2010/3/30 Andre Polykanine <an...@oire.org>:
> Hello Jan,
>
> And what do you use then?)
>

Sadly, I'm bound to use what I dislike. Mantis. ;)
It's not my decision and in our business model there's no major
benefit in switching the software, at this point.
I can live with it.

Regards

> --
> With best regards from Ukraine,
> Andre
> Skype: Francophile; Wlm&MSN: arthaelon @ yandex.ru; Jabber: arthaelon @ 
> jabber.org
> Yahoo! messenger: andre.polykanine; ICQ: 191749952
> Twitter: m_elensule
>
> ----- Original message -----
> From: Jan G.B. <ro0ot.w...@googlemail.com>
> To: Alex Major <p...@allydm.co.uk>
> Date: Tuesday, March 30, 2010, 6:04:20 PM
> Subject: [PHP] Still searching for a bugtracking system
>
> 2010/3/30 Alex Major <p...@allydm.co.uk>
>>
>> Surely if it's not suitable for your situation, it's not the best? :)
>>
>> Mantis is what I'd recommend and believe has already been recommend to you.
>> Runs using PHP and MySQL, it's flexible for public or private projects,
>> multiple projects etc.
>>
>> I do agree with you that Bugzilla seems heavy, I know it has its supporters
>> but I've always found it to be overkill for the projects I've worked on.
>>
>> Alex.
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Andre Polykanine [mailto:an...@oire.org]
>> Sent: 30 March 2010 14:14
>> To: php-general@lists.php.net
>> Subject: [PHP] Still searching for a bugtracking system
>>
>> Hello everyone,
>> The best of all suggested bugtrackers is JotBug, on my opinion. But it
>> works only with SQLite databases, and I have no access to such one
>> (only MySql).
>> Any solutions?
>> P.S. I'd use Trac, but since I have no own server yet, we have no
>> access to Python, either... Only Php, MySql, Perl.
>> I have looked at Bugzilla... seems to heavy for our service).
>>
>> -
>
> Well. I'm not a fan of mantis. Mantis has some annoying bugs and the
> codebase seems weird.
> It basically works, but that is all about it.
>
>
> I quote http://sqlite.org/about.html :
>
>> SQLite is a software library that implements 
>>a self-contained,serverless, zero-configuration, transactional SQL database 
>>engine.
> ...
>> Unlike most other SQL databases, SQLite does not have a separate server 
>> process. SQLite reads and writes directly to ordinary disk files. A complete 
>> SQL database with multiple tables, indices, triggers, and views, is 
>> contained in a single disk file.
>
> So you don't need "access" to such a database.
>
>
> Regards
>
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