Provided by: brz_3.0.2-4ubuntu2_all bug

NAME

       brz - Breezy next-generation distributed version control

SYNOPSIS

       brz command [ command_options ]
       brz help
       brz help command

DESCRIPTION

       Breezy (or brz) is a distributed version control system that is powerful, friendly, and scalable.  Breezy
       is a fork of the Bazaar version control system.

       Breezy keeps track of changes to software source code (or similar  information);  lets  you  explore  who
       changed it, when, and why; merges concurrent changes; and helps people work together in a team.

COMMAND OVERVIEW

       brz add [FILE...]
              Add specified files or directories.

       brz alias [NAME]
              Set/unset and display aliases.

       brz annotate FILENAME
              Show the origin of each line in a file.

       brz bind [LOCATION]
              Convert the current branch into a checkout of the supplied branch.

       brz bisect SUBCOMMAND [ARGS...]
              Find an interesting commit using a binary search.

       brz branch FROM_LOCATION [TO_LOCATION]
              Create a new branch that is a copy of an existing branch.

       brz branches [LOCATION]
              List the branches available at the current location.

       brz break-lock [LOCATION]
              Break a dead lock.

       brz cat FILENAME
              Write the contents of a file as of a given revision to standard output.

       brz check [PATH]
              Validate working tree structure, branch consistency and repository history.

       brz checkout [BRANCH_LOCATION] [TO_LOCATION]
              Create a new checkout of an existing branch.

       brz clean-tree
              Remove unwanted files from working tree.

       brz commit [SELECTED...]
              Commit changes into a new revision.

       brz config [NAME]
              Display, set or remove a configuration option.

       brz conflicts
              List files with conflicts.

       brz cp [NAMES...]
              Copy a file.

       brz deleted
              List files deleted in the working tree.

       brz diff [FILE...]
              Show differences in the working tree, between revisions or branches.

       brz export DEST [BRANCH_OR_SUBDIR]
              Export current or past revision to a destination directory or archive.

       brz grep PATTERN [PATH...]
              Print lines matching PATTERN for specified files and revisions.

       brz help [TOPIC]
              Show help on a command or other topic.

       brz ignore [NAME_PATTERN...]
              Ignore specified files or patterns.

       brz ignored
              List ignored files and the patterns that matched them.

       brz import SOURCE [TREE]
              Import sources from a directory, tarball or zip file

       brz info [LOCATION]
              Show information about a working tree, branch or repository.

       brz init [LOCATION]
              Make a directory into a versioned branch.

       brz init-repository LOCATION
              Create a shared repository for branches to share storage space.

       brz join TREE
              Combine a tree into its containing tree.

       brz launchpad-login [NAME]
              Show or set the Launchpad user ID.

       brz launchpad-logout
              Unset the Launchpad user ID.

       brz launchpad-open [LOCATION]
              Open a Launchpad branch page in your web browser.

       brz link-tree LOCATION
              Hardlink matching files to another tree.

       brz log [FILE...]
              Show historical log for a branch or subset of a branch.

       brz lp-find-proposal
              Find the proposal to merge this revision.

       brz ls [PATH]
              List files in a tree.

       brz merge [LOCATION]
              Perform a three-way merge.

       brz missing [OTHER_BRANCH]
              Show unmerged/unpulled revisions between two branches.

       brz mkdir DIR...
              Create a new versioned directory.

       brz mv [NAMES...]
              Move or rename a file.

       brz nick [NICKNAME]
              Print or set the branch nickname.

       brz pack [BRANCH_OR_REPO]
              Compress the data within a repository.

       brz ping LOCATION
              Pings a Bazaar smart server.

       brz plugins
              List the installed plugins.

       brz pull [LOCATION]
              Turn this branch into a mirror of another branch.

       brz push [LOCATION]
              Update a mirror of this branch.

       brz reconcile [BRANCH]
              Reconcile brz metadata in a branch.

       brz reconfigure [LOCATION]
              Reconfigure the type of a brz directory.

       brz remerge [FILE...]
              Redo a merge.

       brz remove [FILE...]
              Remove files or directories.

       brz remove-branch [LOCATION]
              Remove a branch.

       brz remove-tree [LOCATION...]
              Remove the working tree from a given branch/checkout.

       brz renames [DIR]
              Show list of renamed files.

       brz resolve [FILE...]
              Mark a conflict as resolved.

       brz revert [FILE...]
              Set files in the working tree back to the contents of a previous revision.

       brz revno [LOCATION]
              Show current revision number.

       brz root [FILENAME]
              Show the tree root directory.

       brz send [SUBMIT_BRANCH] [PUBLIC_BRANCH]
              Mail or create a merge-directive for submitting changes.

       brz serve
              Run the brz server.

       brz shelve [FILE...]
              Temporarily set aside some changes from the current tree.

       brz sign-my-commits [LOCATION] [COMMITTER]
              Sign all commits by a given committer.

       brz split TREE
              Split a subdirectory of a tree into a separate tree.

       brz status [FILE...]
              Display status summary.

       brz switch [TO_LOCATION]
              Set the branch of a checkout and update.

       brz tag [TAG_NAME]
              Create, remove or modify a tag naming a revision.

       brz tags
              List tags.

       brz testament [BRANCH]
              Show testament (signing-form) of a revision.

       brz unbind
              Convert the current checkout into a regular branch.

       brz uncommit [LOCATION]
              Remove the last committed revision.

       brz unshelve [SHELF_ID]
              Restore shelved changes.

       brz update [DIR]
              Update a working tree to a new revision.

       brz upgrade [URL]
              Upgrade a repository, branch or working tree to a newer format.

       brz verify-signatures [LOCATION]
              Verify all commit signatures.

       brz version
              Show version of brz.

       brz version-info [LOCATION]
              Show version information about this tree.

       brz view [FILE...]
              Manage filtered views.

       brz whoami [NAME]
              Show or set brz user id.

COMMAND REFERENCE

   brz --help
       Alias for "help", see "brz help".

   brz -?
       Alias for "help", see "brz help".

   brz -h
       Alias for "help", see "brz help".

   brz ?
       Alias for "help", see "brz help".

   brz add [FILE...]
       Options:
           --dry-run                 Show what would be done, but don't
                                     actually do anything.
           --file-ids-from ARG       Lookup file ids from this tree.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --no-recurse, -N          Don't recursively add the contents of
                                     directories.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: ignore, remove

       Add specified files or directories.

       In non-recursive mode, all the named items are added, regardless of whether they were previously ignored.
       A warning is given if any of the named files are already versioned.

       In recursive mode (the default), files are treated the same way but  the  behaviour  for  directories  is
       different.   Directories  that  are  already  versioned  do not give a warning.  All directories, whether
       already versioned or not, are searched for files or subdirectories that are neither versioned or ignored,
       and these are added.  This search proceeds recursively into versioned directories.  If no names are given
       '.' is assumed.

       A warning will be printed when nested trees are encountered, unless they are explicitly ignored.

       Therefore simply saying 'brz add' will version all files that are currently unknown.

       Adding a file whose parent directory is not versioned will implicitly add the parent, and so on up to the
       root. This means you should never need to explicitly add a directory, they'll just get added when you add
       a file in the directory.

       --dry-run will show which files would be added, but not actually add them.

       --file-ids-from will try to use the file ids from the supplied path.  It looks up ids trying  to  find  a
       matching parent directory with the same filename, and then by pure path. This option is rarely needed but
       can be useful when adding the same logical file into two branches that  will  be  merged  later  (without
       showing  the  two  different  adds  as a conflict). It is also useful when merging another project into a
       subdirectory of this one.

       Any files matching patterns in the ignore list will not be added unless they are explicitly mentioned.

       In recursive mode, files larger than the configuration  option  add.maximum_file_size  will  be  skipped.
       Named items are never skipped due to file size.

   brz alias [NAME]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --remove                  Remove the alias.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Set/unset and display aliases.

       Examples:
           Show the current aliases:

               brz alias

           Show the alias specified for 'll':

               brz alias ll

           Set an alias for 'll':

               brz alias ll="log --line -r-10..-1"

           To remove an alias for 'll':

               brz alias --remove ll

   brz ann
       Alias for "annotate", see "brz annotate".

   brz annotate FILENAME
       Options:
           --all                     Show annotations on all lines.
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --long                    Show commit date in annotations.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --show-ids                Show internal object ids.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Aliases: ann, blame, praise

       Show the origin of each line in a file.

       This  prints out the given file with an annotation on the left side indicating which revision, author and
       date introduced the change.

       If the origin is the same for a run of consecutive lines, it is shown only at the top, unless  the  --all
       option is given.

   brz bind [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: checkouts, unbind

       Convert  the  current branch into a checkout of the supplied branch.  If no branch is supplied, rebind to
       the last bound location.

       Once converted into a checkout, commits must succeed on the master branch before they will be applied  to
       the local branch.

       Bound branches use the nickname of its master branch unless it is set locally, in which case binding will
       update the local nickname to be that of the master.

   brz bisect SUBCOMMAND [ARGS...]
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --output ARG, -o          Write log to this file.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Find an interesting commit using a binary search.

       Bisecting, in a nutshell, is a way to find the commit at which some testable change was made, such as the
       introduction of a bug or feature.  By identifying a version which did not have the interesting change and
       a later version which did, a developer can test for the presence of the change at various points  in  the
       history, eventually ending up at the precise commit when the change was first introduced.

       This  command uses subcommands to implement the search, each of which changes the state of the bisection.
       The subcommands are:

       brz bisect start
           Start a bisect, possibly clearing out a previous bisect.

       brz bisect yes [-r rev]
           The specified revision (or the current revision, if not given)
           has the characteristic we're looking for,

       brz bisect no [-r rev]
           The specified revision (or the current revision, if not given)
           does not have the characteristic we're looking for,

       brz bisect move -r rev
           Switch to a different revision manually.  Use if the bisect
           algorithm chooses a revision that is not suitable.  Try to
           move as little as possible.

       brz bisect reset
           Clear out a bisection in progress.

       brz bisect log [-o file]
           Output a log of the current bisection to standard output, or
           to the specified file.

       brz bisect replay <logfile>
           Replay a previously-saved bisect log, forgetting any bisection
           that might be in progress.

       brz bisect run <script>
           Bisect automatically using <script> to determine 'yes' or 'no'.
           <script> should exit with:
              0 for yes
              125 for unknown (like build failed so we could not test)
              anything else for no

   brz blame
       Alias for "annotate", see "brz annotate".

   brz branch FROM_LOCATION [TO_LOCATION]
       Options:
           --bind                    Bind new branch to from location.
           --files-from ARG          Get file contents from this tree.
           --hardlink                Hard-link working tree files where
                                     possible.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --no-tree                 Create a branch without a working-tree.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --stacked                 Create a stacked branch referring to the
                                     source branch. The new branch will
                                     depend on the availability of the source
                                     branch for all operations.
           --standalone              Do not use a shared repository, even if
                                     available.
           --switch                  Switch the checkout in the current
                                     directory to the new branch.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --use-existing-dir        By default branch will fail if the
                                     target directory exists, but does not
                                     already have a control directory.  This
                                     flag will allow branch to proceed.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: checkout

       Create a new branch that is a copy of an existing branch.

       If the TO_LOCATION is omitted, the last component of the FROM_LOCATION will be  used.   In  other  words,
       "branch  ../foo/bar"  will  attempt  to  create  ./bar.   If the FROM_LOCATION has no / or path separator
       embedded, the TO_LOCATION is derived from the FROM_LOCATION  by  stripping  a  leading  scheme  or  drive
       identifier, if any. For example, "branch lp:foo-bar" will attempt to create ./foo-bar.

       To  retrieve  the  branch  as  of  a  particular revision, supply the --revision parameter, as in "branch
       foo/bar -r 5".

   brz branches [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --recursive, -R           Recursively scan for branches rather
                                     than just looking in the specified
                                     location.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       List the branches available at the current location.

       This command will print the names of all the branches at the current location.

   brz break-lock [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --config                  LOCATION is the directory where the
                                     config lock is.
           --force                   Do not ask for confirmation before
                                     breaking the lock.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Break a dead lock.

       This command breaks a lock on a repository, branch, working directory or config file.

       CAUTION: Locks should only be broken when you are sure  that  the  process  holding  the  lock  has  been
       stopped.

       You can get information on what locks are open via the 'brz info [location]' command.

       Examples:
           brz break-lock
           brz break-lock brz+ssh://example.com/brz/foo
           brz break-lock --conf ~/.config/breezy

   brz cat FILENAME
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --filters                 Apply content filters to display the
                                     convenience form.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --name-from-revision      The path name in the old tree.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: ls

       Write the contents of a file as of a given revision to standard output.

       If no revision is nominated, the last revision is used.

       Note: Take care to redirect standard output when using this command on a binary file.

   brz check [PATH]
       Options:
           --branch                  Check the branch related to the current
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --repo                    Check the repository related to the
                                     current directory.
           --tree                    Check the working tree related to the
                                     current directory.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: reconcile

       Validate working tree structure, branch consistency and repository history.

       This  command  checks various invariants about branch and repository storage to detect data corruption or
       brz bugs.

       The working tree and branch checks will only give output if a problem is detected. The output  fields  of
       the repository check are:

       revisions
           This is just the number of revisions checked.  It doesn't
           indicate a problem.

       versionedfiles
           This is just the number of versionedfiles checked.  It
           doesn't indicate a problem.

       unreferenced ancestors
           Texts that are ancestors of other texts, but
           are not properly referenced by the revision ancestry.  This is a
           subtle problem that Breezy can work around.

       unique file texts
           This is the total number of unique file contents
           seen in the checked revisions.  It does not indicate a problem.

       repeated file texts
           This is the total number of repeated texts seen
           in the checked revisions.  Texts can be repeated when their file
           entries are modified, but the file contents are not.  It does not
           indicate a problem.

       If no restrictions are specified, all data that is found at the given location will be checked.

       Examples:

           Check the tree and branch at 'foo':

               brz check --tree --branch foo

           Check only the repository at 'bar':

               brz check --repo bar

           Check everything at 'baz':

               brz check baz

   brz checkin
       Alias for "commit", see "brz commit".

   brz checkout [BRANCH_LOCATION] [TO_LOCATION]
       Options:
           --files-from ARG          Get file contents from this tree.
           --hardlink                Hard-link working tree files where
                                     possible.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --lightweight             Perform a lightweight checkout.
                                     Lightweight checkouts depend on access
                                     to the branch for every operation.
                                     Normal checkouts can perform common
                                     operations like diff and status without
                                     such access, and also support local
                                     commits.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Alias: co

       See also: branch, checkouts, remove-tree, working-trees

       Create a new checkout of an existing branch.

       If  BRANCH_LOCATION  is  omitted,  checkout will reconstitute a working tree for the branch found in '.'.
       This is useful if you have removed the working tree or if it was never created - i.e. if you  pushed  the
       branch to its current location using SFTP.

       If  the  TO_LOCATION is omitted, the last component of the BRANCH_LOCATION will be used.  In other words,
       "checkout ../foo/bar" will attempt to create./bar.  If the BRANCH_LOCATION has no  /  or  path  separator
       embedded,  the  TO_LOCATION  is  derived  from the BRANCH_LOCATION by stripping a leading scheme or drive
       identifier, if any. For example, "checkout lp:foo-bar" will attempt to create ./foo-bar.

       To retrieve the branch as of a particular revision, supply the  --revision  parameter,  as  in  "checkout
       foo/bar -r 5". Note that this will be immediately out of date [so you cannot commit] but it may be useful
       (i.e.  to examine old code.)

   brz ci
       Alias for "commit", see "brz commit".

   brz clean-tree
       Options:
           --detritus                Delete conflict files, merge and revert
                                     backups, and failed selftest dirs.
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --dry-run                 Show files to delete instead of deleting
                                     them.
           --force                   Do not prompt before deleting.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --ignored                 Delete all ignored files.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --unknown                 Delete files unknown to brz (default).
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Remove unwanted files from working tree.

       By default, only unknown files, not ignored files, are deleted.  Versioned files are never deleted.

       Another class is 'detritus', which includes files emitted by brz during normal operations and  selftests.
       (The value of these files decreases with time.)

       If  no  options are specified, unknown files are deleted.  Otherwise, option flags are respected, and may
       be combined.

       To check what clean-tree will do, use --dry-run.

   brz co
       Alias for "checkout", see "brz checkout".

   brz commit [SELECTED...]
       Options:
           --author ARG              Set the author's name, if it's different
                                     from the committer.
           --bugs ARG                Link to a related bug. (see "brz help
                                     bugs").
           --commit-time ARG         Manually set a commit time using commit
                                     date format, e.g. '2009-10-10 08:00:00
                                     +0100'.
           --exclude ARG, -x         Do not consider changes made to a given
                                     path.
           --file MSGFILE, -F        Take commit message from this file.
           --fixes ARG               Mark a bug as being fixed by this
                                     revision (see "brz help bugs").
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --local                   Perform a local commit in a bound
                                     branch.  Local commits are not pushed to
                                     the master branch until a normal commit
                                     is performed.
           --lossy                   When committing to a foreign version
                                     control system do not push data that can
                                     not be natively represented.
           --message ARG, -m         Description of the new revision.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --show-diff, -p           When no message is supplied, show the
                                     diff along with the status summary in
                                     the message editor.
           --strict                  Refuse to commit if there are unknown
                                     files in the working tree.
           --unchanged               Commit even if nothing has changed.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Aliases: ci, checkin

       See also: add, bugs, hooks, uncommit

       Commit changes into a new revision.

       An explanatory message needs to be given for each commit. This is  often  done  by  using  the  --message
       option  (getting  the  message  from the command line) or by using the --file option (getting the message
       from a file). If neither of these options is given, an editor  is  opened  for  the  user  to  enter  the
       message.  To  see  the  changed files in the boilerplate text loaded into the editor, use the --show-diff
       option.

       By default, the entire tree is committed and the person doing the commit is assumed  to  be  the  author.
       These defaults can be overridden as explained below.

       Selective commits:

         If selected files are specified, only changes to those files are
         committed.  If a directory is specified then the directory and
         everything within it is committed.

         When excludes are given, they take precedence over selected files.
         For example, to commit only changes within foo, but not changes
         within foo/bar:

           brz commit foo -x foo/bar

         A selective commit after a merge is not yet supported.

       Custom authors:

         If the author of the change is not the same person as the committer,
         you can specify the author's name using the --author option. The
         name should be in the same format as a committer-id, e.g.
         "John Doe <jdoe@example.com>". If there is more than one author of
         the change you can specify the option multiple times, once for each
         author.

       Checks:

         A common mistake is to forget to add a new file or directory before
         running the commit command. The --strict option checks for unknown
         files and aborts the commit if any are found. More advanced pre-commit
         checks can be implemented by defining hooks. See \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz help hooks\*(Aq\*(Aq
         for details.

       Things to note:

         If you accidentally commit the wrong changes or make a spelling
         mistake in the commit message say, you can use the uncommit command
         to undo it. See \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz help uncommit\*(Aq\*(Aq for details.

         Hooks can also be configured to run after a commit. This allows you
         to trigger updates to external systems like bug trackers. The --fixes
         option can be used to record the association between a revision and
         one or more bugs. See \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz help bugs\*(Aq\*(Aq for details.

   brz config [NAME]
       Options:
           --all                     Display all the defined values for the
                                     matching options.
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --remove                  Remove the option from the configuration
                                     file.
           --scope ARG               Reduce the scope to the specified
                                     configuration file.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: configuration

       Display, set or remove a configuration option.

       Display the active value for option NAME.

       If --all is specified, NAME is interpreted as a regular expression and all matching options are displayed
       mentioning their scope and without resolving option references in the value). The active value  that  bzr
       will take into account is the first one displayed for each option.

       If NAME is not given, --all .* is implied (all options are displayed for the current scope).

       Setting  a  value  is  achieved by using NAME=value without spaces. The value is set in the most relevant
       scope and can be checked by displaying the option again.

       Removing a value is achieved by using --remove NAME.

   brz conflicts
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --text                    List paths of files with text conflicts.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: conflict-types, resolve

       List files with conflicts.

       Merge will do its best to combine the changes in two branches, but there are some kinds of problems  only
       a  human  can fix.  When it encounters those, it will mark a conflict.  A conflict means that you need to
       fix something, before you can commit.

       Conflicts normally are listed as short, human-readable messages.  If --text is supplied, the pathnames of
       files  with  text  conflicts  are  listed,  instead.   (This  is  useful  for editing all files with text
       conflicts.)

       Use brz resolve when you have fixed a problem.

   brz copy
       Alias for "cp", see "brz cp".

   brz cp [NAMES...]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Alias: copy

       Copy a file.

       Usage:
           brz cp OLDNAME NEWNAME

           brz cp SOURCE... DESTINATION

       If the last argument is a versioned directory, all the other names are copied into it.  Otherwise,  there
       must be exactly two arguments and the file is copied to a new name.

       Files cannot be copied between branches. Only files can be copied at the moment.

   brz del
       Alias for "remove", see "brz remove".

   brz deleted
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --show-ids                Show internal object ids.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: ls, status

       List files deleted in the working tree.

   brz di
       Alias for "diff", see "brz diff".

   brz dif
       Alias for "diff", see "brz diff".

   brz diff [FILE...]
       Options:
           --change ARG, -c          Select changes introduced by the
                                     specified revision. See also "help
                                     revisionspec".
           --context ARG             How many lines of context to show.
           --diff-options ARG        Pass these options to the external diff
                                     program.
           --format ARG, -F          Diff format to use.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --new ARG                 Branch/tree to compare to.
           --old ARG                 Branch/tree to compare from.
           --prefix ARG, -p          Set prefixes added to old and new
                                     filenames, as two values separated by a
                                     colon. (eg "old/:new/").
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --using ARG               Use this command to compare files.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Aliases: di, dif

       See also: status

       Show differences in the working tree, between revisions or branches.

       If  no  arguments  are  given, all changes for the current tree are listed.  If files are given, only the
       changes in those files are listed.  Remote and multiple branches can be compared by using the  --old  and
       --new  options.  If not provided, the default for both is derived from the first argument, if any, or the
       current tree if no arguments are given.

       "brz diff -p1" is equivalent to "brz diff --prefix old/:new/", and produces patches suitable  for  "patch
       -p1".

       Note  that when using the -r argument with a range of revisions, the differences are computed between the
       two specified revisions.  That is, the command does not show the changes introduced by the first revision
       in  the  range.  This differs from the interpretation of revision ranges used by "brz log" which includes
       the first revision in the range.

       Exit values:
           1 - changed
           2 - unrepresentable changes
           3 - error
           0 - no change

       Examples:
           Shows the difference in the working tree versus the last commit:

               brz diff

           Difference between the working tree and revision 1:

               brz diff -r1

           Difference between revision 3 and revision 1:

               brz diff -r1..3

           Difference between revision 3 and revision 1 for branch xxx:

               brz diff -r1..3 xxx

           The changes introduced by revision 2 (equivalent to -r1..2):

               brz diff -c2

           To see the changes introduced by revision X:

               brz diff -cX

           Note that in the case of a merge, the -c option shows the changes
           compared to the left hand parent. To see the changes against
           another parent, use:

               brz diff -r<chosen_parent>..X

           The changes between the current revision and the previous revision
           (equivalent to -c-1 and -r-2..-1)

               brz diff -r-2..

           Show just the differences for file NEWS:

               brz diff NEWS

           Show the differences in working tree xxx for file NEWS:

               brz diff xxx/NEWS

           Show the differences from branch xxx to this working tree:

               brz diff --old xxx

           Show the differences between two branches for file NEWS:

               brz diff --old xxx --new yyy NEWS

           Same as 'brz diff' but prefix paths with old/ and new/:

               brz diff --prefix old/:new/

           Show the differences using a custom diff program with options:

               brz diff --using /usr/bin/diff --diff-options -wu

   brz export DEST [BRANCH_OR_SUBDIR]
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --filters                 Apply content filters to export the
                                     convenient form.
           --format ARG              Type of file to export to.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --per-file-timestamps     Set modification time of files to that
                                     of the last revision in which it was
                                     changed.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --root ARG                Name of the root directory inside the
                                     exported file.
           --uncommitted             Export the working tree contents rather
                                     than that of the last revision.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Export current or past revision to a destination directory or archive.

       If no revision is specified this exports the last committed revision.

       Format may be an "exporter" name, such as tar, tgz, tbz2.  If none is given, try to find the format  with
       the extension. If no extension is found exports to a directory (equivalent to --format=dir).

       If  root  is supplied, it will be used as the root directory inside container formats (tar, zip, etc). If
       it is not supplied it will default to the exported filename. The root option  has  no  effect  for  'dir'
       format.

       If branch is omitted then the branch containing the current working directory will be used.

       Note: Export of tree with non-ASCII filenames to zip is not supported.

         =================       =========================
         Supported formats       Autodetected by extension
         =================       =========================
            dir                         (none)
            tar                          .tar
            tbz2                    .tar.bz2, .tbz2
            tgz                      .tar.gz, .tgz
            zip                          .zip
         =================       =========================

   brz grep PATTERN [PATH...]
       Options:
           --color WHEN              Show match in color. WHEN is never,
                                     always or auto.
           --diff, -p                Grep for pattern in changeset for each
                                     revision.
           --exclude GLOB, -X        Skip files whose base name matches GLOB.
           --files-with-matches, -l  Print only the name of each input file
                                     in which PATTERN is found.
           --files-without-match, -L Print only the name of each input file
                                     in which PATTERN is not found.
           --fixed-string, -F        Interpret PATTERN is a single fixed
                                     string (not regex).
           --from-root               Search for pattern starting from the
                                     root of the branch. (implies
                                     --recursive)
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --ignore-case, -i         Ignore case distinctions while matching.
           --include GLOB, -I        Search only files whose base name
                                     matches GLOB.
           --levels N                Number of levels to display - 0 for all,
                                     1 for collapsed (1 is default).
           --line-number, -n         Show 1-based line number.
           --no-recursive            Don't recurse into subdirectories.
                                     (default is --recursive)
           --null, -Z                Write an ASCII NUL (\0) separator
                                     between output lines rather than a
                                     newline.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Print lines matching PATTERN for specified files and revisions.

       This command searches the specified files and revisions for a given pattern.  The pattern is specified as
       a Python regular expressions[1].

       If the file name is not specified, the  revisions  starting  with  the  current  directory  are  searched
       recursively.  If  the  revision number is not specified, the working copy is searched. To search the last
       committed revision, use the '-r -1' or '-r last:1' option.

       Unversioned files are  not  searched  unless  explicitly  specified  on  the  command  line.  Unversioned
       directores are not searched.

       When  searching  a  pattern,  the  output  is  shown  in  the  'filepath:string' format. If a revision is
       explicitly searched, the output is shown as 'filepath~N:string', where N is the revision number.

       --include and --exclude options can be used to search only (or exclude from search) files with base  name
       matches the specified Unix style GLOB pattern.  The GLOB pattern an use *, ?, and [...] as wildcards, and
       \ to quote wildcard or backslash character literally. Note  that  the  glob  pattern  is  not  a  regular
       expression.

       [1] http://docs.python.org/library/re.html#regular-expression-syntax

   brz help [TOPIC]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --long                    Show help on all commands.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Aliases: ?, --help, -?, -h

       See also: topics

       Show help on a command or other topic.

   brz ignore [NAME_PATTERN...]
       Options:
           --default-rules           Display the default ignore rules that
                                     brz uses.
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: ignored, patterns, status

       Ignore specified files or patterns.

       See \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz help patterns\*(Aq\*(Aq for details on the syntax of patterns.

       If  a  .bzrignore  file does not exist, the ignore command will create one and add the specified files or
       patterns to the newly created file. The ignore command will also automatically add the.bzrignore file  to
       be  versioned.  Creating a .bzrignore file without the use of the ignore command will require an explicit
       add command.

       To remove patterns from the ignore list, edit the .bzrignore file.  After  adding,  editing  or  deleting
       that file either indirectly by using this command or directly by using an editor, be sure to commit it.

       Breezy  also supports a global ignore file ~/.config/breezy/ignore. On Windows the global ignore file can
       be  found  in  the  application  data   directory   as   C:\Documents   and   Settings\<user>\Application
       Data\Breezy\3.0\ignore.   Global  ignores  are not touched by this command. The global ignore file can be
       edited directly using an editor.

       Patterns prefixed with '!' are exceptions to ignore patterns and take precedence  over  regular  ignores.
       Such exceptions are used to specify files that should be versioned which would otherwise be ignored.

       Patterns  prefixed  with  '!!' act as regular ignore patterns, but have precedence over the '!' exception
       patterns.

       Notes:

       * Ignore patterns containing shell wildcards must be quoted from
         the shell on Unix.

       * Ignore patterns starting with "#" act as comments in the ignore file.
         To ignore patterns that begin with that character, use the "RE:" prefix.

       Examples:
           Ignore the top level Makefile:

               brz ignore ./Makefile

           Ignore .class files in all directories...:

               brz ignore "*.class"

           ...but do not ignore "special.class":

               brz ignore "!special.class"

           Ignore files whose name begins with the "#" character:

               brz ignore "RE:^#"

           Ignore .o files under the lib directory:

               brz ignore "lib/**/*.o"

           Ignore .o files under the lib directory:

               brz ignore "RE:lib/.*\.o"

           Ignore everything but the "debian" toplevel directory:

               brz ignore "RE:(?!debian/).*"

           Ignore everything except the "local" toplevel directory,
           but always ignore autosave files ending in ~, even under local/:

               brz ignore "*"
               brz ignore "!./local"
               brz ignore "!!*~"

   brz ignored
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: ignore, ls

       List ignored files and the patterns that matched them.

       List all the ignored files and the ignore pattern that caused the file to be ignored.

       Alternatively, to list just the files:

           brz ls --ignored

   brz import SOURCE [TREE]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Import sources from a directory, tarball or zip file

       This command will import a directory, tarball or zip file into a bzr tree, replacing any versioned  files
       already  present.   If  a  directory  is  specified, it is used as the target.  If the directory does not
       exist, or is not versioned, it is created.

       Tarballs may be gzip or bzip2 compressed.  This is autodetected.

       If the tarball or zip has a single root  directory,  that  directory  is  stripped  when  extracting  the
       tarball.  This is not done for directories.

   brz info [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: repositories, revno, working-trees

       Show information about a working tree, branch or repository.

       This command will show all known locations and formats associated to the tree, branch or repository.

       In  verbose  mode,  statistical  information  is  included  with  each report.  To see extended statistic
       information, use a verbosity level of 2 or higher by specifying the verbose option multiple  times,  e.g.
       -vv.

       Branches and working trees will also report any missing revisions.

       Examples:

         Display information on the format and related locations:

           brz info

         Display the above together with extended format information and
         basic statistics (like the number of files in the working tree and
         number of revisions in the branch and repository):

           brz info -v

         Display the above together with number of committers to the branch:

           brz info -vv

   brz init [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --append-revisions-only   Never change revnos or the existing log.
                                     Append revisions to it only.
           --create-prefix           Create the path leading up to the branch
                                     if it does not already exist.
           --format ARG              Specify a format for this branch. See
                                     "help formats" for a full list.
           --2a                      Format for the bzr 2.0 series.
           --bzr                     Format for the bzr 2.0 series.
           --default                 Format for the bzr 2.0 series.
           --git                     GIT repository.
           --git-bare                Bare GIT repository (no working tree).
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --no-tree                 Create a branch without a working tree.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: branch, checkout, init-repository

       Make a directory into a versioned branch.

       Use this to create an empty branch, or before importing an existing project.

       If  there  is  a repository in a parent directory of the location, then the history of the branch will be
       stored in the repository.  Otherwise init creates a standalone branch which carries its  own  history  in
       the .bzr directory.

       If  there  is already a branch at the location but it has no working tree, the tree can be populated with
       'brz checkout'.

       Recipe for importing a tree of files:

           cd ~/project
           brz init
           brz add .
           brz status
           brz commit -m "imported project"

   brz init-repo
       Alias for "init-repository", see "brz init-repository".

   brz init-repository LOCATION
       Options:
           --format ARG              Specify a format for this repository.
                                     See "brz help formats" for details.
           --2a                      Format for the bzr 2.0 series.
           --bzr                     Format for the bzr 2.0 series.
           --default                 Format for the bzr 2.0 series.
           --git                     GIT repository.
           --git-bare                Bare GIT repository (no working tree).
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --no-trees                Branches in the repository will default
                                     to not having a working tree.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Alias: init-repo

       See also: branch, checkout, init, repositories

       Create a shared repository for branches to share storage space.

       New branches created under the repository directory will store their revisions in the repository, not  in
       the  branch  directory.   For branches with shared history, this reduces the amount of storage needed and
       speeds up the creation of new branches.

       If the --no-trees option is given then the branches in the repository will  not  have  working  trees  by
       default.   They  will  still  exist as directories on disk, but they will not have separate copies of the
       files at a certain revision.  This  can  be  useful  for  repositories  that  store  branches  which  are
       interacted with through checkouts or remote branches, such as on a server.

       Examples:
           Create a shared repository holding just branches:

               brz init-repo --no-trees repo
               brz init repo/trunk

           Make a lightweight checkout elsewhere:

               brz checkout --lightweight repo/trunk trunk-checkout
               cd trunk-checkout
               (add files here)

   brz join TREE
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: split

       Combine a tree into its containing tree.

       This command requires the target tree to be in a rich-root format.

       The  TREE  argument  should be an independent tree, inside another tree, but not part of it.  (Such trees
       can be produced by "brz split", but also by running "brz branch" with the target inside a tree.)

       The result is a combined tree, with the subtree no longer an independent part.  This is marked as a merge
       of the subtree into the containing tree, and all history is preserved.

   brz launchpad-login [NAME]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --no-check                Don't check that the user name is valid.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Alias: lp-login

       Show or set the Launchpad user ID.

       When  communicating  with Launchpad, some commands need to know your Launchpad user ID.  This command can
       be used to set or show the user ID that Bazaar will use for such communication.

       Examples:
         Show the Launchpad ID of the current user:

             brz launchpad-login

         Set the Launchpad ID of the current user to 'bob':

             brz launchpad-login bob

   brz launchpad-logout
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Alias: lp-logout

       Unset the Launchpad user ID.

       When communicating with Launchpad, some commands need to know your Launchpad user ID.  This command  will
       log  you  out  from  Launchpad.  This means that communication with Launchpad will happen over HTTPS, and
       will not require one of your SSH keys to be available.

   brz launchpad-open [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --dry-run                 Do not actually open the browser. Just
                                     say the URL we would use.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Alias: lp-open

       Open a Launchpad branch page in your web browser.

   brz link-tree LOCATION
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Hardlink matching files to another tree.

       Only files with identical content and execute bit will be linked.

   brz log [FILE...]
       Options:
           --authors ARG             What names to list as authors - first,
                                     all or committer.
           --change ARG, -c          Show just the specified revision. See
                                     also "help revisionspec".
           --exclude-common-ancestry Display only the revisions that are not
                                     part of both ancestries (require
                                     -rX..Y).
           --forward                 Show from oldest to newest.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --include-merged          Show merged revisions like --levels 0
                                     does.
           --levels N, -n            Number of levels to display - 0 for all,
                                     1 for flat.
           --limit N, -l             Limit the output to the first N
                                     revisions.
           --log-format ARG          Use specified log format.
           --gnu-changelog           Format used by GNU ChangeLog files.
           --line                    Log format with one line per revision.
           --long                    Detailed log format.
           --short                   Moderately short log format.
           --match ARG, -m           Show revisions whose properties match
                                     this expression.
           --match-author ARG        Show revisions whose authors match this
                                     expression.
           --match-bugs ARG          Show revisions whose bugs match this
                                     expression.
           --match-committer ARG     Show revisions whose committer matches
                                     this expression.
           --match-message ARG       Show revisions whose message matches
                                     this expression.
           --omit-merges             Do not report commits with more than one
                                     parent.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --show-diff, -p           Show changes made in each revision as a
                                     patch.
           --show-ids                Show internal object ids.
           --signatures              Show digital signature validity.
           --timezone ARG            Display timezone as local, original, or
                                     utc.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Show files changed in each revision.

       See also: log-formats, revisionspec

       Show historical log for a branch or subset of a branch.

       log is brz's default tool for exploring the history of a branch.  The branch to use  is  taken  from  the
       first parameter. If no parameters are given, the branch containing the working directory is logged.  Here
       are some simple examples:

         brz log                       log the current branch
         brz log foo.py                log a file in its branch
         brz log http://server/branch  log a branch on a server

       The filtering, ordering and information shown for each revision can be controlled as explained below.  By
       default,  all revisions are shown sorted (topologically) so that newer revisions appear before older ones
       and descendants always appear before ancestors. If displayed, merged revisions are shown  indented  under
       the revision in which they were merged.

       Output control:

         The log format controls how information about each revision is
         displayed. The standard log formats are called \*(Aq\*(Aqlong\*(Aq\*(Aq, \*(Aq\*(Aqshort\*(Aq\*(Aq
         and \*(Aq\*(Aqline\*(Aq\*(Aq. The default is long. See \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz help log-formats\*(Aq\*(Aq
         for more details on log formats.

         The following options can be used to control what information is
         displayed:

           -l N        display a maximum of N revisions
           -n N        display N levels of revisions (0 for all, 1 for collapsed)
           -v          display a status summary (delta) for each revision
           -p          display a diff (patch) for each revision
           --show-ids  display revision-ids (and file-ids), not just revnos

         Note that the default number of levels to display is a function of the
         log format. If the -n option is not used, the standard log formats show
         just the top level (mainline).

         Status summaries are shown using status flags like A, M, etc. To see
         the changes explained using words like \*(Aq\*(Aqadded\*(Aq\*(Aq and \*(Aq\*(Aqmodified\*(Aq\*(Aq
         instead, use the -vv option.

       Ordering control:

         To display revisions from oldest to newest, use the --forward option.
         In most cases, using this option will have little impact on the total
         time taken to produce a log, though --forward does not incrementally
         display revisions like --reverse does when it can.

       Revision filtering:

         The -r option can be used to specify what revision or range of revisions
         to filter against. The various forms are shown below:

           -rX      display revision X
           -rX..    display revision X and later
           -r..Y    display up to and including revision Y
           -rX..Y   display from X to Y inclusive

         See \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz help revisionspec\*(Aq\*(Aq for details on how to specify X and Y.
         Some common examples are given below:

           -r-1                show just the tip
           -r-10..             show the last 10 mainline revisions
           -rsubmit:..         show what's new on this branch
           -rancestor:path..   show changes since the common ancestor of this
                               branch and the one at location path
           -rdate:yesterday..  show changes since yesterday

         When logging a range of revisions using -rX..Y, log starts at
         revision Y and searches back in history through the primary
         ("left-hand") parents until it finds X. When logging just the
         top level (using -n1), an error is reported if X is not found
         along the way. If multi-level logging is used (-n0), X may be
         a nested merge revision and the log will be truncated accordingly.

       Path filtering:

         If parameters are given and the first one is not a branch, the log
         will be filtered to show only those revisions that changed the
         nominated files or directories.

         Filenames are interpreted within their historical context. To log a
         deleted file, specify a revision range so that the file existed at
         the end or start of the range.

         Historical context is also important when interpreting pathnames of
         renamed files/directories. Consider the following example:

         * revision 1: add tutorial.txt
         * revision 2: modify tutorial.txt
         * revision 3: rename tutorial.txt to guide.txt; add tutorial.txt

         In this case:

         * \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz log guide.txt\*(Aq\*(Aq will log the file added in revision 1

         * \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz log tutorial.txt\*(Aq\*(Aq will log the new file added in revision 3

         * \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz log -r2 -p tutorial.txt\*(Aq\*(Aq will show the changes made to
           the original file in revision 2.

         * \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz log -r2 -p guide.txt\*(Aq\*(Aq will display an error message as there
           was no file called guide.txt in revision 2.

         Renames are always followed by log. By design, there is no need to
         explicitly ask for this (and no way to stop logging a file back
         until it was last renamed).

       Other filtering:

         The --match option can be used for finding revisions that match a
         regular expression in a commit message, committer, author or bug.
         Specifying the option several times will match any of the supplied
         expressions. --match-author, --match-bugs, --match-committer and
         --match-message can be used to only match a specific field.

       Tips & tricks:

         GUI tools and IDEs are often better at exploring history than command
         line tools: you may prefer qlog or viz from qbzr or bzr-gtk, the
         bzr-explorer shell, or the Loggerhead web interface.  See the Bazaar
         Plugin Guide <http://doc.bazaar.canonical.com/plugins/en/> and
         <http://wiki.bazaar.canonical.com/IDEIntegration>.

         You may find it useful to add the aliases below to \*(Aq\*(Aqbreezy.conf\*(Aq\*(Aq:

           [ALIASES]
           tip = log -r-1
           top = log -l10 --line
           show = log -v -p

         \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz tip\*(Aq\*(Aq will then show the latest revision while \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz top\*(Aq\*(Aq
         will show the last 10 mainline revisions. To see the details of a
         particular revision X,  \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz show -rX\*(Aq\*(Aq.

         If you are interested in looking deeper into a particular merge X,
         use \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz log -n0 -rX\*(Aq\*(Aq.

         \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz log -v\*(Aq\*(Aq on a branch with lots of history is currently
         very slow. A fix for this issue is currently under development.
         With or without that fix, it is recommended that a revision range
         be given when using the -v option.

         brz has a generic full-text matching plugin, brz-search, that can be
         used to find revisions matching user names, commit messages, etc.
         Among other features, this plugin can find all revisions containing
         a list of words but not others.

         When exploring non-mainline history on large projects with deep
         history, the performance of log can be greatly improved by installing
         the historycache plugin. This plugin buffers historical information
         trading disk space for faster speed.

   brz lp-find-proposal
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Find the proposal to merge this revision.

       Finds the merge proposal(s) that discussed landing the specified revision.  This works only if the if the
       merged_revno was recorded for the merge proposal.  The proposal(s) are opened in a web browser.

       Only the revision specified is searched for.  To find the mainline revision that merged it into mainline,
       use the "mainline" revision spec.

       So, to find the merge proposal that reviewed line 1 of README:

         brz lp-find-proposal -r mainline:annotate:README:1

   brz lp-login
       Alias for "launchpad-login", see "brz launchpad-login".

   brz lp-logout
       Alias for "launchpad-logout", see "brz launchpad-logout".

   brz lp-open
       Alias for "launchpad-open", see "brz launchpad-open".

   brz ls [PATH]
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --from-root               Print paths relative to the root of the
                                     branch.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --ignored, -i             Print ignored files.
           --kind ARG, -k            List entries of a particular kind: file,
                                     directory, symlink, tree-reference.
           --null, -0                Use an ASCII NUL (\0) separator rather
                                     than a newline.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --recursive, -R           Recurse into subdirectories.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --show-ids                Show internal object ids.
           --unknown, -u             Print unknown files.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.
           --versioned, -V           Print versioned files.

       See also: cat, status

       List files in a tree.

   brz merge [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --change ARG, -c          Select changes introduced by the
                                     specified revision. See also "help
                                     revisionspec".
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to merge into, rather than the
                                     one containing the working directory.
           --force                   Merge even if the destination tree has
                                     uncommitted changes.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --interactive, -i         Select changes interactively.
           --merge-type ARG          Select a particular merge algorithm.
           --diff3                   Merge using external diff3.
           --lca                     LCA-newness merge.
           --merge3                  Native diff3-style merge.
           --weave                   Weave-based merge.
           --preview                 Instead of merging, show a diff of the
                                     merge.
           --pull                    If the destination is already completely
                                     merged into the source, pull from the
                                     source rather than merging.  When this
                                     happens, you do not need to commit the
                                     result.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --remember                Remember the specified location as a
                                     default.
           --reprocess               Reprocess to reduce spurious conflicts.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --show-base               Show base revision text in conflicts.
           --uncommitted             Apply uncommitted changes from a working
                                     copy, instead of branch changes.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: remerge, send, status-flags, update

       Perform a three-way merge.

       The  source  of  the merge can be specified either in the form of a branch, or in the form of a path to a
       file containing a merge directive generated with brz send. If neither is specified, the  default  is  the
       upstream branch or the branch most recently merged using --remember.  The source of the merge may also be
       specified in the form of a path to a file in another branch:  in this case,  only  the  modifications  to
       that file are merged into the current working tree.

       When  merging  from  a  branch,  by  default brz will try to merge in all new work from the other branch,
       automatically determining an appropriate base revision.  If this fails, you may need to give an  explicit
       base.

       To  pick  a different ending revision, pass "--revision OTHER".  brz will try to merge in all new work up
       to and including revision OTHER.

       If you specify two values, "--revision BASE..OTHER", only revisions BASE through  OTHER,  excluding  BASE
       but  including  OTHER,  will  be  merged.   If  this  causes  some  revisions  to be skipped, i.e. if the
       destination branch does not already contain revision BASE, such a merge is  commonly  referred  to  as  a
       "cherrypick". Unlike a normal merge, Breezy does not currently track cherrypicks. The changes look like a
       normal commit, and the history of the changes from the other branch is not stored in the commit.

       Revision numbers are always relative to the source branch.

       Merge will do its best to combine the changes in two branches, but there are some kinds of problems  only
       a  human  can fix.  When it encounters those, it will mark a conflict.  A conflict means that you need to
       fix something, before you can commit.

       Use brz resolve when you have fixed a problem.  See also brz conflicts.

       If there is no default branch set, the first merge will set it (use --no-remember to avoid  setting  it).
       After that, you can omit the branch to use the default.  To change the default, use --remember. The value
       will only be saved if the remote location can be accessed.

       The results of the merge are placed into the destination working directory, where they  can  be  reviewed
       (with brz diff), tested, and then committed to record the result of the merge.

       merge refuses to run if there are any uncommitted changes, unless --force is given.  If --force is given,
       then the changes from the source will be merged with the current working tree, including any  uncommitted
       changes  in the tree.  The --force option can also be used to create a merge revision which has more than
       two parents.

       If one would like to merge changes from the  working  tree  of  the  other  branch  without  merging  any
       committed revisions, the --uncommitted option can be given.

       To  select  only some changes to merge, use "merge -i", which will prompt you to apply each diff hunk and
       file change, similar to "shelve".

       Examples:
           To merge all new revisions from brz.dev:

               brz merge ../brz.dev

           To merge changes up to and including revision 82 from brz.dev:

               brz merge -r 82 ../brz.dev

           To merge the changes introduced by 82, without previous changes:

               brz merge -r 81..82 ../brz.dev

           To apply a merge directive contained in /tmp/merge:

               brz merge /tmp/merge

           To create a merge revision with three parents from two branches
           feature1a and feature1b:

               brz merge ../feature1a
               brz merge ../feature1b --force
               brz commit -m 'revision with three parents'

   brz missing [OTHER_BRANCH]
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --include-merged          Show all revisions in addition to the
                                     mainline ones.
           --log-format ARG          Use specified log format.
           --gnu-changelog           Format used by GNU ChangeLog files.
           --line                    Log format with one line per revision.
           --long                    Detailed log format.
           --short                   Moderately short log format.
           --mine-only               Display changes in the local branch
                                     only.
           --my-revision ARG         Filter on local branch revisions
                                     (inclusive). See "help revisionspec" for
                                     details.
           --other                   Same as --theirs-only.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --reverse                 Reverse the order of revisions.
           --revision ARG, -r        Filter on other branch revisions
                                     (inclusive). See "help revisionspec" for
                                     details.
           --show-ids                Show internal object ids.
           --theirs-only             Display changes in the remote branch
                                     only.
           --this                    Same as --mine-only.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: merge, pull

       Show unmerged/unpulled revisions between two branches.

       OTHER_BRANCH may be local or remote.

       To filter on a range of revisions, you can use the command -r begin..end -r revision requests a  specific
       revision, -r ..end or -r begin.. are also valid.

       Exit values:
           1 - some missing revisions
           0 - no missing revisions

       Examples:

           Determine the missing revisions between this and the branch at the
           remembered pull location:

               brz missing

           Determine the missing revisions between this and another branch:

               brz missing http://server/branch

           Determine the missing revisions up to a specific revision on the other
           branch:

               brz missing -r ..-10

           Determine the missing revisions up to a specific revision on this
           branch:

               brz missing --my-revision ..-10

   brz mkdir DIR...
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --parents, -p             No error if existing, make parent
                                     directories as needed.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Create a new versioned directory.

       This is equivalent to creating the directory and then adding it.

   brz move
       Alias for "mv", see "brz mv".

   brz mv [NAMES...]
       Options:
           --after                   Move only the brz identifier of the
                                     file, because the file has already been
                                     moved.
           --auto                    Automatically guess renames.
           --dry-run                 Avoid making changes when guessing
                                     renames.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Aliases: move, rename

       Move or rename a file.

       Usage:
           brz mv OLDNAME NEWNAME

           brz mv SOURCE... DESTINATION

       If  the  last argument is a versioned directory, all the other names are moved into it.  Otherwise, there
       must be exactly two arguments and the file is changed to a new name.

       If OLDNAME does not exist on the filesystem but is versioned and NEWNAME does exist on the filesystem but
       is  not  versioned,  mv  assumes  that  the  file  has  been manually moved and only updates its internal
       inventory to reflect that change.  The same is valid when moving many SOURCE files to a DESTINATION.

       Files cannot be moved between branches.

   brz nick [NICKNAME]
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: info

       Print or set the branch nickname.

       If unset, the colocated branch name is used for colocated branches, and the branch directory name is used
       for other branches.  To print the current nickname, execute with no argument.

       Bound branches use the nickname of its master branch unless it is set locally.

   brz pack [BRANCH_OR_REPO]
       Options:
           --clean-obsolete-packs    Delete obsolete packs to save disk
                                     space.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: repositories

       Compress the data within a repository.

       This  operation  compresses  the data within a bazaar repository. As bazaar supports automatic packing of
       repository, this operation is normally not required to be done manually.

       During the pack operation, bazaar takes a backup of existing  repository  data,  i.e.  pack  files.  This
       backup  is  eventually  removed  by  bazaar automatically when it is safe to do so. To save disk space by
       removing the backed up pack files, the --clean-obsolete-packs option may be used.

       Warning: If you  use  --clean-obsolete-packs  and  your  machine  crashes  during  or  immediately  after
       repacking,  you  may  be  left with a state where the deletion has been written to disk but the new packs
       have not been. In this case the repository may be unusable.

   brz ping LOCATION
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Pings a Bazaar smart server.

       This command sends a 'hello' request to the given location using the brz smart protocol, and reports  the
       response.

   brz plugins
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       List the installed plugins.

       This  command  displays the list of installed plugins including version of plugin and a short description
       of each.

       --verbose shows the path where each plugin is located.

       A plugin is an external component for Breezy that extends the  revision  control  system,  by  adding  or
       replacing  code in Breezy.  Plugins can do a variety of things, including overriding commands, adding new
       commands, providing additional network transports and customizing log output.

       See the Bazaar Plugin Guide  <http://doc.bazaar.canonical.com/plugins/en/>  for  further  information  on
       plugins including where to find them and how to install them. Instructions are also provided there on how
       to write new plugins using the Python programming language.

   brz praise
       Alias for "annotate", see "brz annotate".

   brz pull [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to pull into, rather than the one
                                     containing the working directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --local                   Perform a local pull in a bound branch.
                                     Local pulls are not applied to the
                                     master branch.
           --overwrite               Ignore differences between branches and
                                     overwrite unconditionally.
           --overwrite-tags          Overwrite tags only.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --remember                Remember the specified location as a
                                     default.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --show-base               Show base revision text in conflicts.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Show logs of pulled revisions.

       See also: push, send, status-flags, update

       Turn this branch into a mirror of another branch.

       By default, this command only works on branches that have not diverged.  Branches are considered diverged
       if  the  destination branch's most recent commit is one that has not been merged (directly or indirectly)
       into the parent.

       If branches have diverged, you can use 'brz merge' to integrate the changes  from  one  into  the  other.
       Once one branch has merged, the other should be able to pull it again.

       If  you  want  to  replace your local changes and just want your branch to match the remote one, use pull
       --overwrite. This will work even if the two branches have diverged.

       If there is no default location set, the first pull will set it (use --no-remember to avoid setting  it).
       After  that,  you  can  omit the location to use the default.  To change the default, use --remember. The
       value will only be saved if the remote location can be accessed.

       The --verbose option will display the revisions pulled using the log_format configuration option. You can
       use a different format by overriding it with -Olog_format=<other_format>.

       Note:  The  location  can be specified either in the form of a branch, or in the form of a path to a file
       containing a merge directive generated with brz send.

   brz push [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --create-prefix           Create the path leading up to the branch
                                     if it does not already exist.
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to push from, rather than the one
                                     containing the working directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --lossy                   Allow lossy push, i.e. dropping metadata
                                     that can't be represented in the target.
           --no-tree                 Don't populate the working tree, even
                                     for protocols that support it.
           --overwrite               Ignore differences between branches and
                                     overwrite unconditionally.
           --overwrite-tags          Overwrite tags only.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --remember                Remember the specified location as a
                                     default.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --stacked                 Create a stacked branch that references
                                     the public location of the parent
                                     branch.
           --stacked-on ARG          Create a stacked branch that refers to
                                     another branch for the commit history.
                                     Only the work not present in the
                                     referenced branch is included in the
                                     branch created.
           --strict                  Refuse to push if there are uncommitted
                                     changes in the working tree, --no-strict
                                     disables the check.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --use-existing-dir        By default push will fail if the target
                                     directory exists, but does not already
                                     have a control directory.  This flag
                                     will allow push to proceed.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: pull, update, working-trees

       Update a mirror of this branch.

       The target branch will not have its working tree populated because this is both  expensive,  and  is  not
       supported on remote file systems.

       Some smart servers or protocols *may* put the working tree in place in the future.

       This  command  only  works  on  branches that have not diverged.  Branches are considered diverged if the
       destination branch's most recent commit is one that has not been merged (directly or indirectly)  by  the
       source branch.

       If  branches  have  diverged,  you can use 'brz push --overwrite' to replace the other branch completely,
       discarding its unmerged changes.

       If you want to ensure you have the different changes in the other branch, do a merge (see brz help merge)
       from the other branch, and commit that.  After that you will be able to do a push without '--overwrite'.

       If  there is no default push location set, the first push will set it (use --no-remember to avoid setting
       it).  After that, you can omit the location to use the default.  To change the default,  use  --remember.
       The value will only be saved if the remote location can be accessed.

       The --verbose option will display the revisions pushed using the log_format configuration option. You can
       use a different format by overriding it with -Olog_format=<other_format>.

   brz reconcile [BRANCH]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: check

       Reconcile brz metadata in a branch.

       This can correct data mismatches that may have been caused by previous ghost operations or brz  upgrades.
       You should only need to run this command if 'brz check' or a brz developer advises you to run it.

       If a second branch is provided, cross-branch reconciliation is also attempted, which will check that data
       like the tree root id which was not present in very early brz versions is represented correctly  in  both
       branches.

       At  the  same  time  it  is  run  it may recompress data resulting in a potential saving in disk space or
       performance gain.

       The branch *MUST* be on a listable system such as local disk or sftp.

   brz reconfigure [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --bind-to ARG             Branch to bind checkout to.
           --force                   Perform reconfiguration even if local
                                     changes will be lost.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --repository_trees ARG    Whether new branches in the repository
                                     have trees.
           --with-no-trees           Reconfigure repository to not create
                                     working trees on branches by default.
           --with-trees              Reconfigure repository to create working
                                     trees on branches by default.
           --repository_type ARG     Location fo the repository.
           --standalone              Reconfigure to be a standalone branch
                                     (i.e. stop using shared repository).
           --use-shared              Reconfigure to use a shared repository.
           --stacked-on ARG          Reconfigure a branch to be stacked on
                                     another branch.
           --tree_type ARG           The relation between branch and tree.
           --branch                  Reconfigure to be an unbound branch with
                                     no working tree.
           --checkout                Reconfigure to be a bound branch with a
                                     working tree.
           --lightweight-checkout    Reconfigure to be a lightweight checkout
                                     (with no local history).
           --tree                    Reconfigure to be an unbound branch with
                                     a working tree.
           --unstacked               Reconfigure a branch to be unstacked.
                                     This may require copying substantial
                                     data into it.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: branches, checkouts, standalone-trees, working-trees

       Reconfigure the type of a brz directory.

       A target configuration must be specified.

       For checkouts, the bind-to location will be auto-detected if not specified.  The order of  preference  is
       1.  For  a  lightweight checkout, the current bound location.  2. For branches that used to be checkouts,
       the previously-bound location.  3. The push location.  4. The parent  location.   If  none  of  these  is
       available, --bind-to must be specified.

   brz remerge [FILE...]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --merge-type ARG          Select a particular merge algorithm.
           --diff3                   Merge using external diff3.
           --lca                     LCA-newness merge.
           --merge3                  Native diff3-style merge.
           --weave                   Weave-based merge.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --reprocess               Reprocess to reduce spurious conflicts.
           --show-base               Show base revision text in conflicts.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Redo a merge.

       Use this if you want to try a different merge technique while resolving conflicts.  Some merge techniques
       are better than others, and remerge lets you try different ones on different files.

       The options for remerge have the same meaning and defaults as the ones for merge.  The difference is that
       remerge can (only) be run when there is a pending merge, and it lets you specify particular files.

       Examples:
           Re-do the merge of all conflicted files, and show the base text in
           conflict regions, in addition to the usual THIS and OTHER texts:

               brz remerge --show-base

           Re-do the merge of "foobar", using the weave merge algorithm, with
           additional processing to reduce the size of conflict regions:

               brz remerge --merge-type weave --reprocess foobar

   brz remove [FILE...]
       Options:
           --file-deletion-strategy ARGThe file deletion mode to be used.
           --keep                    Delete from brz but leave the working
                                     copy.
           --no-backup               Don't backup changed files.
           --safe                    Backup changed files (default).
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --new                     Only remove files that have never been
                                     committed.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Aliases: rm, del

       Remove files or directories.

       This  makes  Breezy  stop  tracking  changes  to the specified files. Breezy will delete them if they can
       easily be recovered using revert otherwise they will be backed up (adding an extension of the form .~#~).
       If  no  options  or  parameters are given Breezy will scan for files that are being tracked by Breezy but
       missing in your tree and stop tracking them for you.

   brz remove-branch [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --force                   Remove branch even if it is the active
                                     branch.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Alias: rmbranch

       Remove a branch.

       This will remove the branch from the specified location but will keep any working tree or  repository  in
       place.

       Examples:

         Remove the branch at repo/trunk:

           brz remove-branch repo/trunk

   brz remove-tree [LOCATION...]
       Options:
           --force                   Remove the working tree even if it has
                                     uncommitted or shelved changes.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: checkout, working-trees

       Remove the working tree from a given branch/checkout.

       Since a lightweight checkout is little more than a working tree this will refuse to run against one.

       To re-create the working tree, use "brz checkout".

   brz rename
       Alias for "mv", see "brz mv".

   brz renames [DIR]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: status

       Show list of renamed files.

   brz resolve [FILE...]
       Options:
           --action ARG              How to resolve the conflict.
           --auto                    Detect whether conflict has been
                                     resolved by user.
           --done                    Marks the conflict as resolved.
           --take-other              Resolve the conflict taking the merged
                                     version into account.
           --take-this               Resolve the conflict preserving the
                                     version in the working tree.
           --all                     Resolve all conflicts in this tree.
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Alias: resolved

       See also: conflicts

       Mark a conflict as resolved.

       Merge  will do its best to combine the changes in two branches, but there are some kinds of problems only
       a human can fix.  When it encounters those, it will mark a conflict.  A conflict means that you  need  to
       fix something, before you can commit.

       Once  you  have  fixed  a  problem, use "brz resolve" to automatically mark text conflicts as fixed, "brz
       resolve FILE" to mark a specific conflict as resolved, or "brz resolve --all" to mark  all  conflicts  as
       resolved.

   brz resolved
       Alias for "resolve", see "brz resolve".

   brz revert [FILE...]
       Options:
           --forget-merges           Remove pending merge marker, without
                                     changing any files.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --no-backup               Do not save backups of reverted files.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: cat, export, merge, shelve

       Set files in the working tree back to the contents of a previous revision.

       Giving  a  list  of  files  will revert only those files.  Otherwise, all files will be reverted.  If the
       revision is not specified with '--revision', the working tree basis revision is used. A revert  operation
       affects  only  the  working  tree, not any revision history like the branch and repository or the working
       tree basis revision.

       To remove only some changes, without reverting to a prior  version,  use  merge  instead.   For  example,
       "merge  . -r -2..-3" (don't forget the ".")  will remove the changes introduced by the second last commit
       (-2), without affecting the changes introduced by the last commit (-1).  To remove certain changes  on  a
       hunk-by-hunk  basis,  see  the shelve command.  To update the branch to a specific revision or the latest
       revision and update the working tree accordingly while preserving local changes, see the update command.

       Uncommitted changes to files that are reverted will be discarded.  However, by default,  any  files  that
       have  been  manually  changed  will be backed up first.  (Files changed only by merge are not backed up.)
       Backup files have '.~#~' appended to their name, where # is a number.

       When you provide files, you can use their current pathname or the pathname from the target revision.   So
       you  can  use  revert  to  "undelete"  a file by name.  If you name a directory, all the contents of that
       directory will be reverted.

       If you have newly added files since the target revision, they will  be  removed.   If  the  files  to  be
       removed  have  been changed, backups will be created as above.  Directories containing unknown files will
       not be deleted.

       The working tree contains a list of revisions  that  have  been  merged  but  not  yet  committed.  These
       revisions  will be included as additional parents of the next commit.  Normally, using revert clears that
       list as well as reverting the files.  If any files are specified, revert leaves the list  of  uncommitted
       merges  alone and reverts only the files.  Use \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz revert.\*(Aq\*(Aq in the tree root to revert
       all files but keep the recorded merges, and \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz revert --forget-merges\*(Aq\*(Aq to  clear  the
       pending merge list without reverting any files.

       Using  "brz revert --forget-merges", it is possible to apply all of the changes from a branch in a single
       revision.  To do this, perform the merge as desired.  Then doing revert with the "--forget-merges" option
       will  keep  the  content  of  the tree as it was, but it will clear the list of pending merges.  The next
       commit will then contain all of the changes that are present in the other branch, but without  any  other
       parent revisions.  Because this technique forgets where these changes originated, it may cause additional
       conflicts on later merges involving the same source and target branches.

   brz revno [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --tree                    Show revno of working tree.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: info

       Show current revision number.

       This is equal to the number of revisions on this branch.

   brz rm
       Alias for "remove", see "brz remove".

   brz rmbranch
       Alias for "remove-branch", see "brz remove-branch".

   brz root [FILENAME]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Show the tree root directory.

       The root is the nearest enclosing directory with a control directory.

   brz send [SUBMIT_BRANCH] [PUBLIC_BRANCH]
       Options:
           --body ARG                Body for the email.
           --format ARG              Use the specified output format.
           --from ARG, -f            Branch to generate the submission from,
                                     rather than the one containing the
                                     working directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --mail-to ARG             Mail the request to this address.
           --message ARG, -m         Message string.
           --no-bundle               Do not include a bundle in the merge
                                     directive.
           --no-patch                Do not include a preview patch in the
                                     merge directive.
           --output ARG, -o          Write merge directive to this file or
                                     directory; use - for stdout.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --remember                Remember submit and public branch.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --strict                  Refuse to send if there are uncommitted
                                     changes in the working tree, --no-strict
                                     disables the check.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: merge, pull

       Mail or create a merge-directive for submitting changes.

       A merge directive provides many things needed for requesting merges:

       * A machine-readable description of the merge to perform

       * An optional patch that is a preview of the changes requested

       * An optional bundle of revision data, so that the changes can be applied
         directly from the merge directive, without retrieving data from a
         branch.

       \*(Aqbrz send\*(Aq creates a compact data set that, when applied using brz merge, has the same effect  as
       merging from the source branch.

       By  default  the  merge  directive  is  self-contained  and  can  be  applied  to  any  branch containing
       submit_branch in its ancestory without needing access to the source branch.

       If --no-bundle is specified, then Breezy  doesn't  send  the  contents  of  the  revisions,  but  only  a
       structured  request  to  merge from the public_location.  In that case the public_branch is needed and it
       must be up-to-date and accessible to the recipient.  The public_branch is always included  if  known,  so
       that people can check it later.

       The submit branch defaults to the parent of the source branch, but can be overridden.  Both submit branch
       and public branch will be remembered in branch.conf the first time they are used for a particular branch.
       The source branch defaults to that containing the working directory, but can be changed using --from.

       Both  the  submit  branch  and the public branch follow the usual behavior with respect to --remember: If
       there is no default location set, the first send will set it (use --no-remember  to  avoid  setting  it).
       After  that,  you  can  omit the location to use the default.  To change the default, use --remember. The
       value will only be saved if the location can be accessed.

       In order to calculate those changes, brz must analyse the submit branch.  Therefore it is most  efficient
       for  the  submit  branch to be a local mirror.  If a public location is known for the submit_branch, that
       location is used in the merge directive.

       The default behaviour is to send the merge directive by mail, unless -o is given, in  which  case  it  is
       sent to a file.

       Mail  is  sent  using your preferred mail program.  This should be transparent on Windows (it uses MAPI).
       On Unix, it requires the xdg-email utility.  If the preferred client  can't  be  found  (or  used),  your
       editor will be used.

       To  use a specific mail program, set the mail_client configuration option.  Supported values for specific
       clients are "claws", "evolution", "kmail", "mail.app" (MacOS X's Mail.app),  "mutt",  and  "thunderbird";
       generic  options  are  "default", "editor", "emacsclient", "mapi", and "xdg-email".  Plugins may also add
       supported clients.

       If mail is being sent, a to address is required.  This can be supplied  either  on  the  commandline,  by
       setting  the  submit_to  configuration  option  in the branch itself or the child_submit_to configuration
       option in the submit branch.

       The merge directives created by brz send may be applied using brz merge or brz pull by specifying a  file
       containing a merge directive as the location.

       brz  send  makes  extensive  use of public locations to map local locations into URLs that can be used by
       other people.  See \*(Aqbrz help configuration\*(Aq to set them, and use \*(Aqbrz  info\*(Aq  to  display
       them.

   brz serve
       Options:
           --allow-writes            By default the server is a readonly
                                     server.  Supplying --allow-writes
                                     enables write access to the contents of
                                     the served directory and below.  Note
                                     that \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz serve\*(Aq\*(Aq does not perform
                                     authentication, so unless some form of
                                     external authentication is arranged
                                     supplying this option leads to global
                                     uncontrolled write access to your file
                                     system.
           --client-timeout ARG      Override the default idle client timeout
                                     (5min).
           --directory ARG, -d       Serve contents of this directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --inet                    Serve on stdin/out for use from inetd or
                                     sshd.
           --listen ARG              Listen for connections on nominated
                                     address.
           --port ARG                Listen for connections on nominated
                                     port.  Passing 0 as the port number will
                                     result in a dynamically allocated port.
                                     The default port depends on the
                                     protocol.
           --protocol ARG            Protocol to serve.
           --bzr                     The Bazaar smart server protocol over
                                     TCP. (default port: 4155)
           --git                     Git Smart server protocol over TCP.
                                     (default port: 9418)
           --git-receive-pack        Git Smart server receive pack command.
                                     (inetd mode only)
           --git-upload-pack         Git Smart server upload pack command.
                                     (inetd mode only)
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Alias: server

       Run the brz server.

   brz server
       Alias for "serve", see "brz serve".

   brz shelve [FILE...]
       Options:
           --all                     Shelve all changes.
           --destroy                 Destroy removed changes instead of
                                     shelving them.
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --list                    List shelved changes.
           --message ARG, -m         Message string.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.
           --writer ARG              Method to use for writing diffs.
           --plain                   Plaintext diff output.

       See also: configuration, unshelve

       Temporarily set aside some changes from the current tree.

       Shelve  allows  you  to  temporarily  put changes you've made "on the shelf", ie. out of the way, until a
       later time when you can bring them back from the shelf with the  'unshelve'  command.   The  changes  are
       stored  alongside  your  working tree, and so they aren't propagated along with your branch nor will they
       survive its deletion.

       If shelve --list is specified, previously-shelved changes are listed.

       Shelve is intended to help separate several sets of changes that have been inappropriately  mingled.   If
       you  just  want  to  get rid of all changes and you don't need to restore them later, use revert.  If you
       want to shelve all text changes at once, use shelve --all.

       If filenames are specified, only the changes to those files will be shelved. Other  files  will  be  left
       untouched.

       If a revision is specified, changes since that revision will be shelved.

       You  can  put  multiple  items  on  the  shelf, and by default, 'unshelve' will restore the most recently
       shelved changes.

       For complicated changes, it is possible to edit the changes in a separate editor program to  decide  what
       the file remaining in the working copy should look like.  To do this, add the configuration option

           change_editor = PROGRAM @new_path @old_path

       where  @new_path  is replaced with the path of the new version of the file and @old_path is replaced with
       the path of the old version of the file.  The PROGRAM should save the new file with the desired  contents
       of the file in the working tree.

   brz sign-my-commits [LOCATION] [COMMITTER]
       Options:
           --dry-run                 Don't actually sign anything, just print
                                     the revisions that would be signed.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Sign all commits by a given committer.

       If location is not specified the local tree is used.  If committer is not specified the default committer
       is used.

       This does not sign commits that already have signatures.

   brz split TREE
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: join

       Split a subdirectory of a tree into a separate tree.

       This command will produce a target tree in a  format  that  supports  rich  roots,  like  'rich-root'  or
       'rich-root-pack'.  These formats cannot be converted into earlier formats like 'dirstate-tags'.

       The  TREE  argument should be a subdirectory of a working tree.  That subdirectory will be converted into
       an independent tree, with its own branch.  Commits in the top-level  tree  will  not  apply  to  the  new
       subtree.

   brz st
       Alias for "status", see "brz status".

   brz stat
       Alias for "status", see "brz status".

   brz status [FILE...]
       Options:
           --change ARG, -c          Select changes introduced by the
                                     specified revision. See also "help
                                     revisionspec".
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --no-classify             Do not mark object type using indicator.
           --no-pending              Don't show pending merges.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --short, -S               Use short status indicators.
           --show-ids                Show internal object ids.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.
           --versioned, -V           Only show versioned files.

       Aliases: st, stat

       See also: diff, revert, status-flags

       Display status summary.

       This reports on versioned and unknown files, reporting them grouped by state.  Possible states are:

       added
           Versioned in the working copy but not in the previous revision.

       removed
           Versioned in the previous revision but removed or deleted
           in the working copy.

       renamed
           Path of this file changed from the previous revision;
           the text may also have changed.  This includes files whose
           parent directory was renamed.

       modified
           Text has changed since the previous revision.

       kind changed
           File kind has been changed (e.g. from file to directory).

       unknown
           Not versioned and not matching an ignore pattern.

       Additionally  for  directories,  symlinks and files with a changed executable bit, Breezy indicates their
       type using a trailing character: '/', '@' or '*' respectively. These decorations can  be  disabled  using
       the '--no-classify' option.

       To see ignored files use 'brz ignored'.  For details on the changes to file texts, use 'brz diff'.

       Note  that --short or -S gives status flags for each item, similar to Subversion's status command. To get
       output similar to svn -q, use brz status -SV.

       If no arguments are specified, the status of the entire working directory is shown.  Otherwise, only  the
       status  of  the  specified files or directories is reported.  If a directory is given, status is reported
       for everything inside that directory.

       Before merges are committed, the pending merge  tip  revisions  are  shown.  To  see  all  pending  merge
       revisions,  use  the  -v  option.   To  skip the display of pending merge information altogether, use the
       no-pending option or specify a file/directory.

       To compare the working directory to a specific revision, pass a single revision to the revision argument.

       To see which files have changed in a specific revision, or between two revisions, pass a  revision  range
       to the revision argument.  This will produce the same results as calling 'brz diff --summarize'.

   brz switch [TO_LOCATION]
       Options:
           --create-branch, -b       Create the target branch from this one
                                     before switching to it.
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --force                   Switch even if local commits will be
                                     lost.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --store                   Store and restore uncommitted changes in
                                     the branch.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Set the branch of a checkout and update.

       For  lightweight  checkouts,  this  changes the branch being referenced.  For heavyweight checkouts, this
       checks that there are no local commits versus the current bound branch, then it makes the local branch  a
       mirror of the new location and binds to it.

       In  both  cases,  the  working tree is updated and uncommitted changes are merged. The user can commit or
       revert these as they desire.

       Pending merges need to be committed or reverted before using switch.

       The path to the branch to switch to can be specified relative to the  parent  directory  of  the  current
       branch.  For  example, if you are currently in a checkout of /path/to/branch, specifying 'newbranch' will
       find a branch at /path/to/newbranch.

       Bound branches use the nickname of its master branch unless it is set locally, in  which  case  switching
       will update the local nickname to be that of the master.

   brz tag [TAG_NAME]
       Options:
           --delete                  Delete this tag rather than placing it.
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch in which to place the tag.
           --force                   Replace existing tags.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: commit, tags

       Create, remove or modify a tag naming a revision.

       Tags  give human-meaningful names to revisions.  Commands that take a -r (--revision) option can be given
       -rtag:X, where X is any previously created tag.

       Tags are stored in the branch.  Tags are copied from one branch to another along when you  branch,  push,
       pull or merge.

       It  is  an error to give a tag name that already exists unless you pass --force, in which case the tag is
       moved to point to the new revision.

       To rename a tag (change the name but keep it on the same revsion),  run  \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz  tag  new-name  -r
       tag:old-name\*(Aq\*(Aq and then \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz tag --delete oldname\*(Aq\*(Aq.

       If no tag name is specified it will be determined through the 'automatic_tag_name' hook. This can e.g. be
       used  to  automatically  tag  upstream  releases  by  reading  configure.ac.   See   \*(Aq\*(Aqbrz   help
       hooks\*(Aq\*(Aq for details.

   brz tags
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch whose tags should be displayed.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --show-ids                Show internal object ids.
           --sort ARG                Sort tags by different criteria.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: tag

       List tags.

       This command shows a table of tag names and the revisions they reference.

   brz testament [BRANCH]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --long                    Produce long-format testament.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --strict                  Produce a strict-format testament.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Show testament (signing-form) of a revision.

   brz unbind
       Options:
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: bind, checkouts

       Convert the current checkout into a regular branch.

       After unbinding, the local branch is considered independent and subsequent commits will be local only.

   brz uncommit [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --dry-run                 Don't actually make changes.
           --force                   Say yes to all questions.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --keep-tags               Keep tags that point to removed
                                     revisions.
           --local                   Only remove the commits from the local
                                     branch when in a checkout.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: commit

       Remove the last committed revision.

       --verbose  will  print  out  what  is  being removed.  --dry-run will go through all the motions, but not
       actually remove anything.

       If --revision is specified, uncommit revisions to leave  the  branch  at  the  specified  revision.   For
       example, "brz uncommit -r 15" will leave the branch at revision 15.

       Uncommit  leaves  the working tree ready for a new commit.  The only change it may make is to restore any
       pending merges that were present before the commit.

   brz unshelve [SHELF_ID]
       Options:
           --action ARG              The action to perform.
           --apply                   Apply changes and remove from the shelf.
           --delete-only             Delete changes without applying them.
           --dry-run                 Show changes, but do not apply or remove
                                     them.
           --keep                    Apply changes but don't delete them.
           --preview                 Instead of unshelving the changes, show
                                     the diff that would result from
                                     unshelving.
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: shelve

       Restore shelved changes.

       By default, the most recently shelved changes are restored. However if you specify a shelf  by  id  those
       changes will be restored instead.  This works best when the changes don't depend on each other.

   brz up
       Alias for "update", see "brz update".

   brz update [DIR]
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --show-base               Show base revision text in conflicts.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Alias: up

       See also: pull, status-flags, working-trees

       Update a working tree to a new revision.

       This  will perform a merge of the destination revision (the tip of the branch, or the specified revision)
       into the working tree, and then make that revision the basis revision for the working tree.

       You can use this to visit an older revision, or to update a working tree that is out  of  date  from  its
       branch.

       If  there  are any uncommitted changes in the tree, they will be carried across and remain as uncommitted
       changes after the update.  To discard these changes, use  'brz  revert'.   The  uncommitted  changes  may
       conflict with the changes brought in by the change in basis revision.

       If the tree's branch is bound to a master branch, brz will also update the branch from the master.

       You  cannot  update  just  a single file or directory, because each Breezy working tree has just a single
       basis revision.  If you want to restore a file that has been removed locally, use 'brz revert' instead of
       'brz update'.  If you want to restore a file to its state in a previous revision, use 'brz revert' with a
       '-r' option, or use 'brz cat' to write out the old content of that file to a new location.

       The 'dir' argument, if given, must be the location of the root of a working tree to update.  By  default,
       the working tree that contains the current working directory is used.

   brz upgrade [URL]
       Options:
           --clean                   Remove the backup.bzr directory if
                                     successful.
           --dry-run                 Show what would be done, but don't
                                     actually do anything.
           --format ARG              Upgrade to a specific format.  See "brz
                                     help formats" for details.
           --2a                      Format for the bzr 2.0 series.
           --bzr                     Format for the bzr 2.0 series.
           --default                 Format for the bzr 2.0 series.
           --git                     GIT repository.
           --git-bare                Bare GIT repository (no working tree).
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       See also: check, formats, reconcile

       Upgrade a repository, branch or working tree to a newer format.

       When  the  default  format  has  changed  after a major new release of Bazaar/Breezy, you may be informed
       during certain operations that you should upgrade. Upgrading to a newer format may improve performance or
       make  new features available. It may however limit interoperability with older repositories or with older
       versions of Bazaar or Breezy.

       If you wish to upgrade to a particular format rather than the current  default,  that  can  be  specified
       using  the --format option.  As a consequence, you can use the upgrade command this way to "downgrade" to
       an earlier format, though some conversions are a one way process (e.g. changing from the 1.x  default  to
       the 2.x default) so downgrading is not always possible.

       A  backup.bzr.~#~  directory  is created at the start of the conversion process (where # is a number). By
       default, this is left there on completion. If the conversion fails, delete the  new  .bzr  directory  and
       rename  this  one  back  in  its  place. Use the --clean option to ask for the backup.bzr directory to be
       removed on successful conversion.  Alternatively, you can delete it by  hand  if  everything  looks  good
       afterwards.

       If  the  location  given  is  a  shared  repository,  dependent  branches are also converted provided the
       repository converts successfully.  If the conversion of a branch  fails,  remaining  branches  are  still
       tried.

       For      more      information      on      upgrades,      see      the     Breezy     Upgrade     Guide,
       https://www.breezy-vcs.org/doc/en/upgrade-guide/.

   brz verify-signatures [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --acceptable-keys ARG, -k Comma separated list of GPG key patterns
                                     which are acceptable for verification.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Verify all commit signatures.

       Verifies that all commits in the branch are signed by known GnuPG keys.

   brz version
       Options:
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --short                   Print just the version number.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Show version of brz.

   brz version-info [LOCATION]
       Options:
           --all                     Include all possible information.
           --check-clean             Check if tree is clean.
           --format ARG              Select the output format.
           --custom                  Version info in Custom template-based
                                     format.
           --python                  Version info in Python format.
           --rio                     Version info in RIO (simple text) format
                                     (default).
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --include-file-revisions  Include the last revision for each file.
           --include-history         Include the revision-history.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --revision ARG, -r        See "help revisionspec" for details.
           --template ARG            Template for the output.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Show version information about this tree.

       You can use this command to add information about version into source code of an application. The  output
       can be in one of the supported formats or in a custom format based on a template.

       For example:

         brz version-info --custom \
           --template="#define VERSION_INFO \"Project 1.2.3 (r{revno})\"\n"

       will  produce  a  C  header  file  with  formatted  string  containing the current revision number. Other
       supported variables in templates are:

         * {date} - date of the last revision
         * {build_date} - current date
         * {revno} - revision number
         * {revision_id} - revision id
         * {branch_nick} - branch nickname
         * {clean} - 0 if the source tree contains uncommitted changes,
                     otherwise 1

   brz view [FILE...]
       Options:
           --all                     Apply list or delete action to all
                                     views.
           --delete                  Delete the view.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --name ARG                Name of the view to define, list or
                                     delete.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --switch ARG              Name of the view to switch to.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Manage filtered views.

       Views provide a mask over the tree so that users can focus on a subset of a tree when doing  their  work.
       After  creating  a  view, commands that support a list of files - status, diff, commit, etc - effectively
       have that list of files implicitly given each time.  An explicit list of files can  still  be  given  but
       those files must be within the current view.

       In  most cases, a view has a short life-span: it is created to make a selected change and is deleted once
       that change is committed.  At other times, you may wish to create one or  more  named  views  and  switch
       between them.

       To   disable  the  current  view  without  deleting  it,  you  can  switch  to  the  pseudo  view  called
       \*(Aq\*(Aqoff\*(Aq\*(Aq. This can be useful when you need to see the whole tree for an operation  or  two
       (e.g. merge) but want to switch back to your view after that.

       Examples:
         To define the current view:

           brz view file1 dir1 ...

         To list the current view:

           brz view

         To delete the current view:

           brz view --delete

         To disable the current view without deleting it:

           brz view --switch off

         To define a named view and switch to it:

           brz view --name view-name file1 dir1 ...

         To list a named view:

           brz view --name view-name

         To delete a named view:

           brz view --name view-name --delete

         To switch to a named view:

           brz view --switch view-name

         To list all views defined:

           brz view --all

         To delete all views:

           brz view --delete --all

   brz whoami [NAME]
       Options:
           --branch                  Set identity for the current branch
                                     instead of globally.
           --directory ARG, -d       Branch to operate on, instead of working
                                     directory.
           --email                   Display email address only.
           --help, -h                Show help message.
           --quiet, -q               Only display errors and warnings.
           --usage                   Show usage message and options.
           --verbose, -v             Display more information.

       Show or set brz user id.

       Examples:
           Show the email of the current user:

               brz whoami --email

           Set the current user:

               brz whoami "Frank Chu <fchu@example.com>"

ENVIRONMENT

       BRZPATH
              Path where brz is to look for shell plugin external commands.

       BRZ_EMAIL
              E-Mail address of the user. Overrides EMAIL.

       EMAIL  E-Mail address of the user.

       BRZ_EDITOR
              Editor for editing commit messages. Overrides EDITOR.

       EDITOR Editor for editing commit messages.

       BRZ_PLUGIN_PATH
              Paths where brz should look for plugins.

       BRZ_DISABLE_PLUGINS
              Plugins that brz should not load.

       BRZ_PLUGINS_AT
              Plugins to load from a directory not in BRZ_PLUGIN_PATH.

       BRZ_HOME
              Directory holding breezy config dir. Overrides HOME.

       BRZ_HOME (Win32)
              Directory holding breezy config dir. Overrides APPDATA and HOME.

       BZR_REMOTE_PATH
              Full name of remote 'brz' command (for brz+ssh:// URLs).

       BRZ_SSH
              Path to SSH client, or one of paramiko, openssh, sshcorp, plink or lsh.

       BRZ_LOG
              Location of .brz.log (use '/dev/null' to suppress log).

       BRZ_LOG (Win32)
              Location of .brz.log (use 'NUL' to suppress log).

       BRZ_COLUMNS
              Override implicit terminal width.

       BRZ_CONCURRENCY
              Number of processes that can be run concurrently (selftest)

       BRZ_PROGRESS_BAR
              Override the progress display. Values are 'none' or 'text'.

       BRZ_PDB
              Control whether to launch a debugger on error.

       BRZ_SIGQUIT_PDB
              Control whether SIGQUIT behaves normally or invokes a breakin debugger.

       BRZ_TEXTUI_INPUT
              Force console input mode for prompts to line-based (instead of char-based).

FILES

       ~/.config/breezy/breezy.conf
              Contains  the  user's  default  configuration.  The  section  [DEFAULT]  is used to define general
              configuration that will be applied everywhere.  The  section  [ALIASES]  can  be  used  to  create
              command aliases for commonly used options.

              A typical config file might look something like:

              [DEFAULT]
              email=John Doe <jdoe@isp.com>
              [ALIASES]
              commit = commit --strict
              log10 = log --short -r -10..-1

SEE ALSO

       https://www.breezy-vcs.org/