BugZilla MPL

ApacheMySQL

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About

Bugzilla is a vigorous, featureful, and mature bug-tracking system or defect-tracking system that allows teams of developers to maintain track of unsettled bugs, issues, problems, enhancement, and other change requests in their products with effectiveness. Organizations are now turning to Bugzilla as it offers appropriate workflow management, custom fields, and bug visibility control.

Features:

  1. Advanced Search Proficiencies: Bugzilla provides two types of search in which the first includes a basic Google-like bug search that is very simple for new users and searches the full text of a bug. The next is a very advanced search where you can create any search that you want, including time-based searches.
  2. Controlled e-mail notifications by user preferences: You can get an e-mail about any change made in Bugzilla, and the type of notifications that you get on bugs is completely controlled by your personal user preferences.
  3. Bug Lists in Multiple Formats (Atom, iCal and so on): While searching for the bugs, you can get the results in many formats rather than just the basic HTML layout. Bug lists are available in Atom and they are also available in iCalender format. If you are utilizing the time-tracking features of Bugzilla then you can see where your bugs fit into your calendar. In addition, there are even more formats available, like long, printable report format, CSV format, and other XML formats as well.
  4. Automatic Duplicate Bug Detection: Bugzilla has the caliber to automatically look for similar bugs in the system and enable the user to add themselves to the CC list of one of those bugs rather than filing a new one.

You can subscribe BugZilla an AWS Marketplace product and launch an instance from the product’s AMI using the Amazon EC2 launch wizard.

To launch an instance from the AWS Marketplace using the launch wizard

  • Open the Amazon EC2 console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/ec2/
  • From the Amazon EC2 dashboard, choose Launch Instance. On the Choose an Amazon Machine Image (AMI) page, choose the AWS Marketplace category on the left. Find a suitable AMI by browsing the categories, or using the search functionality. Choose Select to choose your product.
  • A dialog displays an overview of the product you’ve selected. You can view the pricing information, as well as any other information that the vendor has provided. When you’re ready, choose Continue.
  • On the Choose an Instance Type page, select the hardware configuration and size of the instance to launch. When you’re done, choose Next: Configure Instance Details.
  • On the next pages of the wizard, you can configure your instance, add storage, and add tags. For more information about the different options you can configure, see Launching an Instance. Choose Next until you reach the Configure Security Group page.
  • The wizard creates a new security group according to the vendor’s specifications for the product. The security group may include rules that allow all IP addresses (0.0.0.0/0) access on SSH (port 22) on Linux or RDP (port 3389) on Windows. We recommend that you adjust these rules to allow only a specific address or range of addresses to access your instance over those ports
  • When you are ready, choose Review and Launch.
  • On the Review Instance Launch page, check the details of the AMI from which you’re about to launch the instance, as well as the other configuration details you set up in the wizard. When you’re ready, choose Launch to select or create a key pair, and launch your instance.
  • Depending on the product you’ve subscribed to, the instance may take a few minutes or more to launch. You are first subscribed to the product before your instance can launch. If there are any problems with your credit card details, you will be asked to update your account details. When the launch confirmation page displays.

Bugzilla Deployment Instructions :

Step 1: Launch the instance using the AWS Marketplace AMI:


Step 2: SSH into the instance using the AWS Instance Public IP & Key Pair:


Step 3: Use the following command to work as an admin user for the server:

$ sudo su


Step 4: Check whether “PERL” is present and working properly using the following command:

$ perl -v


Step 5: Enter into the Bugzilla directory using the below command:

$ cd /var/www/html/bugzilla-5.0.6


Step 6: Change the user permissions for the Bugzilla Directory using the below command:

$ chmod  775 /var/www/html/bugzilla-5.0.6/


Step 7: Run the below command to check that all Bugzilla files are there and working properly:

$ /usr/bin/perl install-module.pl -all


Step 8: Check the Database connection settings on the Bugzilla configuration file using the below command:

$ nano /var/www/html/bugzilla-5.0.6/localconfig


Step 9: Now change the apache2 configuration file by using the following command:

$ nano /etc/apache2/sites-available/bugzilla.conf

Change the “ServerName” to your instance Public IP address as shown below:


Step 10: Check whether the configuration files are compatible and working properly using the following command:

$ ./checksetup.pl


Step 11: Restart Apache services using the following command:

$ systemctl restart apache2.service


Step 12: Test the connection and configuration using the following command:

$ /var/www/html/bugzilla-5.0.6/testserver.pl http://<server public IP address>


Step 13: Enter the Instance Public IP over the browser and Enjoy the Application Bugzilla:

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    Until now, small developers did not have the capital to acquire massive compute resources and ensure they had the capacity they needed to handle unexpected spikes in load. Amazon EC2 enables any developer to leverage Amazon’s own benefits of massive scale with no up-front investment or performance compromises. Developers are now free to innovate knowing that no matter how successful their businesses become, it will be inexpensive and simple to ensure they have the compute capacity they need to meet their business requirements.

    The “Elastic” nature of the service allows developers to instantly scale to meet spikes in traffic or demand. When computing requirements unexpectedly change (up or down), Amazon EC2 can instantly respond, meaning that developers have the ability to control how many resources are in use at any given point in time. In contrast, traditional hosting services generally provide a fixed number of resources for a fixed amount of time, meaning that users have a limited ability to easily respond when their usage is rapidly changing, unpredictable, or is known to experience large peaks at various intervals.

    No. You do not need an Elastic IP address for all your instances. By default, every instance comes with a private IP address and an internet routable public IP address. The private address is associated exclusively with the instance and is only returned to Amazon EC2 when the instance is stopped or terminated. The public address is associated exclusively with the instance until it is stopped, terminated or replaced with an Elastic IP address. These IP addresses should be adequate for many applications where you do not need a long lived internet routable end point. Compute clusters, web crawling, and backend services are all examples of applications that typically do not require Elastic IP addresses.

    Amazon S3 provides a simple web service interface that you can use to store and retrieve any amount of data, at any time, from anywhere on the web. Using this web service, you can easily build applications that make use of Internet storage. Since Amazon S3 is highly scalable and you only pay for what you use, you can start small and grow your application as you wish, with no compromise on performance or reliability.

    Amazon S3 is also designed to be highly flexible. Store any type and amount of data that you want; read the same piece of data a million times or only for emergency disaster recovery; build a simple FTP application, or a sophisticated web application such as the Amazon.com retail web site. Amazon S3 frees developers to focus on innovation instead of figuring out how to store their data

    Amazon RDS manages the work involved in setting up a relational database: from provisioning the infrastructure capacity you request to installing the database software. Once your database is up and running, Amazon RDS automates common administrative tasks such as performing backups and patching the software that powers your database. With optional Multi-AZ deployments, Amazon RDS also manages synchronous data replication across Availability Zones with automatic failover.

    Since Amazon RDS provides native database access, you interact with the relational database software as you normally would. This means you’re still responsible for managing the database settings that are specific to your application. You’ll need to build the relational schema that best fits your use case and are responsible for any performance tuning to optimize your database for your application’s workflow.

    Amazon S3 is secure by default. Upon creation, only the resource owners have access to Amazon S3 resources they create. Amazon S3 supports user authentication to control access to data. You can use access control mechanisms such as bucket policies and Access Control Lists (ACLs) to selectively grant permissions to users and groups of users. The Amazon S3 console highlights your publicly accessible buckets, indicates the source of public accessibility, and also warns you if changes to your bucket policies or bucket ACLs would make your bucket publicly accessible.

    You can securely upload/download your data to Amazon S3 via SSL endpoints using the HTTPS protocol. If you need extra security you can use the Server-Side Encryption (SSE) option to encrypt data stored at rest. You can configure your Amazon S3 buckets to automatically encrypt objects before storing them if the incoming storage requests do not have any encryption information. Alternatively, you can use your own encryption libraries to encrypt data before storing it in Amazon S3.

    • RDS for Amazon Aurora: No limit imposed by software
    • RDS for MySQL: No limit imposed by software
    • RDS for MariaDB: No limit imposed by software
    • RDS for Oracle: 1 database per instance; no limit on number of schemas per database imposed by software
    • RDS for SQL Server: 30 databases per instance
    • RDS for PostgreSQL: No limit imposed by software

    Highlights

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      Bugzilla is a web-based system but it needs to be installed on your server for you to use it.

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      Bugzilla is power-packed with features that various other expensive solutions lack.

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      It is installable on many operating systems including Windows, Linux, and Mac.

    Application Installed

    • icon BugZilla MPL
    • icon apache
    • icon mysql
    • icon linux