debbugs, Debian bug tracking system ----------------------------------- This bug tracking system was developed by Ian Jackson from 1994-1997, with assistance from nCipher Corporation Limited in 1997. nCipher allowed Ian to redistribute modifications he made to the system while working as an employee of nCipher. Since then, it has been developed by the various administrators of bugs.debian.org, including Darren Benham, Adam Heath, Josip Rodin, Anthony Towns, and Colin Watson. As in the case of Ian, nCipher allowed Colin to redistribute modifications he made while working as an employee of nCipher. ============================================================================= SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS ============================================================================= - GNU date - GNU gzip - Perl 5 (5.005 is known to work) - Mailtools and MIME-tools perl modules to manipulate email - Lynx 2.7 or later - The bug system requires its own mail domain. It comes with code which understands how exim, qmail and sendmail deliver mail for such a domain to a script. - A webserver. For the old system of static HTML pages generated for bug reports and index pages, this is easiest if the bug system can write directly to the webspace; for the new system of CGI scripts that generate web pages on the fly, write access is not required. - Somewhere to run CGI scripts (unless you don't need the web forms for searching for bugs by number, package, maintainer or submitter). ============================================================================= INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS ============================================================================= Install the Debian package and read /usr/share/doc/debbugs/README.Debian file. If you can't use the .deb, do the following: 1. Run "make install" from the source directory. 2. Edit the config files in /etc/debbugs/ directory to suit your needs. Re-run debbugsconfig when you're finished to regenerate the documentation. 3. Set up the mail arrangements to deliver mail to the right place, and to set up a blackhole mail alias if you need one. Ensure that owner@bugs, the address of the BTS owner, if that's what you're using, is handled by the MTA. All other email should be piped into the receive script. 4. Set up your HTTP server to point people looking for bug reports to /var/lib/debbugs/www and set /var/lib/debbugs/www/cgi as a valid CGI directory. 5. Test things a bit, by sending mail messages to the bug system and running /usr/lib/debbugs/processall and/or /usr/lib/debbugs/rebuild. The latter updates index files used by the CGI scripts. If you're feeling brave, you can link /var/lib/debbugs/spool/index.db to index.db.realtime and .../index.archive to index.archive.realtime to remove the need for the rebuild script; this is still semi-experimental. 6. If all seems well then install the crontab from /usr/share/doc/debbugs/examples/crontab. Notes: Each line of /etc/debbugs/Maintainers file needs to be formatted like this: "package maintainer name ". If you need a template, look in /usr/share/doc/debbugs/examples/ directory. ============================================================================= FURTHER INFORMATION ============================================================================= Email: debian-debbugs@lists.debian.org (mailing list) To subscribe, email debian-debbugs-request@lists.debian.org with the word "subscribe" in the subject line Outdated web site: http://benham.net/debbugs/ ============================================================================= COPYRIGHT AND LACK-OF-WARRANTY NOTICE ============================================================================= Copyright 1999 Darren O. Benham Copyright 1994-1997 Ian Jackson Copyright 1997,2003 nCipher Corporation Limited This bug system is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License. This program and documentation is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program, or one should be available above; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.