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This is a placeholder for overviews of bug/task tracking systems.

What i want to do here is:

  1. List all tools used in the industry (please provide a link to the tool discussed)
  2. Gather opinions on each tool (please back up your opinion with facts i.e provide advantages and disadvantages)

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.


Related posts:

What is your tool for version control (FAQ)
Free/Cheap Task/Bug Management software
What bug tracking software do you use?

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82 Answers

vote up 7 vote down

Rational ClearQuest

I hate it.

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vote up 0 vote down

At one of my old jobs I used a custom hacked together coldfusion frankenstein that had been mutated over several years by a variety of programmers... after that almost anything is easier to use / better.

Previously I've used dotproject (free and open source).

My current job uses Jira (not free).

Both are good bug-task-project tracking tools for internal use. I haven't used either as customer facing tools so I'm not sure how they would work in that environment.

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vote up 5 vote down

I love Assembla. We use it at work and I use it on a few side projects of my own. Integrated SVN, Tickets, Tasks, Milestones (Or you can just use Trac, which is also integrated).

The fewer things I have to host and maintain myself, the better. I like Trac a lot, but the installation and maintenance are a PITA.

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vote up 0 vote down

We currently use Fogbugz. It is actually fairly nice and easy to use. Really good for small groups. We are looking using TFS atm but are not sure we want to with some of its quirks.

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vote up 1 vote down

We currently use JIRA and Confluence. A nice mix with moderately good integration in our setup.

As a not very much a coder I've found JIRA relatively easy to administer, and the developers like it's 'zilla ness.

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vote up 0 vote down

hands down, bugzilla has been the best most configurable most accessible tool for bug tracking that I've had the pleasure to use. In a few cases, where it was lacking in some functionality, such as integration into visual source safe an attributing a particular bug to a particular build number, file and line number, I was able to add this functionality into our particular instance of bugzilla at a previous company I worked for.

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vote up 3 vote down

My company uses Request Tracker for support tickets. That is, client-reported bug tracking. It has some nice email integration features, and is highly configurable. Also open source, which was a requirement. (Of coruse, we also happen to use Bugzilla for internal bug tracking, so some RT tickets get double-logged, but that's not a terrible thing.)

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vote up 0 vote down

Test Track Pro.

http://www.seapine.com/

I would not describe it as my favorite, as its interface isn't going to win any awards in my book, but it seems to be able to support a pretty dynamic workflow if that is something important to you.

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vote up 0 vote down

I was inspired by FogBugz and Bugzilla and I made a custom bug tracking tool for my diplom work, which was used then in the first company I worked for.

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vote up 0 vote down

I use Redmine for general project stuff and Flyspray if I only need a bugtracker.

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vote up 0 vote down

I use a open source Domino web application called Bug Tracker.

It is available for free here:

http://www.openntf.org/Projects/pmt.nsf/ProjectLookup/BugTracker

It has some quirks, but it is free and works well....

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vote up 5 vote down

Mantis again, with some custom modifications to cope internal requirements.

It's code is so "hackable" that I don't regret about work with it.

It will be better with the upcoming Plugins.

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vote up 0 vote down

We use JIRA for our bugtracking tool.

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vote up 1 vote down

I currently use the Mantis bugtracker. It's small and simple, but it has some great features like custom fields, very easy creation of new projects based on other projects (can copy settings, fields, user setup.)

I used Joel's FogBugz at my last day job, it's awesome. Bugs always have owners in his system, so nothing falls through the cracks. One issue I had was that when a bug was resolved, it went back to the person that opened the bug- it would be nice to have the ability to send the bug to a specified person (eg. QA department) rather than defaulting to whoever opened it.

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vote up 0 vote down

Where I'm working, we use CA's Clarity for just about everything from financials to project management to bug tracking. Ugh.

The interface is ok, but it's slow and doesn't allow for easy batch entry/edit. I find it complete and total overkill, plus, because the whole company uses it, individual teams are unable to tweak it's configuration to suit their projects.

On the side, I'm floating between a couple products right now, and this post is giving me some insight into the tools out there, so thanks everyone for that.

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vote up 0 vote down

Version control: Compuware TrackRecord

Task/Bug Management: Mercury TestDirector

I think we're using an older version of TrackRecord than the one listed on Compuware's site.. I'm really not impressed with TrackRecord. TestDirector is a pretty nice tool. It's easy to customize process work flows and define roles. It's pretty easy to script it for additional flexibility as well.

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vote up 0 vote down

We're using redmine at the moment. Integrated bug tracking/task-tracking, wiki, forums, filestore, svn & other integration.

Very similar to Trac (which we trialled before), but more suited to a multi-project/multi-scm environment.

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vote up 0 vote down

Eventum here.

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vote up 26 vote down

Check out Redmine. It has the look and feel of Trac plus

  • Multiple projects support
  • Flexible role based access control.
  • Flexible issue tracking system
  • Gantt chart and calendar
  • News, documents & files management
  • Feeds & email notifications.
  • Per project wiki
  • Per project forums
  • Simple time tracking functionality
  • Custom fields for issues, projects and users
  • SCM integration (SVN, CVS, Git, Mercurial, Bazaar and Darcs)
  • Multiple LDAP authentication support
  • User self-registration support
  • Multilanguage support
  • Multiple databases support
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vote up 3 vote down

We use MKS Integrity Manager (+ Source Integrity as our scm) and I hate it. It's main features are complicated usage, slowness and a big love affair with "confirm" dialogs. If someone in your company wants to deploy that, run away quickly...

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vote up 1 vote down

No one has mentioned BugTracker.NET, personally I feel this to be quite good and free!

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vote up 0 vote down

I've used Eventum to good effects. It is made by the nice folks of MySQL. It has some nice user-support features, which are not available in other, pure development-oriented, tools.

http://eventum.mysql.org/wiki/index.php/Main_Page

In my current project we use bugzilla, but I don't like it that much. Mantis is very nice, specially because of the work flow.

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vote up 0 vote down

We used to work with Mantis, then went to JIRA (Enterprise Edition). I've also worked with Bugzilla and redmine

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vote up 0 vote down

We use VisionProject visionproject we use it for customer support and internal development. (It has features to support scrum)

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vote up 1 vote down

In our company we are using Polarion, an ALM solution that connects change management (task/bug tracking), wiki, version control (Subversion) and optionally also requirements management and build management.

Our company actually is Polarion Software, but we are using our own product not because we have to, but because we like to - making it the best for ourselves hopefully means making it the best for other users as well.

While addressing the highest ALM disciplines, Polarion also comes in a flavor called Track & Wiki, a rich-featured tracker and wiki integration at an affordable price. There was also a completely free tracker edition (without wiki) but that one is no longer maintained.

If somebody here ever tried Polarion and has something to say on why they prefer it to another tool or vice versa, I will be happy to know.

My reasons to use Polarion (from the user point of view) include:

  • It is integrated, all-in-one solution
  • It is easy to use, configure and maintain
  • It has an Eclipse plugin as well as some for other IDEs
  • It is based on open standards and technologies
  • It is deeply integrated with Subversion, no proprietary data storage
  • No lock-in, all the data visible live and ready to be manipulated in SVN repository (XML)
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vote up 0 vote down

I'm using Eventum and find its not as complicated as bugzilla, also free and has a nice UI that doesn't scare the living daylights out of non-techies.

Why is Eventum not mentionend more often here or further up the top? Anything I've missed that makes not so popular ?

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vote up 0 vote down

Wish I'd found Eventum when we were searching. :-/

We wound up writing our own; even simpler than Eventum. But it took plenty of hours.

http://www.archerfishonline.com

Would love some feedback.

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vote up 1 vote down

We use Eventum version 2.1.1. The key advantages of using it that we found are:

  • It was very easy to integrate with our corporate LDAP tree.
  • It is easy enough to use that we could get our business users in there to help track and prioritize work.
  • It has support for multiple projects and moving items between projects
  • Eventum's email integration allowed us to track conversations around particular items as a side effect of normal email discussions (in other words, someone replies to an item sent by the system and that email is tracked as notes on the item)
  • Integration with Subversion allowed us to track and view commit data from the item.

We've had an excellent experience with this software, after moving over from a highly expensive proprietary product. I highly recommend it.

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vote up 0 vote down

Rational ClearQuest. Probably the worst source code control system ever designed. Practically unusable.

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vote up 1 vote down

We also use JIRA. It's very easy to use, and also quite flexible, in that we started off using it just to track issues for software, and now use also it for hardware, testing and documentation. It helps that you pay for a site license, so are not limited to a particular number of users.

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