I would like to gauge what solutions other people put in place to get Team System functionality. We all know that Team System can be pricey for some of us. I know they offer a small team edition with five licenses with a MSDN subscription, but what if your team is bigger than five or you don't want to use Team System?
I'm stunned that nobody has mentioned the free and excellent TeamCity product from JetBrains. It includes:
- Continous Integration
- Software Build management
- Project Management, Monitoring and Statistical Reports
- Integration with many IDEs, Sourcecode control systems, and Testing Frameworks
For project management / bug tracking / Git or Subversion repository I also use Unfuddle (free for small personal projects!)
I'll second Trac + Subversion. While nothing is perfect, this combination works quite well for me, and the price is right.
Even for projects I work solo on, it's nice to have both of these integrated.
I've had a lot of success with the nice integration between SourceGear vault and FogBugz.
MS Build for build automation meets my needs.
Took my answer out of the question and posted it as one of the answers per the StackOverflow FAQ.
Here is the solution that I use and it works great:
- Subversion for source control
- Warehouse for my Subversion web browser
- FogBugz for feature and bug tracking with it integrated with Subversion, Visual Studio, and Warehouse
- VisualSVN for integrating Subversion into Visual Studio
- CruiseControl.Net with nAnt for my automated build system for .Net projects
- CruiseControl.rb with Capistrano for my automated build system for Ruby on Rails projects
It seems targeted for Open Source / Community type projects but it's working just find as an internal Developer intranet. It integrates a Wiki, Bug tracker and SVN Source browser into one nice package and it's very easy to configure.
Sourcegear's suite of products are a very nice alternative. Vault + Dragnet + Fortress are nice, however if you can't afford all of those, Vault + FogBugz is a pretty decent alternative.
I use SourceGear's Fortress on my home computer for personal development. Its free for a single user.
I use VisualSVN Server for source control, Mingle for project management and bug tracking, and Team City for continous integration. I'm still getting used to it, but it's working great so far. This is a good free setup for small teams. Licensing Mingle and Team City will cost money for larger teams.
Seapine CM - Cross platform issue management and version control
For a lightweight & completely free option, you can use Springloops integrated with Basecamp (+ an SVN client).
- Hosted SVN: SpringLoops: http://www.springloops.com/ (free for a single project & user)
- Basecamp: http://basecamphq.com/ (also free for a single project)
Note: SpringLoops integration with Basecamp is not available in their free setup.
I develop on Linux also, which is one reason I came up with the solution I have. I was wondering how the SourceGear options work in this respect? I have used Vault before, which in my experience wasn't too bad, but I know it is mostly Windows based. I think I read at one point that they have a client that can work on Linux, but I have never used it. I just want to open the conversation up a little more, so people who come to this question can hopefully find the best answer for them, based on their wants.
If the Vault client can run on Linux and Mac and run well, then using Vault and Fortress will definitely be the accepted answer as a good low cost alternative to Team System.
SVN with the TortoiseSVN add-on makes for a solid and easy to use interface. WinMerge is a great tool to thrown in that mix as well.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11857/what-do-you-use-as-a-good-alternative-to-team-system