Your own private hostname:
yourteam.onveracity.com
A fast, reliable, private collaboration server for your team
Complete control over user access and administrative rights
Access to bug lists, wiki pages, source history from any browser
Free accounts can have up to five users
Paid accounts cost only $20 per user each month
Use the Veracity iPad app with your account at onVeracity.com. Full offline support (works in airplane mode).
The core Veracity software is cross-platform and open source (Apache License 2, libre, gratis, no cost, etc).
Find out more at veracity-scm.com.
Not sure where to start? Something not behaving as you expected? The Veracity Q&A Site has a wealth of information, and chances are, someone else has asked the same thing.
Bug tracking, milestone management, build tracking, and wiki pages are all handled via our web interface - which can run locally on each developer’s machine, as well as via shared servers (including our hosted servers).
Checkins and synching between machines are done via familiar command-line tools, or Tortoise shell integration on Windows, as well as our automated Windows sync tool.
The first thing you’ll notice: Distributed Version Control is flat-out fast. Everything happens locally until you need to connect with other servers; when you do, that’s fast and efficient, too.
Veracity takes previously-scary or painful things like Branching, Merging and working Offline and makes them comfortable, powerful components of your everyday workflow. Most merges are resolved automatically, and when in doubt, DiffMerge is available to sort things out.
Having full reign over your own source code repo is a great start, but Veracity takes that idea further. Your bug/task tracking, your wiki documents, file attachments: right there with you. And ready to be pushed, pulled and merged at your command.
Mobile users of onVeracity.com can access all the great features of Veracity through our free iPad app, with extensive support for viewing and editing, even when network access is not available.
…but you probably want one. Merging workstation-to-workstation works beautifully, but it doesn’t scale all that well. You’ll quickly want that one place where everyone can sync up.
It would be nice if that one place already existed; if you didn’t have to build and manage it; if backups were taken care of; if security were built in.