NOTES ON COMMITTING TO EMACS'S BAZAAR REPO -*- outline -*- * Install changes only on one branch, let them get merged elsewhere if needed. In particular, install bug-fixes only on the release branch (if there is one) and let them get synced to the trunk; do not install them by hand on the trunk as well. E.g. if there is an active "emacs-23" branch and you have a bug-fix appropriate for the next Emacs-23.x release, install it only on the emacs-23 branch, not on the trunk as well. Installing things manually into more than one branch makes merges more difficult. http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2010-03/msg01124.html * Backporting a bug-fix from the trunk to a branch (e.g. "emacs-23"). Label the commit as a backport, e.g. by starting the commit message with "Backport:". This is helpful for the person merging the release branch to the trunk. http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2010-05/msg00262.html * Installing changes from your personal branches. If your branch has only a single commit, or many different real commits, it is fine to do a merge. If your branch has only a very small number of "real" commits, but several "merge from trunks", it is preferred that you take your branch's diff, apply it to the trunk, and commit directly, not merge. This keeps the history cleaner. In general, when working on some feature in a separate branch, it is preferable not to merge from trunk until you are done with the feature. Unless you really need some change that was done on the trunk while you were developing on the branch, you don't really need those merges; just merge once, when you are done with the feature, and Bazaar will take care of the rest. Bazaar is much better in this than CVS, so interim merges are unnecessary. Or use shelves; or rebase; or do something else. See the thread for yet another fun excursion into the exciting world of version control. http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2010-04/msg00086.html * How to merge changes from emacs-23 to trunk The following description uses bound branches, presumably it works in a similar way with unbound ones. 1) Get clean, up-to-date copies of the emacs-23 and trunk branches. Check for any uncommitted changes with bzr status. 2) M-x cd /path/to/trunk 3) load admin/bzrmerge.el 4) M-x bzrmerge RET /path/to/emacs-23 RET It will prompt about revisions that should be skipped, based on the regexp in bzrmerge-missing. If there are more revisions that you know need skipping, you'll have to do that by hand. 5) It will stop if there are any conflicts. Resolve them. Using smerge-mode, there are menu items to skip to the next conflict, and to take either the trunk, branch, or both copies. 6) After resolving all conflicts, you might need to run the command again if there are more revisions still to merge. You can commit either before you do this (eg if you had a lot of conflicts to resolve and don't want to get confused), or refrain from committing until bzrmerge has merged all revisions.