Please make sure you do this in consultation with Apache's infrastructure group (infrastructure at apache.org). You should also confirm that you have done it in accordance with the criteria that has been used for other projects where Atlassian has wired fisheye to Apache subversion repositories.
Fisheye, especially when it does its initial crawl, can place a significant load on the repository. You risk getting Atlassian blocked from Apache's SVN repo if you do not do it carefully. Regards, Upayavira On Fri, 2009-09-11 at 11:41 -0700, Jonathan Nolen wrote: > Hi All, > > I'm Jonathan from Atlassian, and we've been building Shindig (java) > into JIRA for the last year or so. > > Atlassian makes another tool called Fisheye[1], which is a source- > repository analysis tool. It reads your SVN repository (read-only) and > publishes all of that useful, usually hidden, information on the web. > Every file, every directory, every branch, every change-set and every > diff gets it's own page and URL. You can also subscribe to RSS feeds > of the changes that happen to all, or a part, of the repository. > > So, to make our job of working with Shindig a little easier, we > pointed one of our public Fisheye servers at the Shindig source. > Fisheye helps us keep up with changes in Shindig, and work back to > historical versions and changes to see why and when they happened. You > can see the results here: > > File view -- http://fisheye6.atlassian.com/browse/shindig/trunk > > Changeset view -- http://fisheye6.atlassian.com/changelog/shindig/trunk > > This is public and free for anyone to use, so please feel free to take > advantage of it. And if there's anything else that we can do to help > the project out, please let me know. > > Cheers, > Jonathan > > [1] http://atlassian.com/fisheye > > -- > Jonathan Nolen > Mail: [email protected] > Web : http://www.atlassian.com > AIM : JonathanNolen > Cell: 805.895.2794 > > >

