From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Breezy
Original author(s) Canonical and Bazaar/Breezy community
Developer(s)Martin Packman, Jelmer Vernooij
Initial release25 May 2017; 6 years ago (2017-05-25)
Stable release
3.3.3 / 23 May 2023; 10 months ago (2023-05-23) [1]
Repository
Written in Python, Cython (optional)
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Distributed and Client–server revision control system
License GPLv2 or later
Website www.breezy-vcs.org

Breezy (brz) is a distributed and client–server revision control system. It is a friendly fork of the dormant GNU Bazaar (formerly Bazaar-NG, bzr) system.

Breezy brings features like Python 3 and Git support to the Bazaar-based codebase. Many plugins are also merged in as an integral part of the fork. [2]

References

  1. ^ "Breezy releases". Launchpad.net.
  2. ^ "Breezy 3.0.1 is released!". Breezy. Retrieved 16 January 2020.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Breezy
Original author(s) Canonical and Bazaar/Breezy community
Developer(s)Martin Packman, Jelmer Vernooij
Initial release25 May 2017; 6 years ago (2017-05-25)
Stable release
3.3.3 / 23 May 2023; 10 months ago (2023-05-23) [1]
Repository
Written in Python, Cython (optional)
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Distributed and Client–server revision control system
License GPLv2 or later
Website www.breezy-vcs.org

Breezy (brz) is a distributed and client–server revision control system. It is a friendly fork of the dormant GNU Bazaar (formerly Bazaar-NG, bzr) system.

Breezy brings features like Python 3 and Git support to the Bazaar-based codebase. Many plugins are also merged in as an integral part of the fork. [2]

References

  1. ^ "Breezy releases". Launchpad.net.
  2. ^ "Breezy 3.0.1 is released!". Breezy. Retrieved 16 January 2020.

External links


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