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I am trying to decide on the best connector/plug-in to use for connecting JIRA with SalesForce. If you have an opinion, please let me know. So far, the two most inviting products are ServiceRocket's Connector for Salesforce and JIRA and Go2Group's CRM Plug-In.
I have 2 main issues: 1) I do not want to give all my Salesforce users access to JIRA. I know this is ok for Go2Group, but I can't find the relevent info for ServiceRocket. 2) Preferably, any comments made on a JIRA ticket would not be visible to the SalesForce users.
Please let me know if you have used one of these (or any others) and why you chose it. Thank you!
Personally, I liked Service Rockets connector a lot more than Go2Group or ZAgile. Pricing wise, Service Rocket was a great deal. Service Rocket is easy to setup as well and you can play around with an eval license before committing to a production license.
http://marketplace.servicerocket.com/product/connector-for-salesforcecom-and-jira
The ease of use was there as well as I felt like Service Rockets connector offered much better connectivity and control over how it interacted with JIRA / SalesForce.
Their documentation has improved over the last year as well and support wise I have never had an issue communicating with them.
I hope this helps in your decision. It was a really tough one for us to make as all three products seem to be on par with each other parity wise.
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I know that there are many tools for the visualization of databases such as metabase, grafana, tableau, superset ...
But I don't know of any packaged software that allows CRUD operations (crete, read, update and delete) on a database.
This problem has been presented to me several times in several of my projects, wanting to make a table available to a user and that does not merit custom development. I bet a lot of people must have this same situation
But I have not found any packaged software that provides crud operations on a database table. So it seems extremely strange to me and I wanted to see why, is there a design problem in this functionality? Or am I just doing the wrong google search and these softwares have another name?
Do you mean something like a Database Management Tool?
You have plenty of them, personally I use DBeaver.
If you mean about frameworks which generate a boilerplate API with CRUD operations, you have Loopback, from IBM.
And if you mean something you could access as a web-application, then you have PHPMyAdmin if you're focused into MySQL/MariaDB.
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I'm looking for a solution (probably CMS or framework) to make a database and user friendly interface for data entry by regular users.
At our department we're doing a lot of data collection - 6 DBs, 2k records, ~100-200 fields. All of them are powered by in-house Rails application that's hard to maintain on this scale. So, I'm looking for a more tailored solution.
What is important:
Well-thought database design and data management solution (migrations, validation, etc)
Almost unlimited customisation (backend and frontend programming), especially an ability to make complex inputs
Great community to learn and contribute (open source)
What will be nice to have:
Python/Ruby/etc backend. Modern React (at least not Angular) frontend
PostgreSQL support
Plugins, integration with other services
Something I've found: Oracle APEX, MS Access, FileMaker (proprietary), nuBuilder (very limited). After all, I thought about rewriting our app using PostgREST and React or use Plone as a basis (but a bit afraid of ZODB). What do you think?
Any help and advices are appreciated, thx.
PostgreSQL + PostgREST + react-admin
Reactrb plus rails. Very simple to use 100% ruby see http://reactrb.org
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Hi I have been given a task to design tool to monitor database server health like cpu usage, memory usage etc. Now there is one such tool like MySQL Spotlight. I want to know is there any open source software available with same functionalities? I want software which has nice visualization with charts. Please guide. Thanks in advance.
You could use Cacti for this. Also look at Nagios.
Check out http://code.openark.org/forge/mycheckpoint. It is an open sourced monitoring tool, primarily for db monitoring, even including custom queries and custom alerts! Graphs come pre-packaged and pre-generated. It's written in python, so mods can added to the code easily. I've used it a bit, and it seems to work pretty well. The only caveat I see is the extensive schema that comes pre-packaged which, ostensibly, can't be customized. One thing I will note for the email alerts, if you're getting login or credential alerts, go to line 4338 of the code and just add what you need to the smtplib.SMTP instance.
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We have a commercial application created on CakePHP. I'm about to install it on a client's server, so we'd like to protect my code from being modyfied and/or copied and reselled, changing trial period terms, etc.
I want to know if obfuscating the Cake PHP code breaks Cake specific libraries, or make the application unusable.
I've been searching on this forum and over internet and found several options for obfuscating PHP code, but none related to CakePHP. (I just asked to some of the commercial tools providers if they support Cake obfuscating but haven't received an answer yet).
Does anybody know if this is possible or if there's a better approach to do that?
I'll try to use one of the trial versions of the commercial tools this weekend, but if someone has an advice about this would be great
My company, Semantic Designs, is one of the commercial vendors.
With a decent obfuscator (ahem :) you shouldn't have any trouble doing this. You need to tell the obfuscator somehow (with ours you just provide a list of symbol names) what identifiers have to be retained as cleartext (e.g., any calls to the CakePHP framework), and any public APIs your software may offer.
I'd recommend, you give it a shot and try it out.
Usually, an obfuscator should obfuscate frameworks, too. It should be independent of what kind of PHP Code you use.
Test it in a test environment. If it's successful, you can enroll it to your production environment.
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I need to look up artist/album/track information for song titles.
Is there a free database I could download or a open source web service/api I could use?
Try the last.fm api at http://www.last.fm/api.
If that doesn't work for you, you can look at the various APIs listed in this search result:
http://www.programmableweb.com/category/music/api
This is a Silverlight tutorial, but since this is an HTTP REST API, it could seem agnostic to you to get started: http://www.devx.com/VisualStudio/Article/40158.
I'd go with musicbrainz.
http://musicbrainz.org/doc/XML_Web_Service
http://musicbrainz.org/doc/libmusicbrainz
I would personnally recommend Discogs, which is free and doesn't limit the per day usage. However, it limits the amount of requests to one per second per IP address.
The API is quite clear and documented. It uses JSON over HTTP, and has wrappers for various programming environnements (Python, Ruby, Perl, .NET, PHP).
Plus, it has data about a massive amount of artists, releases and labels.
Yes! The Echo Nest. Pretty hot startup outside Boston that just got more funding. Their API lets you search by artist, album, track, and more.
FreeDB is free, but may or may not have an API. It is user-generated content.
http://www.freedb.org/
And apparently Gracenote is the new CDDB (but probably not free). I guess they finally figured out that they didn't want to limit their database to CDs.