vote up 35 vote down star
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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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81 Answers

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 4 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 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 0 vote down

Eventum here.

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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

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

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 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

We use JIRA for our bugtracking tool.

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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

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 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 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

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 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

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 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

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 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

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 7 vote down

Rational ClearQuest

I hate it.

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vote up 0 vote down

BugHost.

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vote up 2 vote down

At my day job (essentially a 100% Microsoft shop) we use Windows SharePoint Services. Not Microsoft Office SharePoint Server, which costs, but the free-with-Windows-Server version.

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vote up 5 vote down

We're using Telelogic Synergy, and I wouldn't recommend it because it is not fast enough and not user friendly:

For instance, you can save a report, which is made of a query and a format. Then you have to erase and re-create your report you want to change either the query or the format.

For the speed, it could be due to the server we use (I have no detail), but the HTML page to display one CR weights more that 680 Kb, which make it long to display when you're away from the server.

EDIT: Also it does not differentiate between Defect and Change Request. A Defect reports an incident in the software while a Change Request is a request to fix the problem in a given version. Several Change Requests can be tied to the same Defect.

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vote up 3 vote down

One client I work for uses Basecamp for all client, project, time, and task tracking.

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vote up 0 vote down

I have used TestTrackPro by Seapine. Overall it worked quite well. I was able to set up custom work flows. The reporting does leave a lot to be desired however. Once I switched from using the native database to a SQL database I was able to write my own reports. There are much more powerful open source bug trackers out there and I would recommend one of those instead of TTP. Currently I am using JIRA and am quite happy with it.

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vote up 4 vote down

My company uses JIRA and Quality Center along with a plugin to link both from Go2Group called JaM. The reason for both is partly the cost of Quality Center, but also because QC doesn't have the right workflows we need for the developers.

JIRA integrates with Subversion and other versioning systems so you can look at a bug and easily see the commits that fixed the bug, etc. It's really great being able to extend the software as well.

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vote up 6 vote down

Here's another vote for Mantis.

@Camilo DR, source-control integration is available. I've got my mantis setup so that every time I do a SVN commit, the patch file is attached to the relevant issue along with the SVN comments being added as a note. I find this provides excellent history and lets you easily tie how an issue is resolved from the business side, to how it's resolved in the actual implementation. Here's the Tutorial that I used to get this up and running. (It's definitely worth the effort.)

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vote up 3 vote down

I use SourceForge Enterprise Edition that is free under 10 dev. It's a VMWare with SVN, bug tracker, wiki and task manager. Very simple to use.

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vote up 21 vote down

I've used the open source Mantis Bug Tracker for a medium-sized project, and although it didn't had many source-control integration features, the hability to handle custom fields, the workflow and reporting features worked awesome with my team.

And it's very clean code IMHO. Shouldn't be very difficult to extend and add/modify features.

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