Re: [pgsql-www] Collaboration Tool Proposal - Mailing list pgsql-hackers
From | Bort, Paul |
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Subject | Re: [pgsql-www] Collaboration Tool Proposal |
Date | |
Msg-id | 735D404BD9E7EB44B9CDFC27FC88809B01C4D528@mail2.tmwsystems.com Whole thread Raw |
Responses |
Re: [pgsql-www] Collaboration Tool Proposal
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List | pgsql-hackers |
> > My apologies, then! I was operating off of the statements > of others, and the > fact that the only RT impelementations I've used were running > on MySQL. So, > questions: > > 1) can you compare/contrast RT vs. BZ vs. Simplified > bug-tracking, like > GForge? I've used Bugzilla for searching for FOP issues, and a couple other places, and I find the RT search much more obvious. I can get what I want out of Bugzilla, but usually by creating a really broad search and sifting entries one at a time for likely candidates. The fact that an RT search is iterative is much more obvious, because the bottom of the search page lists all of the current criteria, and the box for adding new ones. Add or remove, and re-run the search. I like the trick that it does with mutually exclusive conditions: It assumes an 'or' between them. (eg, all tickets that are in state 'open' or 'closed'.) OTOH, Bugzilla tracks a whole pile more fields by default. I've taken to putting version numbers in the ticket subject in RT because for the small project here, it's easier than learning how to add a version field. (I haven't tried adding my own fields.) Both handle attachments and comments sanely. I don't know if BZ has an e-mail interface, but the one in RT has filled the basic needs here. (We haven't pushed the limits of the e-mail part.) I have never tried to install BZ. RT's install (RedHat 8.0, PostgreSQL 7.2.4 from RPMs) was straightforward once all the Perl modules were up to date. (All of the needed modules were available from CPAN.) I don't recall using any simplified bug tracking on-line, except maybe at ImageMagick.com, which seems to be more a forum or mailing list search, with no real tracking fields. > > 2) What help, if any, would we be able to get in supporting > RT from the RT > community? I'm afraid I have no idea what or where the larger RT community is. I know there's commercial support available from the author (whom I have no contact with), and I found the answers to my (self-created) problems during setup using Google. I found RT because of a (don't ban me, please ;-) discussion on SlashDot. (http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/10/06/1854211) There were a large number of proponents of RT there; their posts claimed years of use at many sites. I would be happy to lend my meager talents to setting it up for a trial, if that's where the group decides to go. But Josh made a good point off-list: are we trying to solve the problem of ticket/bug tracking, or community/collaboration in general? My $0.02: CVS handles the code, mailing lists handle the dialog, and a ticket/bug tracker keeps people from losing things. About all that leaves for the web site to do is advocate PostgreSQL (which I think it does nicely) and related projects, and provide some glue (like how to find the name of the other lists or projects to see what they're doing.) New tools or old, every day with PostgreSQL is a good day.
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