We use redmine.  Been getting used to it over the last 2 or so weeks
but overall no real complaints.

On Wed, Jan 21, 2009 at 12:32 PM, Robert Castley
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Well ...
>
> Depending on which way you look at it, I have stupidly decided to have a
> stab at developing my own PHP based solution.
>
> Using ZF ... of course!
>
> My starting point is a direct copy of the sqlite database from trac, this
> has already been modified to support projects :-)
>
> I have the Wiki side of things all working thanks to my other attempt at a
> project called ZFWiki.
>
> I will report back when I have more information :-)
>
> I have some screenshots at http://gallery.me.com/robert.castley#100086
>
> - Robert
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Karol Grecki [mailto:[email protected]]
> Sent: 21 December 2008 22:42
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: RE: [fw-general] What do you use to manage your ZF projects?
>
> Everything is raised as tickets, there are different types like bug, task,
> proposal etc.
> You can organise them using milestones, components and versions.
> I used milestones for projects because they have special meaning in Roadmap
> view, but you can chose any of them and create appropriate reports using sql
> syntax.
>
> Anyway I feel your pain, I couldn't find anything meeting my requirements
> either.
> I even considered building it myself, using ZF of course :)
>
> Karol
>
> rcastley wrote:
>>
>> Hi Karol,
>>
>> How do you handle issue/bug tracking?
>>
>> In Bugzilla I can choose the Product and then the component etc.
>>
>> More research tonight has unveiled the following projects:
>>
>> 1) Redmine (seems to be like Trac but written in Ruby).  Not used Ruby
>> or Rails so not comfortable with this from a systems managament POV.
>> See Item 3!
>> 2) I used Gforge on the Mambo project, they now over an Advanced Version:
>> http://gforgegroup.com/es/download.php
>> 3) Retrospectiva - but look at the 'Quick'???? Install guide:
>> http://retrospectiva.org/wiki/Quick%20install.  Now I know why I love
>> PHP
>> ;-)
>>
>> I think I am now getting myself down to Gforge AS or Trac.
>>
>> Why is nothing ever easy, eh?
>>
>> - Robert
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Karol Grecki [mailto:[email protected]]
>> Sent: 21 December 2008 21:46
>> To: [email protected]
>> Subject: Re: [fw-general] What do you use to manage your ZF projects?
>>
>>
>> Robert
>>
>> I had the same problem over a year ago and settled for Trac. It
>> doesn't support multiple projects but we use milestones for it e.g.
>> "project A sprint 1".... It integrates really well with Subversion and
>> there's a lot of plugins extending its functionality. It may still be
>> your best bet if you don't find anything matching all your
>> requirements.
>>
>> Karol
>>
>>
>> rcastley wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> Just curious here.  I/we currently use  Bugzilla & CVS, no formal
>>> wiki but I do have a MediaWiki used for somethings.
>>>
>>> I am looking for a solution that fits all, so the obvious choices are
>>> 'Trac'
>>> like.
>>>
>>> My problem is that I need a solution that will support multiple projects.
>>> (Trac doesn't score well in this area.)
>>>
>>> Bugzilla is used by multiple PHP, Java & C/C++ products.  CVS is used
>>> only by PHP developers the 'others' use VSS.
>>> MediaWiki is used for 'sparse' documentation.
>>>
>>>
>>> My gripes with the current setup:
>>>
>>> Bugzilla - v. slow and ugly but it fitted the bill at the time.
>>> CVS - I like, no love, CVS but I know that there are better solutions
>>> out there but am concerned about migration etc.
>>> MediaWiki - Probably too much of an overkill for what we need and it
>>> is not that easy to configured, extend etc.
>>>
>>> I now that the ZF team uses JIRA, Confluence etc but I have a budget
>>> of £0/$0 :-) and don't qualify for the OS licenses.
>>>
>>> So ... I would be interested on the views of others of a 'one hat
>>> fits all'
>>> solution that can handle multiple projects.
>>> The solution needs to offer Issues/Bug tracking and Wiki at a minimum.
>>> Integration with SCM not important but if it does it great.
>>>
>>> I would prefer a PHP based solution but happy to consider others i.e.
>>> Ruby,
>>> Perl, Java etc.
>>>
>>> - Robert
>>>
>>
>>
>
> --
> View this message in context:
> http://www.nabble.com/What-do-you-use-to-manage-your-ZF-projects--tp21118310p21120113.html
>
> Sent from the Zend Framework mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>
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