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we have a lot of users running in different shared and solo-owned repositories in Subversion. As part of our work, we do project-shared code and individual work, and we need to control access, ideally on a group basis.
Currenly, we use SVNManager to allow users to manage access and create repositories. However, in order to get that working we had to do quite a bit of hacking.
Does anyone know of a free, open-source, linux-compatible SVN management system?
Thanks for your help.
I would recommend SVN Access: http://www.jaj.com/projects/svnaccess/ or http://freshmeat.net/projects/svnaccess/
I have used it as is, and have modified it for an enterprise-wide solution at my day job.
There is an alternative called KDESVN which you might want to try. However, I have never used it, so I cannot vouch for it.
svn-access-manager seems to be a great open-source web administration GUI for SVN too (and currently active ...).
But I've finally adopted USVN !
This question is very similar to SVN admin management GUI tool by the way ...
I use KDESVN. Once it's set up it works great, but you only get one chance to set up your branch structure, so plan to create a test repository first.
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I'm searching a ticketing system in order to implement it on some business. I need a ticketing system with these possibilities and characteristics (if it's possible) or the maximum of it:
Must be compatible with Linux
Open-source code and free software
Compatible with LDAP (I want to do authentications with LDAP)
Possibility to open a ticket and receive the answer via mail (user's side, operators can have the web interface, they should but not must)
The system should contain a wiki section or something like that in order to implement some guides & FAQs for users
I know that I'm searching for a very specific ticketing system and I'm being very demanding :P but I should do in that way.
If you know some ticketing system that provides several of these options your answers will be also welcome.
Thanks for all!
take a look at Redmine, it should have everything you want. You can use LDAP as user management, implement a wiki per projet, be notified by mail when a ticket is created / updated and the source code is available.
Redmine official website
The characteristics you want are very similar with the ticket system I do use in my company.
I suggest to you the GLPi ticket system, is open source and fill all your requirements.
I hope you like it :D
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After trolling through quite a number of Node.js CMS hopefuls, it seems that Calipso is the most active / well developed CMS so far. Am I missing other options or projects that are more robust and mature at this point in time?
Update: Calipso is now dead. We are currently using Apostrophe CMS which in my opinion is more feature-full and better architected for a node.js based cms.
We use Calipso for some of the projects here in my company and it works out fine. If you have love for node you should be fine :)
We constantly review other node based cmses, and so far Calipso is most active and favorite.
I highly recommend KeystoneJS, it's still relatively new but i'm already using it in several commercial projects, give it a go! (I also contribute to the project).
DocPad seems to be nearly as active as Calipso - 831 commits from 22 developers vs 1023 commits in Calipso. DocPad has nice docs and lots of plugins.
Check out enduro.js. It is minimalistic, extensible by node.js and has a pretty nice auto-generated admin interface.
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I'd like a system where I can manage my LAMP server. It is a real server, so it isnt a VPS. But apart from everyone else online, I dont want to sell space on it. I just want to manage it for my own purpose.
So I can change settings on the fly without accessing the Shell.
I would of course like it to be an active, either open source or free software.
Web UI is also a requirement.
As any configuration tool on various web hotels, with possibility to configure only for one mashine, and no virtual spaces or such.
Would be great, as after tons of googling I came to the conclusion that there are tons of systems and they all are too advanced or just look aweful and seem to complex.
My goals.
Manage domains,
Manage emails for domains,
Manage Apache (possibly vhosts and such)
Manage MySQL (could use phpmyadmin)
Manage logs and similar
Manage SVN (if possible)
Manage FTP
And such features, not too advanced stuff.
Much appriciated if you know any good systems of such caliber. Thanks.
webmin (http://www.webmin.com/) might be what you're looking for.
Another could be http://isp-control.net/
And: http://www.syscp.org/
And again: http://www.ispconfig.org/
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So,
We need to keep passwords to different SCM, DBs, etc., etc. -- it's all for the development purposes and needs to be shared between engineers. However, different people work on different projects, so we need to be able to keep some access rights / roles there. Anything you are using? Security and safety of this storage is obviously #1 priority, the #2 is actual features I listed above.
How do you store / share this information?
Thanks!
Different applications with different passwords is always a problem. So what we are using is domain authentication to everything: DB, SCM, etc.
The most important tool is the Project Management Tool. Again access to projects is based on the domain accounts. There we keep everything related to a project, even secure information. Safety is achieved through regular backup. Security can be a bit low in this case, though, depending of the tool used...
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I know this question has been asked before but I am looking for bugtracking system that is free and is just online.
We are not looking for anything fancy, just want the test team to be able to log something so that testers can go back and go through the bugs.
I've looked at bugzilla but it has to be installed and the installation seems very long. Basically looking for something quick and dirty...
If this is a class project (e.g., a university course project), you can get a free FogBugz account for the duration of the project. Joel has mentioned it several times on the Stack Overflow Podcast. I only suggested this because you didn't give any details about what type of project you are working on. This may not apply to your situation.
You can use Google Code. It's for open source projects, so your bugs will be visible, but it is free to use.
Also this.
you could always create your own using google docs.
We use veoproject.com to track our bugs. It's a fully-featured project management system, but works great for our needs. They have a basic free account that works really well.
I like BugHost.