The following pages are either added or updated for TeamForge 20.0.
The following pages are tagged with
Title | Excerpt |
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Install All Services on a Single RHEL/CentOS Server | The easiest way to install TeamForge is to install it on a single server, dedicated to TeamForge taking the default configuration settings. |
Back up and Restore TeamForge | Save a copy of your TeamForge site's data to a location from where you can quickly retrieve it to your TeamForge site. |
FAQs on Binaries | This section provides solutions to common issues with TeamForge-Binary integrations. |
TeamForge Maven Deploy Plugin | The Digital.ai TeamForge Maven Deploy Plugin can be configured to post binary artifact deployment information to TeamForge via the Webhooks-based Event Broke... |
Create a Source Code Repository | Each project can have one or more source code repositories. Before you can create a source code repository, a site administrator must first add one or more S... |
Install TeamForge with an External PostgreSQL Server | You can install TeamForge with its database installed separately on an external PostgreSQL server such as AWS RDS/Aurora. |
Install TeamForge in a Distributed Setup | Distributed setup with TeamForge, Database (including Datamart), Review Board, SCM (Subversion and Git), Code Search and Baseline installed on separate servers. |
Work with Your Documents | You can find and view a document by navigating to it, by searching for it, or by viewing it from a URL or unique identifier. You can also open a document fro... |
EventQ End of Life | EventQ is no longer supported and is completely removed from TeamForge starting from TeamForge 20.0. If you have been using EventQ on your site, you must con... |
Integrate or Link External Applications to Projects | You can make it easy for project members to use a wide variety of applications and sites from within TeamForge. |
Get the Code | Browse TeamForge to find the code you want to work on, then check out the code. |
Import External Git Repositories into TeamForge from the Code Browser UI | External public Git repositories can now be imported into TeamForge from the Code Browser UI. |
Install the TeamForge Webhooks-based Event Broker | This page walks you through the installation procedure for TeamForge Webhooks-based Event Broker (WEBR). |
Install TeamForge with Oracle Database | Distributed setup with TeamForge and Oracle Database (including Datamart) installed on separate servers. |
Install Memcached | Memcached caches Subversion (SVN) authentication and authorization information and serves the mod_authnz_ctf module's authentication and authorization reques... |
Install or Upgrade the TeamForge—Nexus Integration Plugin | Once you have your Nexus server set up, install the TeamForge-Nexus integration plugin. |
Integrate Tools Using Post-submit Webhooks | Post-submit webhooks lets you integrate TeamForge with other heterogeneous applications. Speaking of TeamForge trackers, post-submit webhooks are meant for p... |
Work with the Internal Code Browser | For Subversion and Git repositories, you have the option to use the TeamForge code browser which is turned on by default while integrating the source code se... |
TeamForge Load Balancing Setup | Installing TeamForge in a Load Balancing setup ensures distribution of processing load between multiple servers. The HAProxy Server hosts the HAProxy service... |
Upgrade TeamForge on New Hardware in a Distributed Multi-host Setup | You can upgrade TeamForge on new hardware in a distributed multi-host setup. |
Upgrade TeamForge on New Hardware with All Services on a Single Server | You can upgrade TeamForge on new hardware with all services on a single server. |
The Enhanced Documents List Page | The new Documents List page brings you new functions on top of the existing document management functions to ensure a better document management experience. ... |
Advanced Reporting and Datamart Access | Using external reporting and OLAP tools, query the datamart directly and generate reports. The database schema diagrams provide the means to create advanced ... |
Customize Reports | You can customize your reports by modifying the parameters in config.ini file. For example, some reports require a particular data source such as datamart an... |
Customize Reports | You can customize your reports by modifying the parameters in config.ini file. For example, some reports require a particular data source such as datamart an... |
Reporting in TeamForge | Generate a report to get a snapshot of what is going on in a project. You can generate reports on data stored in both TeamForge's production (operational) da... |
Installation Requirements | Here's what it takes to install and run TeamForge and other integrations supported by TeamForge. |
FAQs on Review Board | These are some of the frequently asked questions on Review Board. |
Upgrade TeamForge on the Same Hardware in a Distributed Multi-host Setup | You can upgrade TeamForge on the same hardware in a distributed multi-host setup. |
Upgrade TeamForge on Same Hardware with All Services on a Single Server | You can upgrade TeamForge on the same hardware with all services on a single server. |
TeamForge Services and Domain Configuration Tokens | Use the host:SERVICES and the host:PUBLIC_FQDN tokens to define the services and domain names of your TeamForge site respectively. You can also have unique s... |
Site Options Change Log | Change log of site-options.conf tokens. |
TeamForge site-options.conf Tokens | Here's a list of TeamForge `site-options.conf` tokens and configuration information. |
TeamForge—Jenkins Integration Using the Webhooks-based Event Broker | TeamForge Webhooks-based Event Broker supports TeamForge—Jenkins integration. Jenkins integration plugin is used to integrate TeamForge with Jenkins using Te... |
TeamForge—JIRA Integration Using the Webhooks-based Event Broker | TeamForge Webhooks-based Event Broker supports TeamForge-JIRA integration. A new JIRA integration plugin version 1.1 is used to integrate TeamForge with JIRA... |
TeamForge—TestLink Integration Using the TeamForge Webhooks-based Event Broker | TeamForge's native Webhooks-based Event Broker replaces EventQ as the default event broker to support TeamForge integration with TestLink. EventQ-based TeamF... |
TeamForge License | When you purchase a TeamForge license, you get the right to assign licenses to a specified number of users. |
Use OAuth 2.0 for TeamForge User Authentication | With the new TeamForge Identity Management built on OpenID Connect (OIDC) and OAuth 2.0 authorization frameworks, TeamForge can now act as an ID Provider (Id... |
TOPIC Event Type | A TOPIC event type within the TeamForge Webhooks-based Event Broker is called as a Post-Submit event in TeamForge. The message of this event type is delivere... |
Set up Trackers | A Tracker is a collection of related artifacts that describe work to be done or issues to be resolved. Every project should have one or more trackers. When y... |
update_artifact_textflex_carriage_return.py | If you have been updating your tracker artifacts both via the UI and CLI/SOAP, you may optionally run the `update_artifact_textflex_carriage_return.py` scrip... |
Upgrade TeamForge on the Same Hardware with Oracle Database | Distributed setup with TeamForge, Oracle Database (including Datamart) and EventQ installed on separate servers. |
TeamForge Webhooks-based Event Broker Overview | TeamForge Webhooks-based Event Broker is a webhook driven integration broker, delivered as a free technical microservice along with TeamForge. It is a replac... |
TeamForge Webhooks-based Event Broker Settings | The TeamForge Webhooks-based Event Broker related settings are discussed in this page. |