What is CodeTRAX?
Thanks for you interest in the CodeTRAX Project.
CodeTRAX, originally launched in the first quarter of 2007, is a hosting service for open-source software projects. The whole project is still under heavy development.
During this long experimental phase, it will serve as the exclusive home for the development of every piece of software published by the G-Loaded Journal.
CodeTRAX supports and uses open-source software in its infrastructure:
- Drupal - used as the main content management system.
- Trac - a project management system which features a wiki for documentation, a ticket system for bug tracking and progress evaluation, a source code browser. Trac is the heart of CodeTRAX.
- Subversion - a flexible and robust version control system to aid the collaborative authoring of software projects.
- TraxAuth - a robust user account management system. TraxAuth is the gate to the system. [Source code is being re-written]
- Minimalist, MHonArc and BenzinArc - Notification Service via mailing lists (experimental).
- Mercurial - another excellent version control system (planned).
Web forum application for community support - CodeTRAX strictly focuses on the development process of the hosted projects and will never provide any facility for official or community-based support for any project.-- The use of a web forum is being reconsidered.
Detailed documentation about how to set up the infrastructure of a project management system like CodeTRAX.org will be published in the form of detailed step-by-step guides by G-Loaded.
Subversion - Source Code Repositories
Current list of SVN repositories for the hosted projects. More projects will be added soon.
Note about DictExpress: The source-code for DictExpress is currently unavailable. The project has been re-written from scratch and the new code will be released soon.
Trac Environments
The available projects on CodeTRAX.
SSL Warning
HTTPS is forced when visiting certain locations in order to keep sensitive data, like passwords, as secure as possible. The SHA1 and MD5 fingerprints of the SSL certificate are available in the Station Theta Certificate Authority Home Page. Note that verifying fingerprints over the web is not secure, but it's better than nothing.