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For that small amount of users, bugzilla could do it - the question will be the one of the costs : since someone will be doing the maintenance and customizing, it could be much less interesting than switching directly to something like Fogbugz with everything included. Fogbugz is great, and $25/month/user is a bargain when you come to think about all the features. For 10 people, it is $3000 a year, so about a man-month.
The rest I can think of (Rational, TFS, ..) is much too expensive and over-engineerd, IMO.
You might have a look at Polarion[^], which is a subversion based ALM software (so including change management as well). I am not sure about their prices though.
~RaGE();
I think words like 'destiny' are a way of trying to find order where none exists. - Christian Graus
Do not feed the troll ! - Common proverb
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Rage wrote: $25/month/user is a bargain when you come to think about all the features. For
10 people, it is $3000 a year, so about a man-month.
Exactly my thought.
Rage wrote: You might have a look at Polarion[^], which is a subversion based ALM software
(so including change management as well). I am not sure about their prices though.
Just checked it on their homepage: $2,490 Lifetime license for Named User. But you can also get a quote.
Politicians are always realistically manoeuvering for the next election. They are obsolete as fundamental problem-solvers.
Buckminster Fuller
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YouTrack[^] is free for up to 10 users.
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Looks cool, have you tried it?
Politicians are always realistically manoeuvering for the next election. They are obsolete as fundamental problem-solvers.
Buckminster Fuller
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Yes, we're using it as our main issue tracker. At that price, it's got to be worth a go!
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Will have a proper look at it, thanks.
Politicians are always realistically manoeuvering for the next election. They are obsolete as fundamental problem-solvers.
Buckminster Fuller
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We're also using Youtrack.
+: Great integration with Continuous Integration (TeamCity).
+: Highly programmable and customizable.
-: Too difficult for non-techies.
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I did a lot of searching a couple of years ago on this very thing. We use subversion for our version control and were using bugzilla for issue tracking. We wanted to move everything to the web, so we did.
I ended up going with bontq http://www.bontq.com/[^]for our bug tracking and beanstalk http://www.beanstalkapp.com/[^]for the subversion host.
We have been EXTREMELY satisfied with both of them. Highly recommended....
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You just made the choice a lot more problematic.
I guess I have some homework to do.
Politicians are always realistically manoeuvering for the next election. They are obsolete as fundamental problem-solvers.
Buckminster Fuller
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I've only used a homegrown bug tracker and atlassians jira (see this page)[^].
The homegrown one was a PITA but jira is just awesome.
There is a free SVN integration that lets you see all your commits to a single issue. There is also integration for Git and TFS if you like to change your SCM once.
There is also a add on called "jira agile" which gives you a customizable scrum board if you are into that stuff.
Furthermore you can - if you like - also host it in the cloud out of the box and hence save all your maintenance costs.
If I get their licensing right it costs 10$/month for up to ten users.
Regards,
cmger
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Jira is great, I've been using it for some open source projects (all atlassian products are free for open source projects). And it works great. Integration with lots of other services and the service is the best i've ever seen.
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The Bug Genie. It has integration with SVN, offers hosted service or you can download and use it on your own hardware for free.
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I'm thinking of using Mantis.
It does integrate with [Tortoise]SVN via a plugin. When using that SVN client, you can optionally click a button to browse the issues on Mantis and select which issue(s) it resolves.
Anyone had any experience with it?
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As much as I dislike Neil Young, he says it best:
"Homegrown's all right with me.
Homegrown is the way it should be.
Homegrown is a good thing.
Plant that bell and let it ring.
The sun comes up in the morning,
Shines that light around.
One day, without no warning,
Things start jumping up from the ground.
Well, homegrown's all right with me.
Homegrown is the way it should be.
Homegrown is a good thing.
Plant that bell and let it ring."
Software Zen: delete this;
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Couldn't agree more (about the sentiment and Neil Young). For fear of duplicate posts, I listed my reasons in a direct response later in the thread.
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Take a look at Redmine. GNU licence very flexible, web based with integration for just about everything
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We use Trac: http://trac.edgewall.org[^] It integrates well with subversion and was pretty simple to setup (for me: windoze server, python, trac, apache httpd) or you can get pre-configured installers from a few places.
Or you could investigate the apache incubator "BloodHound" which is based on Trac: http://bloodhound.apache.org/[^]
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For my programming business we use https://www.assembla.com/[^]. It has SVN and git as repo's plus you get one free private repo which will house a couple projects if you set it up correctly. It has a built in ticket system and bug tracker.
Eric
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It's actually frustrating -- there are so many!
My advice:
1. Determine if you want a hosted service or use your servers.
2. Open source. Period. There are so many available, there is no reason to go with a closed source product.
3. Pick one that is actively maintained.
That still only narrows it down to 25 or so.
I've used:
Eventum -- I was happy with it for 4 years. Now owned by oracle I think.
Google code -- meh.
RT -- Does a good job. Too complex for small installations. Don't know if it's FOSS.
WebIssues -- I use this and am also a contributor. What makes it different is that it also has a fully featured native client for Linux / Windows / OSX.
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Make sure you're thinking of it as a change tracking system, not bug tracking. In other words, all deltas to the code/sql/3rd party software/anything else should be registered in whatever tool you use, not just bugs.
With that being said, I can say to exclude redmine from your consideration. It's been many years since I used jira, but that seemed to be pretty effective from what I recall and integrated with SVN.
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We use a homegrown bug tracker called... wait for it... BugTracker. Silverlight MVVM (WP8 almost done for it), CSLA biz objects, SQL Express backend, working on converting it to ASP.NET MVC. While we could probably buy something for cheaper than the dev costs, a.) we develop on it in downtime, so there's not much opportunity cost, and b.) the big one for me is it essentially doubles as our experimental project. We only have 2 devs, my boss and me, and I'm very much the junior, so this got assigned to me, and I get to use it for trying out new concepts in something more realistic than a "Hello, World!" app.
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We use JIRA as an all in one bug tracker/project management tool. The OnDemand version is free for up to 10 users and integrates well with the other Atlassian products.
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Jira by Atlassian on our own server, but you can also have them host for a very modest amount for a small number of users.
We also have it integrated in to SVN by creating a post-commit hook that sends an Email to Jira; the SVN log then gets posted to the Jira when the user supplies the Jira ticket number.
I've used many bugtracking systems (haven't used Bugzilla, though), and wrote a couple of my own, and found Jira to be very useful and easy to customize.
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Try BugTracker.net[^]
I have used it for a couple of trackers now and I am very pleased with it.
Haven't tried the source control integration so ymmv.
DR
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