/[smecontribs]/rpms/bugzilla/contribs10/README.fedora.bugzilla
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Contents of /rpms/bugzilla/contribs10/README.fedora.bugzilla

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Revision 1.1 - (show annotations) (download)
Mon May 23 19:29:49 2022 UTC (2 years ago) by jpp
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: bugzilla-5_0_6-14_fc36, bugzilla-5_0_6-16_el7_sme, bugzilla-5_0_6-15_el7_sme, HEAD
Initial import

1 Bugzilla is a powerful bug tracking system used by a large number of open
2 source projects.
3
4 In order to use Bugzilla, you will first need to configure it for your
5 environment. The first step to doing this is to run the checksetup.pl
6 script, which will perform module version checks and create an initial
7 config file in /etc/bugzilla called localconfig. You then need to ensure
8 the values in this file are accurate for your environment.
9
10 Once this is done, you may need to modify default settings for your database
11 to ensure it accepts Bugzilla data properly. Please see
12 https://bugzilla.readthedocs.org/en/5.0/ for specifics of
13 database setting modifications.
14
15 Lastly, simply re-run checksetup.pl to populate the database tables, set up
16 the templates, and add the administrator ID. You should be done at this point.
17
18 There are two useful cron jobs which are included with Bugzilla which should be
19 put in place after configuration is done. The first is a daily cron job for
20 statistics collection. This is in the file "cron.daily" and can be enabled by
21 simply copying this file to /etc/cron.daily/bugzilla (or any other file name
22 in the /etc/cron.daily/ directory). The second is the "whine" cron job,
23 designed to run every 15 minutes. To enable this job, simply copy the
24 cron.whine file to /etc/cron.d/bugzilla (or any othe filename within the
25 /etc/cron.d/ directory).

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