Savane (software)

Savane
Developer(s) Mathieu Roy, Yves Perrin
Stable release
3.0 / 4 December 2006 (2006-12-04)
Written in PHP, Perl
Operating system Linux, Unix
Type Collaborative Development Environment
License GNU GPL
Website

Savane is a free web-based software hosting system. It includes issue tracking (bugs, tasks, support, news and documentation), project member management by roles and individual account maintenance. This project is no longer developed.

History

The GNU Project's GNU Savannah website started out using SourceForge as its hosting software. However, after Savannah was set up, SourceForge was changed into proprietary software by its authors. Loïc Dachary, main site's administrator at the Free Software Foundation, forked the software in order to maintain it.

This software fork was originally called simply Savannah, since it was the software running the GNU Project's Savannah website and had no other name.

Professor of Physics at the University of Porto Jaime E. Villate installed an instance of this software at CERN for the interest of the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid. From this point, CERN regularly hired GNU project contributor Mathieu Roy to work under the guidance of CERN developer Yves Perrin to improve the software so it would fit the needs to use it to coordinate software developments related to the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid. It was first released in February 2004 under the name Savane, the French word for "savannah", to distinguish the software from the two main instances GNU Savannah and CERN Savannah.

The latest main public release (3.0) was made in December 2006. Since then, the project failed to recruit new developers while Mathieu Roy and Yves Perrin lost interest in its development. Sylvain Beucler took the project over to ultimately decide, in 2013, to work on FusionForge, another fork of SourceForge, instead.

Features added in Savane

These features were added in Savane and were never implemented in most of other forks of SourceForge.

Current or past installations

References

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