This is the documentation for FishEye 3.5. View the latest version of

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or visit the latest FishEye documentation home page.

You can integrate FishEye with the following Atlassian applications:

When FishEye is integrated with JIRA you can:

When Crucible is integrated with JIRA, you can:

When JIRA is integrated with FishEye, you can:

When FishEye is integrated with Crucible, you can:

In FishEye:

  • Use smart commits to create Crucible reviews, add reviews to new reviews and update an existing review.

In Crucible:  

See also What happens if I decide to stop using Fisheye with Crucible.

You'll need the same number (or higher) of users in FishEye as Crucible.

When FishEye is integrated with Stash:

  • You can easily add Stash repositories to FishEye with a single click. Once added, the repository behaves just like a native repository in FishEye, so your team gets all the benefits of FishEye indexing, browsing and searching. Furthermore, the repository becomes available to Crucible, so you can perform in-depth code reviews for changes in the repository.
  • A push to a Stash repository that has been added to FishEye automatically triggers FishEye to run an incremental index. You don't have to configure polling for new commits anymore, or set up dedicated FishEye web hooks in your Stash instance.

See:

When FishEye is integrated with your Bamboo continuous integration server, you can view the code changes that triggered a build. When a build fails due to a compilation error or failed test, you can explore the failed build in FishEye and jump directly into the changeset that broke the build. You can view the history of that changeset to see what the author was trying to fix, take advantage of the the side-by-side diff view to analyze the change and then open the correct files in your IDE.

For more details see Viewing the Code Changes that Triggered a Build.


Screenshots: Code changes listed in a Bamboo build (top), and viewed in FishEye (bottom)


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