Provided by: ticgit_1.0.2.17-2_all bug

NAME

       ti — issue tracking system built on Git

SYNOPSIS

       ti COMMAND [ARGUMENTS]

DESCRIPTION

       ti,  short  for  ticgit, is an issue tracker based on the Git revision control system.  It
       allows you to store bugs in your project in a separate ticgit or ticgit-ng branch  of  its
       development repository, thereby keeping open issues close to the source without cluttering
       the tree.

       Every ticket consists of the following information:

       Title     A short summary of the problem.  This can be compared to the subject  of  an  e-
                 mail or to the first line of a Git commit message.

       Ticket ID The  Ticket ID (TicId) is the SHA-1 hash of the file which holds the ticket name
                 (which is a normalized form of the title including the time of  ticket  creation
                 and a small random number). It is used to uniquely identify a ticket.

       Number    Apart  from TicIds, tickets can also be referred to by using their number.  This
                 will often be preferred to TicIds when using ticgit from the command line (i.e.,
                 in everyday work), but ticket numbers are not persistent (they change with every
                 ti list invocation).

                 In the current version of ticgit, ti list does not show numbers  any  more,  but
                 they can still be used (by counting manually).

       State     A ticket can either be open, resolved, invalid or put on hold.

       Assignment
                 The e-mail address of the person working on the ticket.

       Tag       A custom label which tells more about the nature of a ticket.  A typical example
                 is feature (not a bug, but a feature suggestion). ticgit associates  no  special
                 semantics to tags, you are free to choose them however you like.

                 Tickets can have an arbitrary number of tags.

       Points    You can use this integer value to assign some numerical value, such as a measure
                 for the importance, to each ticket.  Again, ticgit does not dictate how  to  use
                 this field.

       Comments  Comments  provide  a  simple  form  of  communication  between bug reporters and
                 developers.

COMMANDS

       ti supports the following commands:

       list      List tickets.  By default, only open issues are shown; to show tickets in  other
                 states,  use -s STATE.  You can also select by tag (-t TAG) or by assignment (-a
                 ADDRESS).  When running list, small integer numbers  will  be  assigned  to  all
                 shown  tickets; you may use them to refer to tickets in other commands until you
                 call list again.

       state     Pass  a  ticket  ID  and  a  state  specification  to  set  the  ticket's  state
                 information.  You can omit the ticket ID to work on the current ticket.

       show      Show everything known about the specified ticket.  You can omit the ticket ID to
                 show the current ticket.

       new       Create a new ticket.  This will launch an editor to let you enter a title,  more
                 detailled  information  about  the  issue, and some tags.  Initially, the ticket
                 will be in the open state.

       checkout  Set the current ticket.

       comment   Add a comment to the ticket specified on the command line.  If you do  not  pass
                 one, the current ticket will be used.

       tag       Pass  a  ticket  ID and a tag name to add a label to an issue.  You can omit the
                 ticket ID to tag the current ticket.  If you use the -d option, the tag will  be
                 removed instead of added.

       assign    Assign  the  specified  ticket  to you (or to the given user, when -u ADDRESS is
                 given).  If you omit the  ticket  ID,  the  current  ticket  will  be  assigned.
                 Otherwise, you can prepend -c to the ticket ID to perform the checkout operation
                 after assigning the ticket.

       points    Pass a ticket ID and some integer to assign a point value to the  given  ticket.
                 If you only pass a number, this command manipulates the current ticket.

       sync      Synchronize  tickets  with  the remote repository specified on the command line.
                 This uses the underlying push and pull command implemented in Git,  so  you  can
                 use your usual named remotes.  The default remote is origin.

       recent    Get  a  human-readable  changelog  of  the  tickets  maintained by ticgit.  This
                 command  takes  its  information  straight  from  the  commit  messages  of  the
                 ticgit(-ng) branch.

       These commands show usage information about themselves when passed the --help option.

FILES

       ~/.ticgit/, ~/.ticgit-ng/
                 The ticket cache.

AUTHOR

       ticgit is Copyright © 2008 Scott Chacon <schacon@gmail.com>.

       ticgit-ng is Copyright © 2011 Jeff Welling <jeff.welling@gmail.com>.

       This  manual  page was written by Michael Schutte for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may
       be used by others).

                                                                                            ti(1)