Bzr Intro
The Bzr Intro class should give a basic understanding of how to use the bzr revision control system and some of the useful helper utilities available for bzr.
background
prerequisites
- basic familiarity with commandline and Command Line 2
- basic familiarity with linux
- familiarity with a text editor
suggested background
- basic understanding of cvs, subversion or other revision control systems
terms
topics covered
who am i
the first time you start working with bzr on a given machine, let it know who you are, so commit messages will have useful identifiers:
bzr whoami 'FOO BAR <FOO@example.com>'
starting a new project
bzr init PROJECT cd PROJECT bzr add FOO BAR BAZ bzr ci -m 'added initial files' bzr push --remember sftp://some.server/home/USERNAME/public_html/bzr/PROJECT/my-branch
working on an existing project
bzr get URL ORIGIN bzr get ORIGIN NEW_FEATURE cd NEW_FEATURE while feature_is_incomplete: hack, tweak, etc. bzr ci bzr push --remember sftp://some.server/home/USERNAME/public_html/bzr/PROJECT/NEW_FEATURE
announce that your branch has this cool new feature to the project mailing list or irc channel:
hey, just implemented a fix for bug #10: bzr get http://some.server/~USERNAME/bzr/PROJECT/NEW_FEATURE
staying in sync
after making lots of changes, and upstream made lots of changes, it's time to get back in sync with upstream:
bzr merge ../NEW_FEATURE bzr ci -m 'merged amazing new feature: NEW_FEATURE' bzr push sftp://some.server/home/USERNAME/public_html/bzr/PROJECT/my-branch
converting an existing project from subversion
with bzr-svn, it's rather simple:
bzr get SUBVERSION_URL PROJECT
it's also possible with tailor.
both claim to be able to continue to make commits on the subversion backend, but i have not actually tested how well these features work in practice.
http://doc.bazaar-vcs.org/latest/en/mini-tutorial/index.html