-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 3
/
Copy pathcodestriker.conf
588 lines (507 loc) · 24.7 KB
/
codestriker.conf
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
# -*-perl-*-
# Configuration file for codestriker.pl.
# Database to use for storing codestriker data. Examples given are
# MySQL, Oracle, SQL Server, and PostgreSQL Refer to the
# documentation on how to create the Codestriker database.
# Example of a MySQL database URL residing on the same machine as the webserver.
$db = 'DBI:mysql:dbname=codestrikerdb';
# Example of a MySQL database on host dbhost. In this situation, you need to
# ensure that the webserver host has permission to connect to the database on
# dbhost. Check the MySQL documentation for further details.
#$db = 'DBI:mysql:dbname=codestrikerdb;host=dbhost';
# Example of an oracle database URL.
#$db = 'DBI:Oracle:host=127.0.0.1;sid=local';
# Example of an SQL Server ODBC database URL.
#$db = 'DBI:ODBC:Codestriker';
# Example of a PostgreSQL database URL using the native Pg driver.
#$db = 'DBI:Pg:dbname=codestrikerdb';
# Example of a SQLite database URL. Not fully supported yet.
#$db = 'DBI:SQLite:dbname=/var/www/codestrikerdb';
# Database user.
#$dbuser = 'system';
$dbuser = 'codestriker';
# Database password.
#$dbpasswd = 'manager';
$dbpasswd = 'cspasswd';
# Email addresses of admin users for this installation. Admin users
# have unrestricted access to the system. Non-admin users will not
# be able to create/edit/delete projects or download the full
# system metric reports. If this remains commented out, then no
# authentication will be required, and users have full access to the
# system.
#$admin_users = [ '[email protected]', '[email protected]' ];
# "From" email address to use when sending emails relating to
# administratative duties, such as those sent to new users, or when
# a password is reset. For some email systems, you might need to
# specify this as a full email address including the hostname.
#$daemon_email_address = 'codestriker';
# Location of the mailing host. This is used when sending out codestriker
# comments.
$mailhost = 'localhost';
#$mailhost = 'smtp.iinet.com.au';
# Set the user and password parameters if $mailhost requires SMTP
# authentication. If commented out, it is assumed authentication is
# not required.
#$mailuser = 'smtpuser';
#$mailpasswd = 'smtppasswd';
# Set the Reply-To field for all codestriker emails to this value.
# This is only useful when using the comment email gateway feature
# and can be left blank by default.
$mailreplyto = '';
#$mailreplyto = '[email protected]';
# Optional setting to set a List-Id header for all codestriker emails,
# which can assist in filtering. If this is not set, the header will
# not be set.
#$listid = 'Codestriker <codestriker.sf.net>';
# Indicate whether to try and compress output if the client browser
# supports it. This can make a tremendous difference in bandwidth,
# especially over slow links.
$use_compression = 0;
# Location of gzip. Gzip is used only if you don't have Compress::Zlib
# installed. Note, if running with mod_perl, you _must_ have Compress:Zlib
# installed. If gzip is not available, this can be set to "".
$gzip = '/bin/gzip';
# Location of the cvs binary.
#$cvs = 'c:/Program Files/GNU/WinCvs 1.3/CVSNT/cvs.exe';
#$cvs = 'c:/Program Files/cvsnt/cvs.exe';
$cvs = '/usr/bin/cvs';
# Location of the svn binary.
#$svn = 'c:/Program Files/SVN/svn.exe';
$svn = 'c:/Program Files/svn-win32-1.4.4/bin/svn.exe';
$svn = 'c:/Program Files/CollabNet Subversion/svn.exe';
#$svn = '/usr/bin/svn';
# Location of the ssh binary. This is only required if a CVS :ext
# type repository is used.
#$ssh='c:/Program Files/OpenSSH/bin/ssh.exe';
$ssh = '/usr/local/bin/ssh';
# Location of the p4 (Perforce client) binary. This is only required if
# you are using a Perforce repository.
$p4 = '/usr/local/bin/p4';
# Location of the cleartool binary. This is only required if you are using
# a ClearCase repository.
$cleartool = '/usr/local/bin/cleartool';
# Location of the vss binary. This can be ignored for deployments which don't
# use VSS (Visual Source Safe).
$vss = 'C:/Program Files/Microsoft Visual Studio/VSS/win32/ss.exe';
# Location of the highlight binary, which is used for highlighting source code.
# Available from http://www.andre-simon.de/. If this is not set, no syntax
# highlighting will be performed.
$highlighter = '';
#$highlighter = 'C:/Program Files/WinHighlight/highlight.exe';
# Temporary directory Codestriker can use. For *NIX platforms, this will
# /tmp by default, for Windows 2000 c:\winnt\temp and for XP, c:\windows\temp.
# For Win32 deployments, these temp directories may not be accessible to
# the user running IIS or Apache, so explicitly specify an apprioriate
# directory here that exists on the system. For *NIX platforms, there is
# usually no need to do anything here.
#$tmpdir = '/tmp/codestriker';
#$tmpdir = 'c:/temp';
# If codestriker is installed differently to that described in the README file
# (for example on the sourceforge servers), it may be necessary to explicitly
# specify the location of the codestriker_css as a URL. This can also be
# used for specifying a different CSS file to use in the html directory.
#$codestriker_css = 'codestriker.css';
#$codestriker_css = 'codestriker-alternative.css';
# Valid repositories which may be selected at the create topic screen.
# The order shown here is the order presented in the option list. Most
# deployments will only require a single repository to be specified.
# Comment out / modify entries appropriate for your deployment.
#
# If this list is empty it won't be possible to view the entire contents of a
# file before the proposed change and/or after. All of the places
# in the application that ask for, or display repository information will
# be hidden and lastly, it will be impossible to make a diff review topic
# on files that already checked in.
#
# You also need to make sure that the user running your webserver has
# permission to run the client SCM program (eg, cvs, p4, svn), and to
# connect to the repository.
@valid_repositories =
(
'svn://svn.openchange.org/openchange/trunk',
# Example CVSROOT of a CVS repository on the same machine as the
# codestriker server.
'/home/sits/cvs',
# Example of a CVS repository which contains the URL to a viewcvs
# installation (CVS web is also supported), followed by the
# CVSROOT of the repository.
'http://cvs.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi /cvsroot',
# Codestriker pserver repository.
':pserver:anonymous:@codestriker.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/codestriker',
# The next example is the syntax used for specifying a Subversion
# repository, which is simply the subversion repository URL
# prefixed # by svn:
'svn:http://svn.collab.net/repos/svn/trunk',
# Subversion server with authentication. The user name and
# password should be added to the end and separated by
# semicolons.
'svn:http://svn.collab.net/repos/svn/trunk;username;password',
# Subversion server that uses the Subversion protocol.
'svn://my.subversion.server/repos/product/trunk',
# Example CVS pserver config with username and password
# specified.
':pserver:sits:[email protected]:/cvsroot',
# Example CVS pserver config with proxy options.
':pserver;proxy=abc.com;proxyport=8080:sits:[email protected]',
# Example CVS pserver with empty password.
':pserver:anonymous:@cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot',
# Example CVS server which will be connected to with SSH. This
# assumes the appropriate ssh keys have been created so that the
# process running the Codestriker application can connect to the
# CVS server without requiring a password to be entered.
':ext:sits@localhost:/home/sits/cvs',
# Visual SourceSafe repository on same machine at default
# location. Username "admin", password "password".
'vss:admin;password',
# Visual SourceSafe repository on same machine, but with specific
# repository location specified.
'vss:c:\\Program Files\\Microsoft Visual Studio\\VSS;admin;password',
# Visual SourceSafe repository located on a network fileshare.
'vss:\\\\VisualSourceSafeMachineName\\SharedRepositoryPath;admin;password',
# Example Win32 CVS repository on the same machine.
':local:c:\\cvsrep',
# Another Win32 CVS repository on the same machine.
'c:/cvsrep2',
# The next example is a GIT repository that is accessed from a local
# directory.
'git:/path/to/git/directory',
# The next example is for a Perforce repository. After the
# leading :perforce identifier, the next two components are the
# Perforce user and password parameters. The last two parameters
# after the '@' symbol represent the host and port number of
# the Perforce server.
'perforce:sits:password@localhost:1666',
# Same as previous example, but with no password specified.
'perforce:sits@localhost:1666',
# The next example is a ClearCase repository, where the path is
# the location of a shared snapshot view. From this view, it
# should be possible to a file of any version can be
# retrieved from the vob using the "cleartool get" command. It
# is important that this snapshot view is accessible with the
# same path specification for all developers. This is because
# a diff file created by a developer will refer to the snapshot
# view, and will allow Codestriker to retrieve specific files
# and versions mentioned in the review text, when necessary.
# It is also important that the user account running the
# webserver process has permission to access to the snapshot
# view.
'clearcase:c:\\stuff\\view_name\\vob_name'
# The next example is a repository based off a ClearCase dynamic view.
# The clearcase identifier is followed by the dyn indicator,
# followed by the view name, followed by the location where the
# view is loaded.
# 'clearcase:dyn:viewname:/vobs'
# 'clearcase:dyn:viewname:P:\\viewname'
);
# A mapping of repository URLs to names. In any screen where a
# repository is displayed, if there is a mapping for the repository
# defined here, then the symbolic name will be displayed instead of
# its raw URL. This is useful when the URL contains sensitive
# username/password information, or the symbolic name is more
# meaningful to the end-user. If there is no mapping defined for a
# specific repository, its URL will be displayed.
$repository_name_map =
{
'/home/sits/cvs' => 'Local CVS',
':pserver:sits:[email protected]:/cvsroot' => 'SF CVS'
};
# A mapping of repositories to filename viewers. Examples of such systems
# would be CVSweb and ViewCVS, for local repositories. Mappings are
# not required for remote CVSweb and ViewCVS repositories, as they are
# viewers themselves. When viewing reviews, links from filenames will be
# mapped to these URLs, to obtain revision log information for that file.
# The filename will be appended to the end of the URL, before any CGI
# parameters.
$file_viewer =
{
'/home/sits/cvs' => 'http://localhost/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi',
'svn:file:///var/svn/project/trunk' =>
'http://some.whe.re/cgi-bin/viewvc.cgi/trunk/?root=Project&view=markup'
};
# Exclude these file types from review topics.
# You will generally want to exclude any non-human-readable files.
@exclude_file_types = ('rtf', 'doc', 'gif', 'bmp', 'jpeg', 'jpg', 'mdb',
'ppt', 'vsd', 'xls', 'zip', 'tgz', 'tar', 'gz',
'opt', 'aps', 'ncb', 'a', 'so', 'dll', 'lib',
'exe', 'png', 'pdf', 'bin', 'out', 'ld', 'fm',
'indd', 'wav', 'o', 'obj', 'mpp', 'vsw', 'jfif',
'tif', 'tiff', 'xbm', 'fnt', 'ttf', 'pfm', 'pfb',
'eps', 'wpj', 'sxi');
# The number of problems found per line drops if the size of the
# topic is too large. A common inspection pitfall is for authors to
# attempt to review too much material and then miss problems.
# These two options allow the Codestriker administrator to limit
# the length of the topics. Topics that have more lines than
# $maximum_topic_size_lines are rejected when they are created.
# Topics that are larger than $suggested_topic_size_lines generate
# a warning displayed in the topic page, but are accepted into the
# system. Codestriker measures that length of the topic by counting
# the number of lines in the topic text.
#
# The codestriker default of not enforcing any limits is specified by
# settings either option to an empty string. If you are not sure
# what a reasonable limit would be, start with a suggested_topic_size_lines
# set to 350, and adjust with experience.
$maximum_topic_size_lines = '';
$suggested_topic_size_lines = '';
# The default viewing mode to use in the URL when creating a topic. Can
# be either ($NORMAL_MODE, $COLOURED_MODE or $COLOURED_MONO_MODE). These
# values should not be changed.
$NORMAL_MODE = 0;
$COLOURED_MODE = 1;
$COLOURED_MONO_MODE = 2;
$default_topic_create_mode = $COLOURED_MODE;
# When displaying a topic, if this value is -1, then all files in the
# topic are displayed in the one page (default old Codestriker
# behaviour). If the value is 0, then only the first file is shown,
# with links to display the other files. This is useful for those
# deployments that review a large amount of code.
$default_file_to_view = -1;
# List of valid topic states. Note these values are mapped to the database
# depending on their position in the list. ie, Open -> 0, Closed -> 1, etc.
# There is no problem added new states dynamically, or changing the textual
# names. Note, the initial topic state must be the first element. If
# the 'Obsoleted' state is removed, then it will not be possible to obsolete
# topics. If the 'Deleted' state is removed, then it will not be possible
# to delete topics.
@topic_states = ('Open', 'Closed', 'Committed', 'Obsoleted', 'Deleted');
# Which states (in topic_states, above) represent a 'readonly' state.
# If a topic is in a readonly state, then certain activities are disabled, such
# as adding new comments, editing the metrics of existing comments, etc.
@readonly_states = ('Closed', 'Committed', 'Obsoleted', 'Deleted');
# Indicate if topics can be listed/searched. Turning this to false can be
# useful for "anonymous" installations of codestriker.
$allow_searchlist = 1;
# The following controls project configuration. Each Codestriker topic is
# a member of a specific project. Uncomment the option you want
# below. Note the textual state names below cannot be changed.
# Default option, projects are enabled, but they have no state
# changing operations (ie, projects are always in state 'Open').
@project_states = ('Open');
# Don't use projects at all. Effectively, an implicit "default
# project" is created and associated with all topics behind the scenes.
# @project_states = ();
#
# Allow for projects to be closed. Closing a project will
# not allow new topics to be created in that project.
# @project_states = ('Open', 'Closed');
#
# Allow for projects to be deleted. This is potentially a dangerous
# option to allow, as deleting a project will delete all of its member
# topics as well. Use with caution.
# @project_states = ('Open', 'Deleted');
#
# Allow for projects to be closed and deleted. Use with caution.
# @project_states = ('Open', 'Closed', 'Deleted');
# If true, don't display any email addresses in their true form, but
# truncate them, to beat SPAM harvesters.
$antispam_email = 0;
# If comments_sent_to_topic_author is true, codestriker will send
# out email to the topic owner and when a comment is added. If this
# option is false, no email will be sent the topic owner.
#
# If comments_sent_to_commenter is set to true, codestriker will
# blind cc (bcc) the comment author on all comments. The preceding
# comments_sent_to_topic_author must be true in order for the blind
# cc of emails to be enabled.
#
# If topic_state_change_sent_to_reviewers is set to true, codestriker
# will send email to the reviewer list when a topic state is changed.
#
# Emails about each comment may not be needed if a meeting
# is planned to discuss the topic. If the comment submitter specifies
# a cc user, an email is always sent out, regardless of any email
# settings.
$email_send_options =
{
comments_sent_to_topic_author => 1,
comments_sent_to_commenter => 0,
topic_state_change_sent_to_reviewers => 0
};
# Default width of tabs. Most developers expect this to be 8, but
# some expect to see 4. This is also stored in the user's cookie, and
# can be changed dynamically on the view topic screen.
$default_tabwidth = 8;
# Indicate whether the diffs presented in a topic should be ordered by
# filename. For some deployments, it is important that the order of the
# diffs are presented in the same order as it was in the file. Subversion
# reports diffs I believe in order of modification, which makes it
# quite arbitrary, so the default is to sort.
$sort_diffs_by_filename = 1;
# Bug database to update. Currently, Bugzilla, Flyspray, Mantis and TestDirector
# are supported, but it is straight-forward to support other bug
# databases. To enable Bugzilla, set $bug_db to "bugzilla", and set
# the following parameters to your setup. To enable Flyspray, set
# $bug_db to "flyspray", and set the relevant parameters. To enable
# TestDirectory, set $bug_db to "testdirector" and set the relevant
# parameters. Likewise for Mantis, set $bug_db to "mantis".
#
# If the $bug_db is an empty string, all bug-tracking related
# features will be disabled. To allow the association of a bug ID
# with a topic, without any physical connection to a bug database,
# set the value to "noconnection".
$bug_db = '';
#$bug_db = 'bugzilla';
#$bug_db = 'flyspray';
#$bug_db = 'testdirector';
#$bug_db = 'mantis';
#$bug_db = 'jira';
$bug_db = 'noconnection';
# Bugzilla database connection details.
#$bug_db_host = 'localhost';
#$bug_db_name = 'bugs';
#$bug_db_password = 'bugs_password';
#$bug_db_dbname = 'bugs';
#$bug_db_user_id = '2';
# Flyspray database connection details
#$flyspray_db_host = 'localhost';
#$flyspray_db_name = 'flyspray';
#$flyspray_db_password = 'flyspray_password';
#$flyspray_db_dbname = 'flyspray_dev';
#$flyspray_db_user_id = 50;
# TestDirector connection details
#$testdirector_url = 'http://emea-testdir:8080/qcbin';
#$testdirector_user_id = 'robh';
#$testdirector_password = '';
#$testdirector_domain = 'DEFAULT';
#$testdirector_project = 'BPM33';
# JIRA connection details
#$jira_url = 'http://jira.mycompany.com';
#$jira_username = 'codestriker';
#$jira_password = 'passwd';
# The URL to the bug tracking system. The bug number is appended to the
# end of this string when URLs are generated. This can be left blank if
# there is no need for bug-tracking integration. Below are some example
# URLs for Bugzilla and Flyspray.
$bugtracker = '';
$bugtracker = 'http://localhost.localdomain/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=';
#$bugtracker = '/flyspray_dev/?do=details&id=';
# Some bug tracking systems store details of the files changed under each bug
# ID. A generic plugin for bugzilla is scmbug which can be used to link
# with source control systems such as subversion. The following flag
# enables/disables the ability for a user to create a topic by just
# using a Bug ID.
#$scmbug_hostname = 'localhost';
#$scmbug_port = 3872;
#$scmbug_lib_dir = 'C:/Program Files/Scmbug/share/scmbug/lib';
# LXR database. Each repository can be optionally mapped to a
# different LXR deployment. If a repository has an associated LXR
# mapping, then create a new entry where the repository string is the
# key, and the value is another map, where "db" is the LXR database
# URL, "user" is the database user, "password" is the data password,
# and "url" is the base LXR URL for viewing where an identifier is
# defined/used.
$lxr_map =
{
# '/home/sits/cvs' => { db => 'DBI:Pg:dbname=lxr',
# user => 'lxr',
# password => '',
# url => 'http://localhost.localdomain/lxr/ident?i='
# },
#
# 'svn:http://svn.collab.net/repos/svn/trunk' =>
# { db => 'DBI:Pg:dbname=lxr2',
# user => 'lxr',
# password => '',
# url => 'http://localhost.localdomain/lxr2/ident?i='
# }
};
# Character encoding to use when reading topic text. Default is utf8
# (compatible with ASCII) if not set, but this can be over-ridden here.
# List of example encoding names can be retrieved from the following
# URL: http://perldoc.perl.org/Encode/Supported.html.
$topic_text_encoding = 'utf8';
#$topic_text_encoding = 'gb2312';
# Each comment thread (or issue) that is created against a specific
# code line in Codestriker can have a configurable number of
# user-defined metrics recorded against it.
#
# Every site has their own requirements, below are a number of example
# configurations. The "name" attribute refers to the name of the
# metric being recorded. The "values" attribute is a list of values
# that this metric can be assigned to. The "default_value" attribute
# is optional, and indicates what the default value of the metric is
# assigned to. If this attribute is not specified, then the user will
# be required to specify a value for a metric when creating a new
# comment thread. This is recommended, so that users think about what
# these values should be, rather than blindly accepting default
# values. For the "Status" metric below however, it is recording the
# "state" of the thread, so an initial state of "Submitted" is reasonable.
# For the other metrics below, an initial value makes no sense.
# Metric items can have an optional show_on_main_page list that will
# force the numbers of comments with the metric settings to be reported
# on the main page of codestriker.
$comment_state_metrics =
[
{ name => 'Status',
values => ['Submitted', 'Invalid', 'Completed'],
default_value => 'Submitted',
show_on_mainpage => ['Submitted' ]
}
];
# Two metrics defined: Status and Type.
#$comment_state_metrics =
# [
# { name=>'Status', values=>['Submitted', 'Invalid', 'Completed'],
# default_value=>'Submitted' },
# { name=>'Type', values=>['Style', 'Minor', 'Major', 'Severe'] }
# ];
# Four metrics defined: Status, Level, Mode and Type.
#$comment_state_metrics =
# [
# { name=>'Status', values=>['Submitted', 'Invalid', 'Completed'],
# default_value=>'Submitted' },
# { name=>'Level', values=>['Major', 'Minor'] },
# { name=>'Mode', values=>['Missing', 'Wrong', 'Unclear', 'Suggestion'] },
# { name=>'Type', values=>['Logic', 'Data Handling', 'Interface',
# 'Error Handling', 'Performance', 'Comments',
# 'Standards'] }
# ];
#
# Case where no comment thread metrics are to be used.
#$comment_state_metrics = [];
# Allows you to override the default title of "Codestriker %version%".
# $title = "Codestriker $Codestriker::VERSION";
# This options configures the metric support in codestriker. You have
# the following options:
#
# $metric_config = "none", "basic", "all", "metric name, metric name, etc"
#
# "none" - turns off all extra metric support in the application. The
# metric page will only display and manage data that is strictly
# required to perform the review. Codestriker will not require any
# addition data input from the reviewers and authors. This is the
# default. However, you still get basic data like how many topics are
# being created and how problems are being found.
#
# "basic" - Turns on the metrics that are considered to be essential
# for a metric program. It will require that reviewers and authors
# enter the time spent reviewing the topic, the time spent in the
# review meeting, and the time spent preparing for the review. The
# metric selection assumes that you are following a formal review
# process with a preparation meeting, and a defect review meeting.
#
# kickoff time - time spent preparing for the review
# checking time - time spent actually reviewing the topic.
# logging meeting duration - the time spent in the logging meeting.
#
# "all" - Turns on all of the metrics that one could possibly want to
# track. The list of metrics is from the book "Software Inspection" by
# Gilb and Graham. You should probably not use this unless you are
# using a formal process that is well established. You may want to
# enable this temporally to get a idea of the types of metrics that
# are supported.
#
# "name,name" - Lastly, you can pick and chose what metrics you would
# like to enable. just list the metric names in a comma separated
# list. You can see all of the build in metrics in the
# lib/Codestriker.pm file. For example, if you don't hold a kick off
# meeting, and but do hold a logging meeting, the basic option will not
# quit fit. You should set the $metric_config as:
# $metric_config = "checking time,logging meeting duration".
#
# If you don't like our choices of metrics, the names, descriptions,
# etc feel free to edit the lib/Codestriker.pm. It contains
# documentations on how to add your own metrics into codestriker. It
# is easy to do, and does not require any coding.
$metric_config = "all";