A simple distributed bug tracker.
Peter Harpending e5664bfbb2 Edit Data/Louse.hs a bit | 9 年 前 | |
---|---|---|
Data | 9 年 前 | |
bin | 9 年 前 | |
res | 9 年 前 | |
skel | 9 年 前 | |
.gitignore | 9 年 前 | |
LICENSE | 9 年 前 | |
README.md | 9 年 前 | |
Setup.hs | 9 年 前 | |
TUTORIAL.md | 9 年 前 | |
louse.cabal | 9 年 前 |
louse is a very simple distributed bug-tracking system. It literally stores bugs in a JSON file. The idea is pretty portable, although this implementation is written in Haskell.
The schema for the JSON file is stored in the
res/schemata/project.json
. The other schemata (for people, comments,
individual bugs, etc) are stored in the res/schemata/
directory.
You can also access the schemata with the louse
tool.
$ louse schemata list
bug
comment
person
project
$ louse schemata show comment
{
"name": "comment",
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"comment-person": {
"required": false,
"type": "object",
"description": "The person associated with this comment. Should fit the person schema."
},
"comment-text": {
"required": true,
"type": "string",
"description": "The comment itself"
}
}
}
Or, with highlighting:
{
"name": "comment",
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"comment-person": {
"required": false,
"type": "object",
"description": "The person associated with this comment. Should fit the person schema."
},
"comment-text": {
"required": true,
"type": "string",
"description": "The comment itself"
}
}
}
I can't really copyright an idea, but this particular implementation of it is Copyright (C) 2015 Peter Harpending, and licensed under the GNU General Public License, version >=3. A copy of the license can be found in the LICENSE file.
You need to install the Haskell platform before installing louse. Chris Allen maintains an exhaustive guide on installing the Haskell platform.
I haven't published a version on Hackage (the Haskell package repository) yet, so you'll have to use the git version. To download and compile louse, run:
git clone https://github.com/pharpend/louse.git
cd louse
cabal update
cabal install
For a tutorial, you can see the TUTORIAL.md file, or run
louse --tutorial
. For a brief listing of the available commands, you
can run louse --help
.
The current directory structure looks like this:
project/
.louse/
project.json
It occurs to me though, that just one JSON file is a bit hard to version control. If two louse branches make different changes, they'll inevitably conflict.
That is, if two separate people add bugs, they'll likely add them to the same spot in the JSON file, which means a merge conflict. With this new system, if two people add two files with different names, there is unlikely to be a merge conflict.
Even though louse doesn't interface with version control, projects that will use louse probably also use version control, so I have to keep version control in mind during the design process.
Thus, I'm probably going to switch to a directory structure more like this:
project/
.louse/
project.json
people/
58ec25555613cfced0171391bc483ee77a2fd317.json
74a2c0d30d1125a4952a92a0d5b534546d4967ba.json
d787eed545773f27b23622e8ade69bf1ecd90528.json
f19cec87632be50bffb463314ea0c7a76ec4aca6.json
...
bugs/
43d66424f5d84470aabedc2cc369ab8cf0ba19ee.json
8c36dd07c13861be9d8634eeb97b0024785b541a.json
92de71a16a94012f53c0f09de214a2235ee32fa0.json
a97816ef1d66507695698fb41dd6887cc8869c2d.json
...
which is much more VCS-friendly.
This also has the added benefit of "factoring out" individual people.
At the moment, the identifiers are randomly generated. In the future, I'll probably add some sort of hashing system.
If you're developing software with Git, there are, in broad terms, 4 components:
I'm sure I'm forgetting something here.
The recent DDOS attack on GitHub revealed a sore point with distributed version control workflows: even though the code itself is distributed, often the bug tracker is hosted on a central server, which could go down. This is an effort to further distribute the standard development workflow.
I can't figure out how to distribute continuous integration, so I'll leave that to someone else.
The SFC has a trademark on the term "Git", so I can't use it in the name of my program without their permission. I looked in the thesaurus for synonyms to "git", and "louse" came up. It seems appropriate, because camping is vaguely reminiscent of free/open-source developers collaborating.
You can email me at <peter@harpending.org>
, or contact me via IRC. I am
pharpend
on FreeNode and OFTC.