top button
Flag Notify
    Connect to us
      Site Registration

Site Registration

need to use a project management software package under Centos 6.6?

+2 votes
331 views

I have a need to use a project management software package under Centos 6.6 and have started looking at ProjectLibre which is a Java package.

Unfortunately it seems to have shortcomings when it comes to following up projects and my current understanding is that it falls short of Microsoft Project 2010, i.e., a previous version.

Does anyone have experience with this type of software and what would you recommend?

posted May 30, 2015 by Daler

Looking for an answer?  Promote on:
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button

Similar Questions
+1 vote

Does anyone know of a reputable repository where I can obtain a CentOS-6 version of Blink as an rpm/yum package?

I have to support three platforms (OSX, MS-Win and CentOS-Linux) with SRTP capable soft-phones. inter-operating with an Asterisk-11 PBX; and I would rather have only one client to deal with.

0 votes

I want to set up dovecot on a CentOS server. I did this before, some time ago, but it seems to have become much more complicated, involving postfix, amavisd-new and clamav (for spamassassin).

What puzzles me is the role, if any, of procmail and .procmailrc in this new system.
Is procmail no longer used/needed?

+3 votes

I'm looking to setup a git server under CentOS 6.5 x64 that will serve 2-5 .NET developers using Visual Studio Pro 2013. I've been reading that Visual Studio 2013 now has 'native git support', but as I've been reading into this more and more, it appears to me that the 'native git support' is really the fact that Team Foundation Server has git support on it and that I'd need to setup TFS in order to use the Visual Studio 2013's native git support. Can anyone either confirm and/or deny this for me? My personal suspicion is that I will need to implement TortiseGIT to do what I want to do, but wanted to throw this question.

If, in actuality, I can use a CentOS git server with Visual Studio 2013, can anyone point me in the direction of an FAQ/directions/YouTube video/book/anything for how to setup something like this? I have the resources to setup a CentOS git server (which will also host some DreamWeaver CC users as well on other projects), but setting up a dedicated TFS server isn't an option, hence why I'm looking into this.

+1 vote

I want to install path.py in my Python 3.4 environment on a Centos 5 box. My /usr/local/bin/ contains:

easy_install-3.4 
python3.4  
etc. 

We are behind a proxy server and I tried this:

# /usr/local/bin/easy_install-3.4 path.py 

Searching for path.py 
Reading https://pypi.python.org/simple/path.py/ 
Download error on https://pypi.python.org/simple/path.py/: hostname '172.29.68.1  
' doesn't match either of 'www.python.org', 'python.org', 'pypi.python.org',  
'docs.python.org', 'testpypi.python.org', 'bugs.python.org', 'wiki.python.org',  
'hg.python.org', 'mail.python.org', 'packaging.python.org', 'pythonhosted.org',  
'www.pythonhosted.org', 'test.pythonhosted.org', 'us.pycon.org', 'id.python.org' --  
Some packages may not be found! 

Couldn't find index page for 'path.py' (maybe misspelled?), Am I best to use pip or easy_install? also if easy_install, how can I fix the above error?

+3 votes

What would be the best way to install mock on my Centos server? yum install mock does not recognize the
package. Have already installed 'Developer tools' using yum groupinstall.

...