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ProjectForge - project management solution

ProjectForge is a web-based solution for project management including time tracking, team calendar, gantt-charting, financial administration, issue management, controlling and managing work-break-down-structures (e. g. together with JIRA as issue management system).

Express installation

For a fast installation via docker or executable jar, please refer Installation.

Documentation

projectforge.org

Version 8.0 is out now…​

The fastest way of installation of the newest version (8.0). you will find here: Installation

This version contains a lot of cool stuff:

  • New versions of Spring, Spring Boot, Hibernate, Hibernate Search etc.

  • …​

Quickstart from command line

Note

You only need the following steps for developing ProjectForge. If you just want to run it, please download it from https://sourceforge.net/projects/pforge/ and simply start it java -jar projectforge-application-X.X.X.jar.

Or simply use the fastest way: Installation as docker image

  1. Checkout: git clone [email protected]:micromata/projectforge.git

  2. For developing try OpenJDK 17 (tested): java -version.

  3. Build ProjectForge: mvn -DskipTests clean install

  4. Run ProjectForge: java -jar projectforge-application/target/projectforge-application-X.X.X.jar

  5. Open your browser: http://localhost:8080

Remark: If you have any trouble regarding projectforge-webapp, try to delete the sub directory node_modules and repeat mvn clean install.

Configuration of ProjectForge

No configuration needed. After starting ProjectForge a first time, a console or desktop based wizard is provided for doing a quick setup (choose directory and configure optionally some parameters).

To configure a different directory you have several options (choose Your favorite):

  1. Create ProjectForge as top level directory of your home directory: $HOME/ProjectForge, or

  2. Create a directory named ProjectForge and put the jar file somewhere in it or in the same directory. ProjectForge detects the folder ProjectForge relative to the executed jar, or

  3. Create a directory and define it as command line parameter: java -Dhome.dir=yourdirectory -jar projectforge-application-X.X.X.jar, or

  4. Create a directory and define it as system environment variable PROJECTFORGE_HOME.

Please note the detailed documentations for administrators, developers as well as for users.

Java version 17 is required since ProjectForge 8.0. Please note, that OpenJdk 17 is currently used in production for developing and running ProjectForge.

Quickstart with IntelliJ

  1. Launch IntelliJ IDEA

  2. Import new project via pom.xml in git root dir

  3. Run maven clean install for pom.xml in projectforge-webapp (to build React stuff)

  4. Start by simply running main (in projectforge-application/src/main/java):
    org.projectforge.start.ProjectForgeApplication.java

Quickstart with PostgreSQL (optional)

You may use PostgreSQL instead of the built-in data base.

Using PostgresSQL (Docker)

  • Choose and set a database password:
    export PGPASSWORD=mypassword

  • Run PostgreSQL:
    docker run --name projectforge-postgres -p 127.0.0.1:5432:5432 -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=$PGPASSWORD -e POSTGRES_USER=projectforge -d postgres:13.9

  • Configure ProjectForge

$HOME/ProjectForge/projectforge.properties
projectforge.base.dir=${user.home}/ProjectForge
spring.datasource.url=jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/projectforge
spring.datasource.username=projectforge
spring.datasource.password=${PGPASSWORD}
spring.datasource.driver-class-name=org.postgresql.Driver
  • Run ProjectForge and enjoy it.

Table 1. Some helpful docker commands

Stop

docker stop projectforge-postgres

Start

docker start projectforge-postgres

Import dump (optional)

docker run -v ~/ProjectForgeBackup/pf.sql:/mnt/pf.sql -e PGPASSWORD=$PGPASSWORD -it --rm --link projectforge-postgres:postgres postgres:13.9 psql -h postgres -U projectforge -q -f /mnt/pf.sql 2>&1 > log.txt

PSQL

docker run -e PGPASSWORD=$PGPASSWORD -it --rm --link projectforge-postgres:postgres postgres:13.9 psql -h postgres -U projectforge

Reset passwords (optional)

update t_pf_user_password SET password_hash='SHA{BC871652288E56E306CFA093BEFC3FFCD0ED8872}', password_salt=null; update t_pf_user SET password='SHA{BC871652288E56E306CFA093BEFC3FFCD0ED8872}', password_salt=null, email='m.developer@localhost';
password is now test123.

Clear calendar subscriptions (optional)

update t_calendar set ext_subscription=false where owner_fk != #;
This is useful for avoiding a lot of external calendar calls of foreign users if your productive data contains a lot of users with calendar subscriptions.

Uninstall

docker rm projectforge-postgres

Further configurations

Please have a lock at all available config parameters: application.properties

Documentation

Adding your own plugins

ProjectForge support plugins. The existing menu can be modified and own entities and functionalities can be added.

Please note: We’re working highly on a new release (will be published soon). Wicket will be replaced by ReactJS and Rest technology. The implementation of plugins will be changed as well.

The menu is customizable (you can add or remove menu entries in the config.xml file). Deploy your plugins by adding your jar(s) to the plugin directory next to the jar file. In eclipse you have to add the plugin project to the run configuration classpath. The jars contains both, the Java classes and the web pages (Wicket-pages). Nothing more is needed. Register your plugins in the administration menu at the web gui. You need to restart the server. One advantage is that your own plugins are independent from new releases of the ProjectForge core system. In one of the next releases an example plugin will show you how easy it is to extend ProjectForge!