active questions tagged bug-tracking - Stack Overflowmost recent 30 from stackoverflow.com2009-12-01T01:58:45Zhttp://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/bug-trackinghttp://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/1520479/how-to-generate-changelog-from-trac0How to generate changelog from Tracfrogbot2009-10-05T14:35:30Z2009-11-30T20:00:08Z
<p>I need to generate changelog from Trac for a specific version as XML and then process it with a custom XSL. It seems one of the default reports is the case (All Tickets By Milestone (Including closed)). However, if i request it as XML (by adding format=rss to the url) the output XML does not contain Status, Resolution, Milestone fields. How do i configure it to contain all the fields? How do you generate your changelogs from Trac to include it in release notes?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1401561/is-there-a-netbeans-plugin-or-issue-tracker-that-provides-connectivity-to-fogbugz2Is there a Netbeans plugin or issue tracker that provides connectivity to Fogbugz?Bob Cross2009-09-09T19:22:22Z2009-11-30T14:00:04Z
<p>I would like to be able to create FogBugz cases directly straight from the editor in NetBeans. Specifically, I would like to be able to look at a JUnit run in the IDE, examine the failures and create cases directly using the information that is right in front of me (rather than cutting and pasting into a web browser, etc).</p>
<p>I see that NetBeans 6.5.1 ships with Bugzilla available by default and JIRA connectivity in some sort of beta form. Is there an equivalent FogBugz issue tracker?</p>
<p><em>PS: I am aware of the new plugin architecture of FogBugz 7. However, I have a realistic appreciation of the time that I would be able to commit to creating my own plugin for either NetBeans and / or FogBugz and I suspect that I would be able to make just enough of a partial solution to make my life worse rather than better.</em></p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1791214/online-issue-tracking-tool0Online Issue Tracking Tool?mike2009-11-24T16:29:21Z2009-11-27T10:47:57Z
<p>im part of a dev team thats tired of being used as a crutch by the rest of the organization. I want to start to build a document repository of how-tos, work-arounds and other information that instead of doing the work for others, or having problems that users can resolve on their own being dropped on our laps i want to be able to send links to online content to users who post problems.</p>
<p>i want the system to be searchable, online so that users can search and access the system over the web, it should also have an issue tracking/ management system so users can add issues and track their status as the ticket info changes.</p>
<p>i am thinking of share point and ilient. (<a href="http://www.ilient.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.ilient.com/</a>)
i would prefer a free tool, but paid is fine too.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12328/what-bug-tracking-software-do-you-use69What bug tracking software do you use?Thomas Owens2008-08-15T15:05:06Z2009-11-27T10:37:39Z
<p>I'm currently looking at Bugzilla and Trac, as they seem to be the most popular (and I'm hoping that also means if there are any problems, it will be easier to get help), but I'm curious what solutions you use or have used and what your thoughts are.</p>
<p>I'm currently leaning toward Trac, as it's Wiki functionality can be used to support documentation. But that might not be a good enough reason to jump on Trac.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/661387/recommends-bug-tracking-system5Recommends bug tracking systemKarptonite2009-03-19T07:56:08Z2009-11-27T10:31:45Z
<p>I work on a web site with only a few other programmers. We've been using Fogbugz for issue tracking, and while we like it, it is expensive, and isn't exactly suited to our needs--we'd really like the users of our web site to be able to access the bug lists, rather than submitting bugs blindly with no way of knowing whether an issue has already been reported.</p>
<p>What bug tracking systems do people recommend that allow public searches? We are looking at Bugzilla, but the bug reporting screen has a lot of unnecessary stuff, creating what we think may be to much of a barrier for bug reporting. We'd like to make things as easy as possible on users who are reporting bugs--ideally, they we'd like them to be able to report bugs without even registering an account, although would only be a bonus. Also, the cheaper the better, although we will pay for good software if it is a significant improvement over what we can get for free.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1804844/using-tfs-with-third-party-bug-issue-tracking1Using TFS with Third Party Bug/Issue Tracking?NickGPS2009-11-26T17:13:12Z2009-11-27T02:46:36Z
<p>Are there any 3rd party bug tracking applications that integrate with TFS? </p>
<p>My company wants to use TFS for source control but not for bug tracking if there are any better 3rd party tools.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1609707/how-to-backup-your-data-with-hosted-issue-tracking1How to backup your data with hosted issue tracking?Rolf2009-10-22T20:15:32Z2009-11-23T22:57:18Z
<p>I'd like to use a hosted issue-tracking service, but I want to be able
to backup my data in case the service goes under.</p>
<ol>
<li><p>Are there any hosted issue-tracking services that have a "data
liberation" strategy and support you periodically copying your
issue-tracking data to your local system?</p></li>
<li><p>If not, does anyone have a clever workaround for backing up your
data using an existing hosted issue-tracking service, even if it's in
an unsupported way?</p></li>
</ol>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/101774/what-is-your-bug-task-tracking-tool35What is your bug/task tracking tool?Ilya 2008-09-19T13:25:28Z2009-11-23T21:30:16Z
<p>This is a placeholder for overviews of bug/task tracking systems. </p>
<p>What i want to do here is: </p>
<ol>
<li>List all tools used in the industry (please provide a link to the tool discussed)</li>
<li>Gather opinions on each tool (please back up your opinion with facts i.e provide advantages and disadvantages)</li>
</ol>
<p>Please put each tool in separate answer and please make it community owned wiki to give an option to add/edit to as many people as possible. </p>
<p><hr /></p>
<h2>Related posts:</h2>
<blockquote>
<p><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100162/what-is-your-tool-for-version-control-faq">What is your tool for version control (FAQ)</a><br />
<a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/86394/freecheap-taskbug-management-software">Free/Cheap Task/Bug Management software</a><br />
<a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12328/what-bug-tracking-software-do-you-use">What bug tracking software do you use?</a> </p>
</blockquote>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/40495/bug-tracker-setup-with-git-integration4Bug tracker setup with Git integration?Jordi Bunster2008-09-02T20:17:11Z2009-11-22T00:30:41Z
<p>I know I can do most of this by hacking Trac and using Git hooks, but I was wondering if someone has / knows of something ready.</p>
<p>Commenting on (and closing) tickets from commit messages would be nice, specially if the diff appears inline with the comment/closing remark.</p>
<p>sha1 hashes should be auto-linked to gitweb/cigt/custom git browser.</p>
<p>I tried the GitPlugin for Trac, but the code browser was soo slow... any alternatives?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/897907/how-to-effectively-manage-branches-with-jira1How to effectively manage branches with JIRA?Boris Terzic2009-05-22T13:42:13Z2009-11-20T13:22:25Z
<p>We develop a product that consists of a core runtime shared across products (project1, project2, ...) and a project/product specific part. For each of those "products" we maintain multiple branches because different versions are rolled out into the field and require maintenance and sometimes even feature backports.</p>
<p>We also use JIRA as an issue tracking system and I'm having trouble finding the right way to model our product types/branches. The JIRA elements that seem relevant in this context are components and versions:</p>
<ul>
<li>we use components to differentiate between CORE, PRO1, PRO2, etc</li>
<li>we use components also to identify what branches are concerned</li>
<li>we use Fix Version to keep track of what iteration to resolve the issue (iterative development, bi-weekly iterations)</li>
</ul>
<p>This more or less works but using the Component type for branches is a hack and has the disadvantage that you can not "retire" components, only delete them. We choose to go this way since if we would mix the iterations together with the branches in the Fix Version field we can no longer query for "iteration X and branch Y" (JIRA does not support AND queries).</p>
<p>What sort of best practices exist for maintaining branches and tracking iterations in JIRA?</p>
<p>Some stats for context: we are talking about around 4 product types and about 3 major branches per product type to maintain.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/628840/what-is-the-best-way-to-cater-for-users-reporting-bugs2What is the best way to cater for users reporting bugs ?CAD bloke2009-03-10T03:23:46Z2009-11-19T22:05:13Z
<p>ok, <a href="http://www.bugzilla.org/" rel="nofollow">Bugzilla</a> would scare the willies out of the average end-user. Even things like <a href="http://www.mantisbt.org/" rel="nofollow">Mantis</a> are a little spooky for the uninitiated.</p>
<p>What method, web package (preferred), interface, whatever can I implement to make it easy, intuitive and not-at-all-intimidating for my end users & customers to report bugs in an intelligible manner?</p>
<p>I like the idea of something forms-based, or point-and-clicky, rather than the prior knowledge needed by something as comprehensive and intimidating as Bugzilla.</p>
<p>Email, while approachable for the average punter, seems less than ideal since it doesn't prompt the user for the kinds of information I need to try & figure out what is broken.</p>
<p>So far <a href="http://www.thebuggenie.com/" rel="nofollow">Bugs - The Bug Genie</a> seems like the least scary option to confront the average user with. I searched but didn't find any questions like mine.</p>
<p>Suggestions, ideas, insights please !</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1720662/adopting-software-project-management-and-testing-protocol-from-scratch1Adopting software project management and testing protocol from scratchJoonas Pulakka2009-11-12T08:07:07Z2009-11-19T08:16:49Z
<p>I work in a small company (2-4 software developers) where software is "only" a part of the main product (specialized measurement instruments). So far the software has been built from start to end with no formal process at all, but as we're steadily growing in both in number of products and people involved, it's evident that we need to adopt <em>some</em> kind of methodology for the whole thing (designing, building, testing, maintaining) to avoid blowing into a mess</p>
<p>The problem is that none of us has much real-world experience on such processes. Wikipedia's <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software%5Fdevelopment%5Fmethodology" rel="nofollow">software development methodology </a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software%5Fdevelopment%5Fprocess" rel="nofollow">software development process</a> entries list lots of practices, and I'm aware of the modern buzzwords (agile, extreme, etc.), but we're still lost on how and from where to start all this.</p>
<p>What should we do to <em>get started</em>, given that currently we have <em>no</em> formal process, and the goal would be to have a <em>light</em> process that helps us keep things under control without slowing us down? Is there some:</p>
<ul>
<li>Essential <em>de facto</em> literature that we should read first? </li>
<li>Essential tools? (We do have a SCM, but should we start using something like <a href="http://www.fogcreek.com/fogbugz/" rel="nofollow">FogBugz</a>?)</li>
<li>Practical "do this and this" guidelines? </li>
</ul>
<p>Any guidelines are welcome, as long as they're not 1000+ page books! I want to avoid both the religious hype and the dull academicity that seem to surround this field, and find out what to do <em>in practice</em>.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1719428/managing-project-development-for-single-programmer1Managing Project Development for Single Programmer?Richard2009-11-12T02:03:01Z2009-11-19T03:45:18Z
<p>Hi,</p>
<p>I am going to be starting a new job in a few weeks where I will be responsible for both the maintenance and development of a couple of existing web applications and the development of new web applications.</p>
<p>As I will be the only developer on the project and the previous developer was more of a hobbyist, no formal project management or planning techniques have been followed. Additionally no bug tracking has been used or if anything has been recorded its just been notes on paper.</p>
<p>I would therefore like to introduce a better system to help resolve some of the issues and help ensure things run more smoothly. I intend to develop using an agile process (likely scrum) and would therefore like to know what all-in-one solutions people could recommend for me to look into further. I am looking for something which will provide at minimum:</p>
<ul>
<li>Project Planning
<ul>
<li>Defining new features</li>
<li>Time estimating</li>
<li>Ability to organise tasks by priority</li>
</ul></li>
<li>Project Management
<ul>
<li>Tracking active tasks</li>
<li>Reporting</li>
</ul></li>
<li>Bug Tracking</li>
</ul>
<p>I would also like to let other staff easily submit new bugs in the applications which they find or customers report. Additionally support for them to add new stories / high level tasks would be of use so they can note down other new requirments/features and I can then work with them to outline more detailed tasks and estimates.</p>
<p>So far I have looked at a number of systems including:</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.fogcreek.com/FogBUGZ/" rel="nofollow">FogBugz</a> - Seems great for bug reporting but would need something else for project planning / management</li>
<li><a href="http://www.agilebuddy.com/" rel="nofollow">Agile Buddy</a> - This is probably the best solution I have found so far</li>
<li><a href="http://trac.edgewall.org/" rel="nofollow">Trac</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.smartsheet.com/" rel="nofollow">Smart Sheets</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.pivotaltracker.com/" rel="nofollow">Pivotal Tracker</a></li>
</ul>
<p>However, as I have not actually used any of these systems myself I do not know what ones would be best or whether there is a better solution out there??? So any recommendations you can provide would be much appreciated.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14293/are-there-any-unhappy-users-of-fogbugz16Are there any unhappy users of FogBugz?Michal Sznajder2008-08-18T07:52:43Z2009-11-17T16:18:35Z
<p>Are there any unhappy FogBugz user? Or someone that evaluated it and decided that it lacks some essential features?</p>
<h3>Edit:</h3>
<p>We are evaluating FogBugz and I would like to know if there is something that might hurt us. </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1682740/best-solution-for-integrated-bug-tracking-wiki-and-version-control0Best solution for integrated bug tracking, wiki and version controlJader Dias2009-11-05T18:50:31Z2009-11-17T11:40:07Z
<p>I love the Google Project Hosting web app. It includes bug tracking, wiki and SCM in one interface. (Example: <a href="http://code.google.com/p/n2markdowneditors/" rel="nofollow">WMD Editor</a>)</p>
<p>This solution is closed source and not for sale. While searching similar solutions I found <a href="http://trac.edgewall.org/" rel="nofollow">Trac</a> which has a rougher interface.</p>
<p>Could you list similar solutions?</p>
<p><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1170831/distributed-revision-control-wiki-and-bug-tracking-all-in-one">Someone asked the same question, but specified Git as the SCM.</a></p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1723140/bug-tracker-running-of-a-usb-pendrive-is-this-possible4Bug tracker running of a USB pendrive. Is this possible?Neil2009-11-12T15:39:13Z2009-11-16T06:46:20Z
<p>Experts,</p>
<p>I desire to run a bug tracker off a USB pendrive (for a variety of reasons, mostly because I frequently do not have internet access and need to hop around from machine to machine).</p>
<p>Does anyone have any advice on achieving this? I know mySQL and such can all be installed on a pendrive, just wondered if anyone had put this all together in one nice and easy package?</p>
<p>Thanks
Neil</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1736277/go-bug-tracking-report-system0Go bug tracking / report system?dehmann2009-11-15T01:34:27Z2009-11-15T01:36:35Z
<p>Where can I file bug reports for the Go language? I mean reports about a crashing compiler or something else about Go that does not work as advertised. It would also be interesting to just read through them. </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1732492/team-foundation-server-bug-tracking-tools1team foundation server bug tracking toolssinde2009-11-13T23:15:58Z2009-11-13T23:23:49Z
<p>I am new to TFS and am told that TFS (VS 2008) has an internal bug tracking system. I have used open source bug tracking systems before but want to work with TFS now.
If anyone knows or has links to any readin bout this please answer this question</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1694184/what-do-you-look-for-in-a-bug-tracker2What do you look for in a bug tracker?Chris2009-11-07T19:46:44Z2009-11-07T23:32:42Z
<p>I'm interested in evaluating bug trackers, but I wanted to back up and figure out what sorts of criteria were most important in bug software. So far things I've thought of include:</p>
<ul>
<li>integration with source control</li>
<li>usability</li>
<li>basic features (email notifications, rss, case states)</li>
<li>customization</li>
<li>advanced features (reporting, visualizations)</li>
<li><p>stability</p></li>
<li><p>cost</p></li>
<li>IDE integration</li>
</ul>
<p>Any ideas?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/319371/what-interesting-programming-bugs-have-you-seen13What interesting programming bugs have you seen?MrValdez2008-11-26T00:33:50Z2009-11-07T07:08:04Z
<p>Finding bugs is part of a programmer's lifestyle. But there are some bugs that are just plain weird and the solution to them are unintuitive.</p>
<p>Post stories that has happened to you or someone else that involves these types of bugs. If you want, you can post links to great programming bug stories.</p>
<p>One bug story per post but you can post as many war stories as you want.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1111295/tools-to-manage-manual-testing-results-possibly-integrated-with-trac1Tools to manage manual testing results - possibly integrated with trac?Stacia2009-07-10T18:47:38Z2009-11-06T11:56:01Z
<p>At work we currently use Trac to manage our test cases. However, we have quite a few TCs that are listed on test plan wiki pages instead of tickets.</p>
<p>My manager has recently become interested in better documenting the results of manual testing. While this is a noble goal, and several of the people on the QA team are quite gung-ho about the idea, I actually feel that the overhead for such a system may be disastrous if not executed correctly. In fact, the only sane non-Trac integrated solution I can think of is just a simple task manager, where we can store and manage more casual results like, "X ran through Component Y on Env blah at this date and there were these problems". I think that porting over several TC numbers and stuff from the wiki would take ages and some kind of system like "X verified TC 23423432 at time Y and it's passing" is only suitable for automated tests when there's that many test cases (and a small team).</p>
<p>I have seen a few plugins for Trac that allow you to create test plans and the like and report results - but nothing that exciting. Has anyone had experience with these tools? Integration with trac would greatly reduce the overhead, but we still have the issue of not every TC being filed as a ticket, which we'd have to address.</p>
<p>What would you suggest for such a project? Have you been in a similar situation? Your input would be greatly appreciated, as I don't want to be the only nay-sayer on the team and look lazy because of my opinion that over-organizing manual testing with such a small team would be detrimental. </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1643460/excel-bug-tracking-link-to-code-line1Excel bug tracking + link to code line?gmalggievato2009-10-29T12:44:14Z2009-10-29T15:44:49Z
<p>I'm a small developer in VB6 and VB.net, and use for bugtracking a simple Excel. Seemed to me that I didnt need anything more.</p>
<p>I've wanted to add links to the code. Then:</p>
<ul>
<li><p>How can I do it for vb6 and for vs.net?</p></li>
<li><p>Is this reasonable? Should I change to a (free) bugtracking tool? Do they have this functionality?</p></li>
</ul>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/323411/bugzilla-or-mantis9Bugzilla or Mantis?John2008-11-27T10:22:58Z2009-10-27T15:14:33Z
<p>As the title says, I'm starting one project right now, and trying to layout the infrastructure for the project (SVN, Email, Bug tracking, Online Forums, etc...)</p>
<p>So, Bugzilla or Mantis?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/674505/looking-for-an-alternative-to-trac-project-management-and-bug-tracking-system-fo10Looking for an alternative to Trac: Project management and bug tracking system for multiple projects.Fernando2009-03-23T17:53:48Z2009-10-27T11:31:26Z
<p>We are using <strong><a href="http://trac.edgewall.org/" rel="nofollow">Trac</a></strong> as the main project management / bug tracking tool in our job. The pros in Trac:</p>
<ul>
<li>Free software (free as in free beer and free speech).</li>
<li>SVN integration.</li>
<li>Easy to use, user-friendly, etc.</li>
<li>Different permissions.</li>
</ul>
<p>We started using it for our software projects, one instance of Trac per project. Here's where I found the first con. As the Trac admin, I have to install a new instance of Trac for every new project, and configure a user file with different permissions. So I have to be aware of the different instances of Trac, user names, permissions, directories, etc.</p>
<p>We even found Trac useful for inner management. We have an instance of Trac to handle tickets from the different area managers, with the upper management.</p>
<p>Basically, we use most of the features in Trac and found it really useful to solve our task management / bug tracking problems. For software development, and general management too.</p>
<p>I'm looking for a multiple project management software, in the spirit of Trac, but with one centralized administration of some kind. One where I can give different users different permissions for different projects. </p>
<p>I've read about <strong><a href="http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/" rel="nofollow">Jira</a></strong>, but I've been told it's an overkill for the size of our company. I also saw <strong><a href="http://www.redmine.org/" rel="nofollow">Redmine</a></strong> on some project management/bug tracking questions here at StackOverflow. It seems as the closest product to what I'm looking for. </p>
<p>What would you recommend? Have you tried Redmine? Is it worth migrating our current projects and Trac data to Redmine?</p>
<p>I must add, I've seen some multiple-project hacks for Trac, but none of them seemed convincing enough.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1604062/trac-to-bugzilla-migration1Trac to Bugzilla Migration?David M2009-10-21T22:40:04Z2009-10-26T16:35:34Z
<p>Any tips, scripts, or other artifacts that will make importing data from a Trac instance into a Bugzilla instance less work?</p>
<p>We have a modified Bugzilla, so it's likely that importxml.cgi won't be a good choice. Even if that were available, then the problem becomes "how to map Trac data to Bugzilla data."</p>
<p>As icky as it might be, I think we're going to have to do a database-to-database migration with some mapping tables on the side. Yuck.</p>
<p>Any help is appreciated!</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1624195/what-categories-and-custom-attributes-do-you-use-in-you-bug-tracker2What categories and custom attributes do you use in you bug tracker ?Radu0942009-10-26T10:58:58Z2009-10-26T11:14:06Z
<p>This one has been bugging me for a while now, but I never seem to be satisfied with the way the bug categories are defined in our bug tracker. It always seems like 90% of bugs go to "General" and 2/3 of the categories never get used.</p>
<p>How do you organize/categorize the bugs in your bugtracker? </p>
<p>Edit: I'm starting a new project on an ASP.NET MVC website. What would be your categories on an MVC website</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19883/is-there-a-bug-issue-tracking-system-which-integrates-with-mercurial6Is there a bug/issue tracking system which integrates with Mercurial?basszero2008-08-21T13:34:43Z2009-10-25T14:17:24Z
<p>I've used Trac/Subversion before and really like the integration. My current project is using Mercurial for distributed development and it'd be nice to be able to track issues/bugs and have this be integrated with Mercurial. I realized this could be tricky with the nature of DVCS.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1440940/mantis-what-do-i-change-to-auto-display-attached-images-when-viewing-issues1Mantis: What do I change to auto-display attached images when viewing issues?hamlin112009-09-17T19:44:08Z2009-10-24T09:34:53Z
<p>I apologize if this is not the correct site for this question. There can be arguments to put it on superuser, serverfault, or stackoverflow... I posted it here because source code control is so programming-oriented and it's a code-tweak. </p>
<p>I am able to upload images to mantis issues. I'd like to tweak the mantis code or config to auto-display images (gif, png, jpg). </p>
<p>Has anybody been successful in doing this?</p>
<p>Thanks in advance for your time.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1593348/improving-work-procedures-programmer-to-developer-woes6Improving Work Procedures - Programmer To Developer WoesKezzer2009-10-20T09:06:33Z2009-10-21T08:52:13Z
<p>I finally plucked up the courage to go and formally complain to the heads about my boss. What's really scary is that the claims I have made are serious enough to be taken to the CEO in a couple of weeks. I've been asked today to procure some documents referring to some points I have outlined and wanted some real-world developer input on these points.</p>
<p>The following are things I have raised as a part of my complaint:</p>
<ul>
<li>We have no formal architecture. We use code-behind only, and code-behind is what's used to open database connections, and pass SQL queries in with parameters. There are literally thousands upon thousands of pages. I propose at the very least a three-tier architecture, but I'd rather use MVC architectures. How does this ad-hoc approach affect work towards large web systems?</li>
<li>We have no documentation outlining all our processes and how things work. What kind of impact could this have on us as a team and individually? Does it slow us down? (I believe it does in a considerable way)</li>
<li>Bug tracking. We use none, despite bugs flowing in constantly every day. Need I say anything more?</li>
<li>Testing. We have no formal testing methods, we just use TIAS.</li>
<li>Usability. It's an intranet system used by hundreds of people, yet none of us are trained in UI development (in fact, I'm the only one who improves usability based on my UI studies)</li>
</ul>
<p>I'm not asking anyone to write any of it, but if anyone has any statistics, or evidence-based facts to help improve my report. Already I've been quoting out of many books I read to use.</p>
<p>Just as a side note, I am the only person employed who has any formal education in what we do. We're a team of programmers, I have a degree in Computer Science and currently studying a masters degree. So from a "personnel" point of view, does anyone have any tips? I realise there are many-a-people here whom are far more experienced developers than me, so your input is greatly appreciated.</p>
<p>Cheers!</p>
<p><strong>EDIT</strong></p>
<p>So I wrote a very, very long e-mail to the management. For those of you who were wondering why I'd taken it to upper management as opposed to my immediate manager whom assigns me all my work is that I have previously raised the issues and they've been ignored.</p>
<p>Many points you all raised were very insightful so I decided to change my approach. Whilst I may have been hot-headed about it initially I decided to instead work on building as opposed to tearing down and stated that the changes could and would only have to be made incrementally. They were rather suggestions as opposed to statements slating our current systems. I've been recommended to raise these issues in my upcoming appraisals directly to my boss on a one-to-one basis, this is far more suggestive than getting someone else to do it.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1595039/what-would-you-want-in-a-self-hosted-project-support-information-web-app0What would you want in a self-hosted project support/information web app?mcrittenden2009-10-20T14:31:36Z2009-10-20T14:35:32Z
<p>My next project will be a lightweight PHP alternative to Trac, since Trac is often confusing to install and is often a little too big or feature-rich for smaller project.</p>
<p>Features planned so far:</p>
<ul>
<li>Wiki</li>
<li>Bug tracker</li>
<li>Forum(s)</li>
<li>Static pages (easily edited of course)</li>
<li>Markdown support</li>
<li>No code repo hosting (I consider this a feature since most people would prefer to use a 3rd party such as GitHub for the actual code hosting)</li>
</ul>
<p>My question: if you were to use a self-hosted app for making a website about one of your open source projects, what would you want? Is there anything on that list that's missing? Would you absolutely require the ability to actually host the code repo on the site itself, or would you be ok hosting the code elsewhere (Google Code, GitHub, BitBucket), and using the site only to upload major versions?</p>
<p><strong>Summary: if you were to use a self-hosted app to provide info and support for an open source project of yours, what would you want it to be like?</strong></p>