ATTENTION: Corey here, creator of BugTracker.NET. Please checkout the successor to BugTracker.NET, "Budoco", which is like BugTracker.NET, but runs cross platform and uses PostgreSQL.
https://github.com/ctrager/budoco
In November 2020 Microsoft released .NET 5, aka .NET Core aka dotnet core. It drops technologies that BugTracker.NET depends on. Budoco is a rewrite that runs on dotnet core. Budoco is *BU*gtracker dot net on *DO*tnet *CO*re.
Microsoft has a good track record of keeping so BugTracker.NET "Classic", which was born in 2001 and is still alive going into 2021, should be fine for the next few years.
So, about BugTracker.NET "Classic":
A web-based bug or issue tracker written using .NET 4.x Framework, ASP.NET, C#, and SQL Server (SQL Server Express too). Probably has all the features you need. Easy to setup. Power and flexibility when you need it. Learn more at http://ifdefined.com/bugtrackernet.html
License
GNU General Public License version 2.0 (GPLv2)Follow BugTracker.NET
User Reviews
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it's so simple to use and customize.
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This is a pretty average bug tracker. It tracks bugs and lets you customize stuff but man it's ugly. And missing a ton of features. Just go look at other open source projects. Mantis BT makes this thing look like an ugly POS. I use it because I don't have an OS server to setup. I would almost consider joining the project just to help it stop sucking.
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Really everything we need. Simple stable. Easy to use. Good integration. Really a bunch of features. Rights and adjustments possible to groups of users. Since years a perfect tool for us beside TFS...
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There are so many bug tracking apps with tons of features and more. After spending a few days like 50 man hours testing them, we finally choose bugtracker.net for is simplicity. Strength: simple, it just works, relatively easy to set up for an open source software. We can think of so many uses for it. Thank you for this project.
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easy to use,lightweight,very nice.