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Usage Cases
===========

Case 1: Tracking the status of bugs in remote repo branches
-----------------------------------------------------------

See discussion in
  #bea86499-824e-4e77-b085-2d581fa9ccab/12c986be-d19a-4b8b-b1b5-68248ff4d331#
Here, it doesn't matter whether the remote repository is a branch of
the local repository, or a completely separate project
(e.g. upstream, ...).  So long as the remote project provides access
via some REPO format, you can use
  be --repo REPO ...
to run your query, or
  be diff REPO
to see the changes between the local and remote repositories.


Case 2: Importing bugs from other repositories
----------------------------------------------

Case 2.1: If the remote repository is a branch of the local repository
  VCS merge REPO
Case 2.2: If the remote repository is not a branch of the local repository
  Hypothetical command:
    be import REPO ID


Notes
=====

Providing public repositories
-----------------------------

e.g. for non-dev users.  These are just branches that expose a public
interface (HTML, email, ...).  Merge and query like any other
development branch.


Managing permissions
--------------------

Many bugtrackers implement some sort of permissions system, and they
are certainly required for a central system with diverse user roles.
However DVCSs also support the 'pull my changes' workflow, where
permissions are irrelevant.