| 43 | | Ticket data can be imported from Sourceforge using the sourceforge2trac.py script, available in the contrib/ directory of the Trac distribution. |
| | 44 | Ticket data can be imported from Sourceforge using the [http://trac.edgewall.org/browser/trunk/contrib/sourceforge2trac.py sourceforge2trac.py] script, available in the contrib/ directory of the Trac distribution. |
| | 45 | |
| | 46 | See #Trac3521 for an updated sourceforge2trac script. |
| | 47 | |
| | 48 | == Mantis == |
| | 49 | |
| | 50 | The mantis2trac script now lives at http://trac-hacks.org/wiki/MantisImportScript. You can always get the latest version from http://trac-hacks.org/changeset/latest/mantisimportscript?old_path=/&filename=mantisimportscript&format=zip |
| | 51 | |
| | 52 | Mantis bugs can be imported using the attached script. |
| | 53 | |
| | 54 | Currently, the following data is imported from Mantis: |
| | 55 | * bugs |
| | 56 | * bug comments |
| | 57 | * bug activity (field changes) |
| | 58 | * attachments (as long as the files live in the mantis db, not on the filesystem) |
| | 59 | |
| | 60 | If you use the script, please read the NOTES section (at the top of the file) and make sure you adjust the config parameters for your environment. |
| | 61 | |
| | 62 | mantis2trac.py has the same parameters as the bugzilla2trac.py script: |
| | 63 | {{{ |
| | 64 | mantis2trac - Imports a bug database from Mantis into Trac. |
| | 65 | |
| | 66 | Usage: mantis2trac.py [options] |
| | 67 | |
| | 68 | Available Options: |
| | 69 | --db <MySQL dbname> - Mantis database |
| | 70 | --tracenv /path/to/trac/env - Full path to Trac db environment |
| | 71 | -h | --host <MySQL hostname> - Mantis DNS host name |
| | 72 | -u | --user <MySQL username> - Effective Mantis database user |
| | 73 | -p | --passwd <MySQL password> - Mantis database user password |
| | 74 | -c | --clean - Remove current Trac tickets before importing |
| | 75 | --help | help - This help info |
| | 76 | |
| | 77 | Additional configuration options can be defined directly in the script. |
| | 78 | }}} |
| | 79 | |
| | 80 | == Jira == |
| | 81 | |
| | 82 | The [http://trac-hacks.org/wiki/JiraToTracIntegration Jira2Trac plugin] provides you with tools to import Atlassian Jira backup files into Trac. |
| | 83 | |
| | 84 | The plugin consists of a Python 3.1 commandline tool that: |
| | 85 | |
| | 86 | - Parses the Jira backup XML file |
| | 87 | - Sends the imported Jira data and attachments to Trac using the [http://trac-hacks.org/wiki/XmlRpcPlugin XmlRpcPlugin] |
| | 88 | - Generates a htpasswd file containing the imported Jira users and their SHA-512 base64 encoded passwords |
| | 89 | |
| | 90 | == Other == |
| | 91 | |
| | 92 | Since trac uses a SQL database to store the data, you can import from other systems by examining the database tables. Just go into [http://www.sqlite.org/sqlite.html sqlite] command line to look at the tables and import into them from your application. |
| | 93 | |
| | 94 | === Using a comma delimited file - CSV === |
| | 95 | See [http://trac.edgewall.org/attachment/wiki/TracSynchronize/csv2trac.2.py] for details. This approach is particularly useful if one needs to enter a large number of tickets by hand. (note that the ticket type type field, (task etc...) is also needed for this script to work with more recent Trac releases) |
| | 96 | |