What tracking software does Rubyforge use?

Does anyone know what software Ruby uses for the bug/requests/patches
trackers? It's pretty slick (way better than Trac imo) and I was just
wondering software it is. Is it internal to RF or is it available for
people to download and use?

Pat

It's called GForge.

-austin

···

On 12/15/06, Pat Maddox <pergesu@gmail.com> wrote:

Does anyone know what software Ruby uses for the bug/requests/patches
trackers? It's pretty slick (way better than Trac imo) and I was just
wondering software it is. Is it internal to RF or is it available for
people to download and use?

--
Austin Ziegler * halostatue@gmail.com * http://www.halostatue.ca/
               * austin@halostatue.ca * You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike. // halo • statue
               * austin@zieglers.ca

Can you explain why you think its better then trac? I know just from
the UI and user experience level, Trac seems a whole lot nicer then
gforge does. I've only use trac for actual project tracking, though,
and only know gforge through a few bug reports and searching.

- Rob

···

On 12/15/06, Pat Maddox <pergesu@gmail.com> wrote:

Does anyone know what software Ruby uses for the bug/requests/patches
trackers? It's pretty slick (way better than Trac imo) and I was just
wondering software it is. Is it internal to RF or is it available for
people to download and use?

Pat

Thanks. I'm having trouble figuring out if it's free or not. Seems
like the app itself is free, but you can purchase licenses?

Basically what I'd like to do is be able to set up a couple different
projects and have a couple trackers, just like a rubyforge project
would. Though we probably won't have more than 15 users or 5 projects
or so. Would GForge be good for this? Is there any other open source
software I should take a look at?

Pat

···

On 12/15/06, Austin Ziegler <halostatue@gmail.com> wrote:

On 12/15/06, Pat Maddox <pergesu@gmail.com> wrote:
> Does anyone know what software Ruby uses for the bug/requests/patches
> trackers? It's pretty slick (way better than Trac imo) and I was just
> wondering software it is. Is it internal to RF or is it available for
> people to download and use?

It's called GForge.

> > Does anyone know what software Ruby uses for the bug/requests/patches
> > trackers? It's pretty slick (way better than Trac imo) and I was just
> > wondering software it is. Is it internal to RF or is it available for
> > people to download and use?
>
> It's called GForge.

Thanks. I'm having trouble figuring out if it's free or not. Seems
like the app itself is free, but you can purchase licenses?

Yup, there's a GPL'd version and a commercial version. And I think
GForgeGroup will sell support contracts for the GPL'd version, too.

Basically what I'd like to do is be able to set up a couple different
projects and have a couple trackers, just like a rubyforge project
would. Though we probably won't have more than 15 users or 5 projects
or so. Would GForge be good for this? Is there any other open source
software I should take a look at?

GForge is a bit of a hassle to set up; lots of moving parts. But once
it's up and running it's quite handy...

Yours,

Tom

···

On Fri, 2006-12-15 at 22:04 +0900, Pat Maddox wrote:

On 12/15/06, Austin Ziegler <halostatue@gmail.com> wrote:
> On 12/15/06, Pat Maddox <pergesu@gmail.com> wrote:

Tom Copeland wrote:

···

On Fri, 2006-12-15 at 22:04 +0900, Pat Maddox wrote:
  

On 12/15/06, Austin Ziegler <halostatue@gmail.com> wrote:
    

On 12/15/06, Pat Maddox <pergesu@gmail.com> wrote:
      

Does anyone know what software Ruby uses for the bug/requests/patches
trackers? It's pretty slick (way better than Trac imo) and I was just
wondering software it is. Is it internal to RF or is it available for
people to download and use?
        

It's called GForge.
      

Thanks. I'm having trouble figuring out if it's free or not. Seems
like the app itself is free, but you can purchase licenses?
    
Yup, there's a GPL'd version and a commercial version. And I think
GForgeGroup will sell support contracts for the GPL'd version, too.

Basically what I'd like to do is be able to set up a couple different
projects and have a couple trackers, just like a rubyforge project
would. Though we probably won't have more than 15 users or 5 projects
or so. Would GForge be good for this? Is there any other open source
software I should take a look at?
    
GForge is a bit of a hassle to set up; lots of moving parts. But once
it's up and running it's quite handy...

Yours,

Tom

UBUNTU && debian have GFORGE in their repositories -> sudo apt-get install

Reid Thompson wrote:

Tom Copeland wrote:

Does anyone know what software Ruby uses for the bug/requests/patches
trackers? It's pretty slick (way better than Trac imo) and I was just
wondering software it is. Is it internal to RF or is it available for
people to download and use?
        

It's called GForge.
      

Thanks. I'm having trouble figuring out if it's free or not. Seems
like the app itself is free, but you can purchase licenses?
    
Yup, there's a GPL'd version and a commercial version. And I think
GForgeGroup will sell support contracts for the GPL'd version, too.

Basically what I'd like to do is be able to set up a couple different
projects and have a couple trackers, just like a rubyforge project
would. Though we probably won't have more than 15 users or 5 projects
or so. Would GForge be good for this? Is there any other open source
software I should take a look at?
    
GForge is a bit of a hassle to set up; lots of moving parts. But once
it's up and running it's quite handy...

Yours,

Tom

UBUNTU && debian have GFORGE in their repositories -> sudo apt-get install

For something that small, GForge might be overkill. I've played around a little with Collaboa, which is Rails-based, but I don't know how active a project it is. Most of the rest of the software project tools have either PHP or Python under the hood, so if you have to dig, there could be a language barrier. :slight_smile:

What I have listed in Gentoo is

* www-apps/phpcollab
      Latest version available: 2.5_rc3
      Latest version installed: [ Not Installed ]
      Unstable version: 2.5_rc3
      Use Flags (stable): -vhosts
      Size of downloaded files: 4,038 kB
      Homepage: http://php-collab.com/
      Description: phpCollab is an open-source internet-enabled collaboration workspace for project teams
      License: GPL-2

* www-apps/phprojekt
      Latest version available: 5.1.2
      Latest version installed: [ Not Installed ]
      Unstable version: 5.1.2
      Use Flags (stable): -mysql -postgres -vhosts
      Size of downloaded files: 6,104 kB
      Homepage: http://www.phprojekt.com/
      Description: Project management and coordination system
      License: GPL-2

* www-apps/trac
      Latest version available: 0.10.3
      Latest version installed: [ Not Installed ]
      Unstable version: 0.10.3
      Use Flags (stable): +cgi +enscript +fastcgi -mysql -postgres +silvercity +sqlite -vhosts
      Size of downloaded files: 1,291 kB
      Homepage: http://trac.edgewall.com/
      Description: Trac is a minimalistic web-based project management, wiki and bug/issue tracking system.
      License: trac

* net-www/dotproject
      Latest version available: 2.0.4
      Latest version installed: [ Not Installed ]
      Unstable version: 2.0.4
      Use Flags (stable): -vhosts
      Size of downloaded files: 6,222 kB
      Homepage: http://www.dotproject.net/
      Description: dotProject is a PHP web-based project management framework
      License: GPL-2

···

On Fri, 2006-12-15 at 22:04 +0900, Pat Maddox wrote:

On 12/15/06, Austin Ziegler <halostatue@gmail.com> wrote:

On 12/15/06, Pat Maddox <pergesu@gmail.com> wrote:

--
M. Edward (Ed) Borasky, FBG, AB, PTA, PGS, MS, MNLP, NST, ACMC(P)
http://borasky-research.blogspot.com/

If God had meant for carrots to be eaten cooked, He would have given rabbits fire.