From 8d7d02f42c3947f756c18cb4d37d9d97fbd0d27d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Franck Cuny Date: Wed, 10 Aug 2016 14:33:04 -0700 Subject: convert back to md --- ...1-17-sd-the-peer-to-peer-bug-tracking-system.md | 162 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 162 insertions(+) create mode 100644 posts/2009-11-17-sd-the-peer-to-peer-bug-tracking-system.md (limited to 'posts/2009-11-17-sd-the-peer-to-peer-bug-tracking-system.md') diff --git a/posts/2009-11-17-sd-the-peer-to-peer-bug-tracking-system.md b/posts/2009-11-17-sd-the-peer-to-peer-bug-tracking-system.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..50ecd92 --- /dev/null +++ b/posts/2009-11-17-sd-the-peer-to-peer-bug-tracking-system.md @@ -0,0 +1,162 @@ +SD is a peer to peer bug tracking system build on top of Prophet. Prophet is A grounded, semirelational, peer to peer replicated, disconnected, versioned, property database with self-healing conflict resolution. SD can be used alone, on an existing bug tracking system (like RT or redmine or github) and it plays nice with git. + +Why should you use SD ? Well, at $work</a> we are using <a href="">redmine</a> as our ticket tracker. I spend a good part of my time in a terminal, and checking the ticket system, adding a ticket, etc, using the browser, is annoying. I prefer something which I can use in my terminal and edit with my <a href="">$EDITOR. So if you recognize yourself in this description, you might want to take a look at SD. + +> In the contrib directory of the SD distribution, you will find a SD ticket syntax file for vim. + +how to do some basic stuff with sd +---------------------------------- + +We will start by initializing a database. By default + +``` example + % sd init +``` + +will create a *.sd* directory in your $HOME. If you want to create in a specific path, you will need to set the SD\_REPO in your env. + +``` example + % SD_REPO=~/code/myproject/sd sd init +``` + +The init command creates an sqlite database and a config file. The config file is in the same format as the one used by git. + +Now we can create a ticket: + +``` example + % SD_REPO=~/code/myproject/sd ticket create +``` + +This will open your $EDITOR, the part you need to edit are specified. After editing this file, you will get something like this: + +> Created ticket 11 (437b823c-8f69-46ff-864f-a5f74964a73f) Created comment 12 (f7f9ee13-76df-49fe-b8b2-9b94f8c37989) + +You can view the created ticket: + +``` example + % SD_REPO=~/code/myproject/sd ticket show 11 +``` + +and the content of your ticket will be displayed. + +You can list and filter your tickets: + +``` example + % SD_REPO=~/code/myproject/sd ticket list + % SD_REPO=~/code/myproject/sd search --regex foo +``` + +You can edit the SD configuration using the config tool or editing directly the file. SD will look for three files : *etc/sdrc, $HOME*.sdrc or the config file in your replica (in our exemple, ~/code/myproject/sd/config). + +For changing my email address, I can do it this way: + +``` example + % SD_REPO=~/code/myproject/sd config user.email-address franck@lumberjaph.net +``` + +or directly + +``` example + % SD_REPO=~/code/myproject/sd config edit +``` + +and update the user section. + +sd with git +----------- + +SD provides a script for git: *git-sd*. + +Let's start by creating a git repository: + +``` example + % mkdir ~/code/git/myuberproject + % cd ~/code/git/myuberproject + git init +``` + +SD comes with a git hook named "git-post-commit-close-ticket" (in the contrib directory). We will copy this script to .git/hooks/post-commit. + +now we can initialize our sd database + +``` example + % git-sd init +``` + +git-sd will try to find which email you have choosen for this project using git config, and use the same address for it's configuration. + +Let's write some code for our new project + +``` perl + #!/usr/bin/env perl + use strict; + use warnings; + print "hello, world\n"; +``` + +then + +``` example + % git add hello.pl + % git commit -m "first commit" hello.pl +``` + +now we can create a new entry + +``` example + % git-sd ticket create # create a ticket to replace print with say +``` + +We note the UUID for the ticket: in my exemple, the following output is produced: + +> Created ticket 11 (92878841-d764-4ac9-8aae-cd49e84c1ffe) Created comment 12 (ddb1e56e-87cb-4054-a035-253be4bc5855) + +so my UUID is 92878841-d764-4ac9-8aae-cd49e84c1ffe. + +Now, I fix my bug + +``` example + #!/usr/bin/env perl + use strict; + use 5.010; + use warnings; + say "hello, world"; +``` + +and commit it + +``` example + % git commit -m "Closes 92878841-d764-4ac9-8aae-cd49e84c1ffe" hello.pl +``` + +If I do a + +``` example + % git ticket show 92878841-d764-4ac9-8aae-cd49e84c1ffe +``` + +The ticket will be marked as closed. + +sd with github +-------------- + +Let's say you want to track issues from a project (I will use Plack for this exemple) that is hosted on github. + +``` example + % git clone git://github.com/miyagawa/Plack.git + % git-sd clone --from "github:http://github.com/miyagawa/Plack" + # it's the same as + % git-sd clone --from "github:miyagawa/Plack" + # or if you don't want to be prompted for username and password each time + % git-sd clone --from github:http://githubusername:apitoken@github.com/miyagawa/Plack.git +``` + +It will ask for you github username and your API token, and clone the database. + +Later, you can publish your sd database like this: + +``` example + % git-sd push --to "github:http://github.com/$user/$project" +``` + +Now you can code offline with git, and open/close tickets using SD :) -- cgit v1.2.3