Edgewall Software

Version 36 (modified by Ryan J Ollos, 8 years ago) ( diff )

Answer question posted at end of document.

Trac Main Features

Notice: This page doesn't belong to the "official" Trac documentation and consists entirely of user contributed comments.

If you are part of a development project (notably software development) and need to keep track of your issues, milestones and artefacts, and additionally want to keep these in-house - ie not hosted on third-party cloud solutions - then Trac is for you.

There are many other novel ways in which Trac is used, for example as a document management system or when performing requirements management.

Because Trac is licensed under BSD, the platform can be customised to fit within your group workflow. This can be done either through configuration options (TracIni), the installation of plugins or under-the-hood development.

See also: AboutTrac

Open source project management tool

Trac is a lightweight project management tool that is implemented as a web-based application, written in the Python programming language. It emphasizes ease of use and low ceremony, and is open source.

Ideal for managing software developments, it is flexible enough to use for many types of projects. As it is open source, if it doesn't quite fit your needs, you can always make changes yourself, write plugins, or commission someone else to do so.

Ticket system

Track the progress of resolving individual bugs, issues, feature requests, and ideas - each with its own ticket (numbered, as in a waiting room queue system). Easily reconcile overlapping tickets (where more than one person reports the same thing). Search and filter tickets by severity, project component, version or owner (among others).

View progress

Trac gives you a number of convenient ways to stay on top of events and changes within a project. You can set milestones, and view a roadmap of progress towards them (as well as historical achievements) in summary. There is a timeline of individual changes so you can see the order of events, starting with the most recent. Trac supports RSS for content syndication: allowing people to subscribe to those changes outside Trac itself, as well as email notification.

Online repository viewing

Trac gives a highly usable browsing and management front-end for Subversion and Git. Trac gives you clear and elegant code highlighting and file comparison, so you can easily see how files differ. Multiple repositories can be connected to Trac.

Using plugins, Trac also supports other version control systems. There is even a GitHub integration interface.

User management

Trac has a simple permission system to control what users can and can't access. Permissions can be enhanced with the AccountManagerPlugin and other plugins.

Knowledge management (wiki)

Built-in documentation server, which can be used for developer or user resources. As it's a Wiki, it can be set up to allow shared editing. Uses MoinMoin syntax and links to tickets, reports and source.

Wiki pages can start from a customisable template.

Features provided through plugins

Trac is extensible through plugins. There is a range of plugins available supporting additional features to Trac core, from anti-spam to Gantt charts and time tracking. All plugins are collected at the Trac-Hacks site.

Discussion

Things I don't know whether Trac has or not

  • Q: Bug categories?
  • Q: Development Calendar?
  • Q: Bug type flow, eg bugs migrate from unconfirmed → prioritized → confirmed → fixed?
    • A: This can be found in trac.ini, see TracWorkflow, and is configurable.
  • Q: Is there a "resource planning" possibility? Something that Gantt charts would provide?
    • A: There's a Gantt chart plugin and resource planning plugins at PluginList, check also here.

Comparisons

To make this page particularly valuable, consider which features Trac sports/lacks in contrast to other popular systems, such as BugZilla, JIRA, Confluence, MediaWiki, FogBugz.

If this page covers both its relative strengths and weaknesses, this would be a great page: letting potential users know what they'll get, how much work they'll need to do to get it running, and what competing packages can offer.

Rationale

This is a page that answers the first FAQ: What is Trac and how can it help me?

  • This page would be a great help for people needing to pick an issue tracking system out of the myriad available.
  • Well, I read this, and it did not help me with my question at all: "Could Trac be useful for me and my Projects?"

These points are best dicussed on the MailingList.

Note: See TracWiki for help on using the wiki.