introduced line 500 of transform.py, and display its log,
status output and diff.
It can be combined with ``mainline`` to select the revision that landed this
line into trunk, like so:
``bzr log -vp -r mainline:annotate:bzrlib/transform.py:500``
(Aaron Bentley)
Testing/Bug reporting
*********************
* Shell-like scripts can now be run directly from the command line without
writing a python test. This should help users adding reproducing recipes
to bug reports. (Vincent Ladeuil)
Improved conflict handling
**************************
* ``pull``, ``merge`` or ``switch`` can lead to conflicts when deleting a
versioned directory contains unversioned files. The cause of the conflict
is that deleting the directory will orphan the unversioned files so the
user needs to instruct ``bzr`` what do to do about these orpahns. This is
controlled by setting the ``bzr.transform.orphan_policy`` configuration
variable with a value of ``move``. In this case the unversioned files are
moved to a ``bzr-orphans`` directory at the root of the working tree. The
default behaviour is specified (if needed) by setting the variable to
``conflict``. (Vincent Ladeuil, #323111)
* ``bzr resolve --take-this`` and ``bzr resolve --take-other`` can now be
used for text conflicts. This will ignore the differences that were merged
cleanly and replace the file with its content in the current branch
(``--take-this``) or with its content in the merged branch
(``--take-other``). (Vincent Ladeuil, #638451)
* ``bzr resolve`` now provides more feedback about the conflicts just
resolved and the remaining ones. (Vincent Ladeuil)
Documentation
*************
* A beta version of the documentation is now available in GNU TexInfo
format, used by emacs and the standalone ``info`` reader.
(Vincent Ladeuil, #219334)
Configuration
*************
``bzr`` can be configured via environment variables, command-line options
and configurations files. We've started working on unifying this and give
access to more options. The first step is a new ``bzr config`` command that
can be used to display the active configuration options in the current
working tree or branch as well as the ability to set or remove an
option. Scripts can also use it to get only the value for a given option.
Further information
*******************
For more detailed information on the changes made, see the
the :doc:`../release-notes/index` for:
* the interim bzr `milestones <https://launchpad.net/bzr/2.3>`_
* the plugins you use.
For a summary of changes made in earlier releases, see:
* :doc:`whats-new-in-2.1`
* :doc:`whats-new-in-2.2`
.. vim: ft=rst
|