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[ version 1.0 for bazaar 0.13 ]
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Loggerhead is a web viewer for bazaar branches. It can be used to navigate
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a branch history, annotate files, perform searches... all the usual things.
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This is a TurboGears (http://www.turbogears.org) project. It can be
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started by running the 'start-loggerhead.py' script.
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If you're not familiar with turbogears, the easiest way to get this script
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started is to run it via::
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$ nohup ./start-loggerhead.py &
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and add the following lines to your apache configuration::
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[ Version 1.2 for Bazaar 1.2 ]
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Loggerhead is a web viewer for Bazaar branches. It can be used to
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navigate a branch history, annotate files, perform searches... all the
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To get started, first you need to create a 'loggerhead.conf' file
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specifying the branches you want to view. A 'loggerhead.conf.example'
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file is included in the source which has comments explaining the
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Loggerhead can then be started by running::
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$ ./start-loggerhead.py
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This will run loggerhead in the background. It listens on port 8080
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by default, so go to http://localhost:8080/ in your browser to see the
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list of bublished branches.
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To stop Loggerhead, run::
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$ ./stop-loggerhead.py
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If you want to view Bazaar branches from your existing Apache
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installation, you'll need to configure Apache to proxy certain
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requests to Loggerhead. Adding lines like this to you Apache
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configuration is one way to do this::
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<Location "/branches/">
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ProxyPass http://127.0.0.1:8080/
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ProxyPassReverse http://127.0.0.1:8080/
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The port configuration is in "dev.cfg".
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The config file is "loggerhead.conf". In there, you can configure projects,
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and branches per project. The idea is that you could be publishing several
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(possibly unrelated) projects through the same loggerhead instance, and
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several branches for the same project.
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In the configuration file you can configure projects, and branches per
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project. The idea is that you could be publishing several (possibly
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unrelated) projects through the same loggerhead instance, and several
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branches for the same project. See the "loggerhead.conf.example" file
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included with the source.
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Although Loggerhead is a TurboGears (http://www.turbogears.org)
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project, don't bother with "dev.cfg" or any of the other TurboGears
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config files. Loggerhead overrides those values with its own.
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A debug and access log are stored in the logs/ folder, relative to
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the location of the start-loggerhead.py script.
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You may update the Bazaar branch at any time (for example, from a cron).
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Loggerhead will notice and refresh, and Bazaar uses its own branch
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locking to prevent corruption.
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To speed up most operations, loggerhead will start creating two caches per
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branch when it first launches:
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To speed up operations with large branches, loggerhead can be configured
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to create three caches per branch when it first launches:
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- a revision data cache
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- a cache of files changed in a revision
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- a text searching cache
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You can put the cache folder anywhere, but I find that a folder under
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the branch's .bzr/ folder is the simplest place.
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The caches for a branch with 10,000 revisions take about 15 minutes each
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on my machine, but YMMV. Once they are built, they update every six hours
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or so but usually finish quickly (or instantly) after the initial creation.
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Until the revision cache is built, all operations will be slow.
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You may update the bazaar branch at any time (for example, from a cron).
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Loggerhead will notice and refresh, and bazaar uses its own branch locking
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to prevent corruption.
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You can put the cache folder anywhere.
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The revision data cache and text searching cache will be automatically
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filled once loggerhead starts up. The caches for a branch with 15,000
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revisions take about four minutes each on a fairly fast machine, but
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mileage may vary. Once they are built, they update every six hours or
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so but usually finish quickly (or instantly) after the initial creation.
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This is loosely based on bazaar-webserve, which was loosely based on hgweb.
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Discussion should take place on the bazaar-dev mailing list.
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Loggerhead is loosely based on bazaar-webserve, which was loosely
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based on hgweb. Discussion should take place on the bazaar-dev
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mailing list at bazaar@lists.canonical.com. You can join the list at
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<https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/bazaar>. You don't need to
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subscribe to post, but your first post will be held briefly for manual