On Thu, 23 Apr 2009 22:54:12 -0400 Jean Schurger <[email protected]> wrote:
> On ven, 2009-04-24 at 11:23 +0930, Karl Goetz wrote: > > On Thu, 23 Apr 2009 22:38:23 +0200 > > Simon Josefsson <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Sam Geeraerts <[email protected]> writes: > > > > > > >>> about redmine: (http://www.redmine.org/) > > > > > > > > The feature list gives a very mature impression, but I've never > > > > heard of it. > > > > Ditto. > > > > > > > > I'm using it (http://redmine.josefsson.org/) lightly for GnuTLS, > > > but anything remotely connected to Ruby or Rails is a nightmare to > > > maintain. I tried to install things cleanly on debian lenny: > > > > > > http://blog.josefsson.org/2008/10/17/redmine-on-debian-lenny-using-lighttpd/ > > > > This is fairly consistant with what I've heard about RoR. > > > > > Trac and redmine are both not 'easily' installable. > > - Both requires a 'special' apache configuation (mod_python for trac, > passenger for redmine) (or using mod_proxy) > > - Both install documentation tell about installing packages without > the distribution tool, but with the 'language' tool (easy_install for > python, and gem for ruby). trac is, however, packaged in Debian, which eases the burden considerably. kk > > - Trac install is more documented because trac is more used (that may > be change since redmine 0.8 and newer versions) > > - I think that redmine upgrades is VERY simple. It handles db model > migration, and 'just' works. Plugins who do changes to the model works > very well too. > > - Both can use mysql/postgres/whateversql > > -- Karl Goetz, (Kamping_Kaiser / VK5FOSS) Debian user / gNewSense contributor http://www.kgoetz.id.au No, I won't join your social networking group
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
_______________________________________________ gNewSense-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnewsense-dev
