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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.

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.

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At my previous employer we used IssueTrackerProduct, a Zope-based webapp.. Very elegant in my opinion :)

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Trac is pretty sweet and nice because you can download it and install it on your server. It also supports SVN, which is very nice to have. We've been using trac in combination with pivotal tracker on one of our projects and it works well.

We use Intervals for most of our projects. It's web-based and we built it after trying to duct-tape the features we needed onto opensource tools.

Check it out at: http://www.myintervals.com

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We've been very happy with TeamSupport. It's designed to work with both the customer service team and the development team (hence the name I guess). 100% hosted solution, and the first three users are free.

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I have used:

Team Foundation Server FogBugz Mantis BugZilla etc...

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We use Unfuddle with ok results. It's competent. It looks nice and does what we need, but it can sometimes feel like a lot of clicking in order to get what you want.

Recently I've been lusting after Lighthouse because Unfuddle can feel a bit pokey and I saw that Lighthouse has a desktop client application which looked speedy. Lighthouse's webapp version seems unintuitive to me though. I can never find the right thing to click on.

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We use customers as such tool. They seem to be happy with that.

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I'd never trust such a crucial workflow tool to a proprietary application, so anything that's not free software maintained by an active community doesn't even make our list.

Of the possible offerings, I find Roundup to be the best balance between flexibility, standards compliance, and simple by default.

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http://opengoo.org/

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I would definitely give redmine a try...

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+1 for Gemini which liammclennan has already pointed to above. It's a great product at a hard-to-beat price. In fact Gemini worked out for us with about 30 developers in an environment that never had bug tracking before - highly recommended.

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We use JIRA in conjunction with desktop JIRA Client.

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Mantis

coupled with subversion ...

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We are a 12 person team and use Countersoft Gemini. Love it for it's simplicity, intuitiveness and UI. Plus it has add ons for VB, Outlook, a nifty time tracker and rich client.

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In my current organisation I am using Clear Quest and Quality centre for different projects - one is at the client end and another is at out end. Also I worked on Bugzilla in my previous organisation.

Quality Center basically gives the facility to manage test scripts, generes tracebility matrix to check the coverage area.

Bugzilla is generally used to log bugs but it can also linked with some test management tool like TestLink to manage test cases. We have done this in my previous organisation.

Both Clear Quest and Quality Center needs licensed copy whereas Buqzilla is open source so for a small organisation Bugzilla is preferable.

Thanks.

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We are using informup (http://www.informup.com ). really great tool for small - mid size group including very good dashboard, customized fields, customized workflow, emai lnotification etc... Really easy to use and maintainance. In the past I used Test director, bugzilla and few more small bug tracking and really love this tool especially because you get the best solution for a very cheap price!!!

Thanks:-)

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Trac with Dokuwiki

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Subscribe to new online bug tracker called - Bontq

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http://www.countersoft.com offers Gemini. For us, it's one of the better .NET browser-based offerings.

I just their 5 user licence coz its' FREE!

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+1 for Pivotal Tracker. I've tried just about everything and this is the first solution that really works both for a single developer as well as a small team. Unless you don't like seeing bugs, chores, and features mixed together, but this matches how I work.

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I got my last company using Lighthouse because as far as our project managers were concerned, Trac was unusable. It's interface is just way friendlier to less skilled users. Also they seem to be upgrading functionality like CVS export and their API is improving as well. I'm still using it as an indie developer, since a broad range of designers and clients can be taught how to use it fast, unless they are on IE6...

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I've used Gemini. Works well for a small team and good value for money. Mercury test director is pretty neat and works well for a large team.

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I haven't used this personally, but it looks awesome: JetBrains Charisma. It is still in "beta" test mode.

  1. Features list
  2. Example
  3. Try Out!
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I have used Mantis. It's good and simple.

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I use BugTracker.NET. It is a nice and simple program and very fast. With nice features like fulltext search, ...

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We use WikiTrac , easy to use.

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