view website/www/index.txt @ 5632:a29a8dae2095

Initial implementation of function to return data for / and /data endpoints under /rest/. /rest/ returns: 1) default_version of the interface and supported_version array 2) list of links with rel and uri properties that indicate what assets are available under /rest. E.g. /rest/data /data returns: a list of possible assets (e.g. issue, user, keyword, status) and links for accessing those assets. E.G. { "data": { "keyword": { "link": "https://example.net/demo/rest/data/keyword" }, "user": { "link": "https://example.net/demo/rest/data/user" }, ... } } Both of these are currently hand coded. Others will be doing more development on the rest interface. These two examples are meant to spark discussion on what the payloads returned by the rest interface should look like and give some ideas around HATEOAS.
author John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org>
date Fri, 01 Mar 2019 23:24:40 -0500
parents e7293df727dc
children b68d3d8531d5 29d428927362
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Roundup Issue Tracker
=====================

.. pypi-release:: roundup
   :prefix: Download
   :class: note

Roundup is a simple-to-use and -install issue-tracking system with command-line, web and e-mail interfaces. 
It is based on the winning design from Ka-Ping Yee in the Software Carpentry "Track" design competition.

The current stable version of Roundup is 1.6 which has quite a comprehensive
:doc:`feature set <docs/features>`. For more information see the :doc:`design overview <docs/design>`,
and all the other :doc:`documentation <docs>`. Roundup has been deployed for:

    * bug tracking and TODO list management (the classic installation)
    * customer help desk support (with a wizard for the phone answerers, linking to networking, 
      system and development issue trackers)
    * issue management for IETF working groups
    * sales lead tracking
    * conference paper submission and double-blind referee management
    * weblogging (well, almost :) 

...and so on. It's been designed with :doc:`flexibility <docs/customizing>` in mind - it's not just 
another bug tracker. Roundup ships with a *demo tracker* to play with - after you've unpacked the source, 
just run "python demo.py" and load up the URL it prints out!

Roundup was originally released as version 0.1.1 in late August, 2001. The first `change note`_ I wrote says:

    Needed a bug tracking system. Looked around. Tried to install many Perl-based systems, to no avail.
    Got tired of waiting for Roundup to be released. Had just finished major product project, so needed
    something different for a while. Roundup here I come... 

.. _`download`: http://cheeseshop.python.org/pypi/roundup
.. _`change note`: https://sourceforge.net/p/roundup/code/ci/tip/tree/CHANGES.txt

Roundup Issue Tracker: http://roundup-tracker.org/