Developing a plugin
===================

Naming
------

By convention, most plugins are named brz-xxx and are installed into a
directory called xxx. Note that the directory name must be a legal
Python package name, so a plugin called brz-xxx-yyy need to be installed
into a directory called xxx_yyy, i.e. '-' in a plugin name should be mapped to
an underscore in the directory name.


Licensing
---------

We encourage plugin authors to make their plugins publicly available
under the same license as Breezy itself, namely GPL v2 or later. However, there
is no requirement to do so. You are free to create Breezy plugins for
private or internal use within your company and not distribute them.

By sharing your work, a larger number of people benefit. In our experience,
plugin developers also benefit heavily by having more users involved in
the design, testing, bug fixing and longer term maintenance. In other words,
sharing leads to a better plugin faster.


Testing
-------

To ensure your plugin under development is available to Breezy, set
the ``BRZ_PLUGIN_PATH`` environment variable to its parent directory.
Alternatively, you may wish to develop your plugin within a directory
under your personal plugins area (``~/.bazaar/plugins`` on GNU/Linux)
or put a symbolic link in that area pointing to your plugin under
test.  Finally you can use ``BRZ_PLUGINS_AT`` to point to a specific
directory for a specific plugin (separated by your platform's value of
os.pathsep), e.g.

  export BRZ_PLUGINS_AT=qbrz@/home/me/qbrz:explorer@/home/me/explorer

You can disable loading plugins with ``BRZ_DISABLE_PLUGINS``.

If you want to stop loading all but installed plugins you can use:

  BRZ_PLUGIN_PATH=-site

We also encourage plugin developers to provide tests for their plugin.
When you run ``brz selftest``, Breezy will scan all its plugins to see if
they contain a function named ``test_suite()``.  For each plugin that does,
it calls the function and adds any resulting tests to the master test suite.
To run just the tests for plugin xxx, the command is::

  brz selftest -s bp.xxx


Providing help
--------------

Plugins in this guide have their documentation automatically
generated from the online help provided for a plugin. Sections are
ordered as follows:

1. High level introduction
2. Plugin-specific help topics (COMING SOON)
3. Commands defined or extended by the plugin.

High level help is specified in the docstring for the ``__init__.py`` module.
You can register plugin-specific help topics in ``__init__.py`` like this::

  _xxx_tutorial = """XXX Tutorial

  Welcome to xxx, your new best friend. ...
  """
  topic_registry.register('xxx-tutorial',
      _xxx_tutorial,
      'How to use xxx')

Command level help is specified in the docstring for the relevant 
``cmd_xxx`` Command class.

.. note::

   The final documentation needs to be in ReST format. Keep in mind though
   that the documentation should also be readable via ``brz help xxx`` so
   it's best to keep markup to a reasonable minimum.
   

Providing custom code via hooks
-------------------------------

Hooks let you provide custom code at certain processing points.
The available hook point are documented in the `User Reference
<http://doc.bazaar-vcs.org/development/en/user-reference/index.html#hooks>`_.

Adding a new hook is done with, for example::

  import breezy.branch
  breezy.branch.Branch.hooks.install_named_hook('post_push', post_push_hook,
                                 'My post_push hook')

For more information on how to write hooks,
see http://doc.bazaar-vcs.org/development/en/user-guide/hooks.html.


Defining a new command
----------------------

Breezy commands are defined as subclasses of ``breezy.commands.Command``, the
command name is specified by the name of the subclass, and they must be
registered into ``brz`` with the ``breezy.commands.register_command`` function
at module import time.

To define the ``brz foo-bar`` command::

  from breezy.commands import Command, register_command

  class cmd_foo_bar(Command):
    # see breezy/builtins.py for information about what to put here
    pass

  register_command(cmd_foo_bar)

If the class name starts with ``cmd_``, the prefix will get dropped
and ``_`` will be replaced by ``-`` characters.


Managing data
-------------

Plugin data falls into several categories:

* Configuration settings.
* Data the user can see and version control.
* Data behind the scenes.

Configuration settings are often stored in ``branch.conf``,
``locations.conf`` or ``bazaar.conf``.

User-visible data for a plugin called xxx should be stored in
``.bzrmeta/xxx``. If mutiple files are desirable, make ``.bzrmeta/xxx``
a directory or give them a common prefix within ``.bzrmeta``, e.g.
``xxx-foo``, ``xxx-bar``.

Data managed behind the scenes should be stored in ``.bzr``.
Depending on the nature of the data, it may belong in a subdirectory
within there, e.g. ``checkout``, ``branch`` or ``repository``.
It's your responsibility to ensure behind-the-scenes data is
propagated and merged appropriately via custom code. You may want
to use existing hooks for this or ask for new hooks to help.

Useful metadata
---------------

It is highly recommended that plugins define a version number. This
is displayed by ``brz plugins`` and by the ``qplugins`` GUI dialog.
To do this, define ``version_info`` in ``__init__.py`` like this::

  version_info = (1, 2, 0, 'beta', 1)

Plugins can also declare other useful metadata such as a mimimum
breezy version, new transports and storage formats. See
`Plugin API <plugin-api>`_ for details.


Performance tips
----------------

When brz starts up, it imports every plugin, so plugins can degrade
performance when they're not being used. However, sub-modules are not
loaded, only the main name.

One way you can avoid this slowdown is by putting most of your code
in sub-modules, so that the plugin, itself, is small. All you really
need in the ``__init__.py`` is the plugin's Command classes, the
commands to register them, and the optional ``test_suite()``.

Another way to reduce your plugin's overhead is to use the breezy
lazy_import functionality. That looks something like this::

  from breezy.lazy_import import lazy_import
  lazy_import(globals(), """
  from breezy import (
      branch as _mod_branch,
      option,
      workingtree,
      )
  """)

Lazy importing only works for packages and modules, not classes or
functions. It defers the import until you actually need it.


Learning more
-------------

`Integrating with Bazaar <http://wiki.bazaar.canonical.com/Integrating_with_Bazaar>`_
explains how to do such operations as ``add``, ``commit``, ``log`` and more.

Reference documentation on some key APIs is provided below. For a more
detailed reference, see the `complete breezy API documentation <api/index>`_.


Mini API Reference
------------------

Command Class
~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Base class for commands. Commands are the heart of the command-line brz
interface.

The command object mostly handles the mapping of command-line parameters into
one or more breezy operations, and of the results into textual output.

Commands normally don't have any state. All their arguments are passed in to
the run method. (Subclasses may take a different policy if the behaviour of the
instance needs to depend on e.g. a shell plugin and not just its Python class.)

The docstring for an actual command should give a single-line summary, then a
complete description of the command. A grammar description will be inserted.

aliases
    Other accepted names for this command.

takes_args
    List of argument forms, marked with whether they are optional,
    repeated, etc.

    For example: ``['to_location', 'from_branch?', 'file*']`` means:

    * 'to_location' is required
    * 'from_branch' is optional
    * 'file' can be specified 0 or more times

takes_options
    List of options that may be given for this command. These can be either
    strings, referring to globally-defined options, or option objects.
    Retrieve through options().

hidden
    If true, this command isn't advertised. This is typically for commands
    intended for expert users.

run()
    Actually run the command. This is invoked with the options and arguments
    bound to keyword parameters.

    Return 0 or None if the command was successful, or a non-zero shell error
    code if not. It's OK for this method to allow an exception to raise up.


register_command Function
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Utility function to help register a command.

param *cmd*
  Command subclass to register

param *decorate*
  If true, allow overriding an existing command of the same name; the old
  command is returned by this function. Otherwise it is an error to try to
  override an existing command.
