Debbugs is the software powering the Debian project's issue tracking system. Uniquely[citation needed] it doesn't have any form of web-interface to edit bug reports – all modification is done through email. Debbugs was mainly written by Ian Jackson, former Debian project leader.
It is strongly recommended[2] that people use the reportbug program when reporting bugs in Debian.
History
Debbugs started as a rudimentary issue tracking system in 1994.[1] The software was generalized starting from 1997 but was only officially released as Debbugs 1 in January 1999.[3]
Soon after the GNOME project abandoned Debbugs, the KDE project also switched to Bugzilla in 2002.[4]
Deployments
The oldest and largest deployment of Debbugs is the Debian project's.[5] As of March 2018[update], the Debian debbugs instance had handled over 890,000 bug reports.[6]
The GNU Project has deployed a public instance of debbugs[7] that can be used by GNU software or GNU Savannah-hosted free software.[8]
Integration
Ubuntu's Launchpad recognizes and integrates with Debian's debbugs instance.[9]