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Original author(s) | D. Richard Hipp |
---|---|
Initial release | 2006 |
Stable release | 2.24[1]
/ 24 April 2024 |
Repository | |
Written in | C, SQL |
Operating system | Cross-platform |
Type | Software configuration management, bug tracking system, wiki software |
License | 2010: BSD-2-Clause[a][2] 2007: GPL-2.0-only[b] |
Website | www |
Fossil is a software configuration management, bug tracking system and wiki software server for use in software development created by D. Richard Hipp.
Fossil is a cross-platform DVCS that runs on Linux, BSD derivatives, Mac and Windows. It is capable of performing distributed version control, bug tracking, wiki services, and blogging. The software has a built-in web interface, which reduces project tracking complexity and promotes situational awareness. A user may simply type "fossil ui" from within any check-out and Fossil automatically opens the user's web browser to display a page giving detailed history and status information on that project. The fossil executable may be run as a standalone HTTP server, as a CGI application, accessed via SSH, or run interactively from the CLI.
Being distributed, Fossil requires no central server, although collaboration is made easier by using one.
Content is stored using a SQLite database so that transactions are atomic even if interrupted by a power loss or system crash.[3]
Fossil is free software released under a BSD license[4] (relicensed from previously GPL).
Fossil is used for version control by the SQLite project, which is itself a component of Fossil. SQLite transitioned to using Fossil for version control over CVS on 2009-08-12.[5][6]
Some examples of other projects using Fossil are:
The following websites provide free source code hosting for Fossil repositories:
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