[Biojava-dev] Open bugs.

Michael Heuer heuermh at acm.org
Tue Mar 1 19:32:04 EST 2011


Sorry for replying to an old thread.

I am quite fond of JIRA, having used it with ASF open source projects, at
work, and as a hosted option (JIRA Studio or whatever they call it).  I
believe they provide free hosting for open source projects.

I'm not sure how it might integrate with github though, I only have
experience integrating it with subversion.

   michael


On Thu, 13 Jan 2011, Peter wrote:

> On Mon, Jan 10, 2011 at 3:50 AM, Andreas Prlic <andreas at sdsc.edu> wrote:
> >
> > Hi Peter,
> >
> > Thanks for the comments re. bugzilla.  Taking a step back, at the
> > present bugzilla feels a bit dated, at least the version we have
> > installed at the OBF. Did you guys at biopython ever think about using
> > other systems like Redmine or Jira?
> >
> > Andreas
>
> Hi,
>
> I have used Jira a little as a bug submitter, but have no experience
> of it as an admin (e.g. what benefits if any it might bring us).
>
> I have never looked at Redmine.
>
> Right now the only bug tracker I'd be curious to try is that
> built into github, since we (and also BioPerl, BioSQL, and
> BioRuby) are using them for our primary repository hosting.
> This could allow things like linking bugs to commits etc.
>
> However, I'm happy enough with bugzilla not to feel any great
> need to migrate to something else. It may not look slick, but
> it is quite functional.
>
> Peter
>
> P.S. The OBF bugzilla has just over 3000 bug reports in it
> (most closed anyway) so a complete transfer may be
> possible (depending on where we wanted to move it too
> of course).




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