About This Guide
Disclaimer No liability for the contents of this document can be accepted. Follow the instructions herein at your own risk. This document may contain errors and inaccuracies that may damage your system, cause your partner to leave you, your boss to fire you, your cats to pee on your furniture and clothing, and global thermonuclear war. Proceed with caution. Naming of particular products or brands should not be seen as endorsements, with the exception of the term "GNU/Linux". We wholeheartedly endorse the use of GNU/Linux; it is an extremely versatile, stable, and robust operating system that offers an ideal operating environment for Bugzilla. Although the Bugzilla development team has taken great care to ensure that all exploitable bugs have been fixed, security holes surely exist in any piece of code. Great care should be taken both in the installation and usage of this software. The Bugzilla development team members assume no liability for your use of Bugzilla. You have the source code, and are responsible for auditing it yourself to ensure your security needs are met.
New Versions This is the &bz-ver; version of The Bugzilla Guide. It is so named to match the current version of Bugzilla. This version of the guide, like its associated Bugzilla version, is a development version. The latest version of this guide can always be found at , or checked out via CVS by following the Mozilla CVS instructions and check out the mozilla/webtools/bugzilla/docs/ subtree. However, you should read the version which came with the Bugzilla release you are using. The Bugzilla Guide, or a section of it, is also available in the following languages: German. In addition, there are Bugzilla template localisation projects in the following languages. They may have translated documentation available: Belarusian, Brazilian Portuguese, Chinese, French, German, Korean, Russian and Spanish. If you would like to volunteer to translate the Guide into additional languages, please contact Dave Miller.
Credits The people listed below have made enormous contributions to the creation of this Guide, through their writing, dedicated hacking efforts, numerous e-mail and IRC support sessions, and overall excellent contribution to the Bugzilla community: Matthew P. Barnson mbarnson@sisna.com for the Herculaean task of pulling together the Bugzilla Guide and shepherding it to 2.14. Terry Weissman terry@mozilla.org for initially writing Bugzilla and creating the README upon which the UNIX installation documentation is largely based. Tara Hernandez tara@tequilarists.org for keeping Bugzilla development going strong after Terry left mozilla.org and for running landfill. Dave Lawrence dkl@redhat.com for providing insight into the key differences between Red Hat's customized Bugzilla. Dawn Endico endico@mozilla.org for being a hacker extraordinaire and putting up with Matthew's incessant questions and arguments on irc.mozilla.org in #mozwebtools Jacob Steenhagen jake@bugzilla.org for taking over documentation during the 2.17 development period. Dave Miller justdave@bugzilla.org for taking over as project lead when Tara stepped down and continually pushing for the documentation to be the best it can be. Thanks also go to the following people for significant contributions to this documentation: Kevin Brannen Vlad Dascalu Ben FrantzDale Eric Hanson Zach Lipton Gervase Markham Andrew Pearson Joe Robins Spencer Smith Ron Teitelbaum Shane Travis Martin Wulffeld . Also, thanks are due to the members of the netscape.public.mozilla.webtools newsgroup. Without your discussions, insight, suggestions, and patches, this could never have happened.
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