Fisheye

RATING:

4.0

(1)
Overview

About Fisheye

Fisheye by Atlassian is the first-of-its kind tool for visualization, understanding and reporting on code activity. It offers an effective way to search commits, files, revisions and teammates across Perforce, SVN, Git and Mercurial. Fisheye also has a real-time notification system, enabling tracking of new commits or changes made to files and projects. Users can search Fisheye with any code artifact, including commit messages, file names, text, authors, and historical changes. Fisheye's visualization tools allow users to report on lines of code over time and view a visual audit trail of all changes.

Fisheye Pricing

Small teams: $10 one-time for up to 5 users, 10 committers, 5 repos Growing teams: starts from $1100 one-time for 10 users, unlimited repos

Starting price: 

$10.00 

Free trial: 

Available

Free version: 

Not Available

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Fisheye Reviews

Overall Rating

4.0

Ratings Breakdown

Secondary Ratings

Ease-of-use

4

Customer Support

4

Value for money

4

Functionality

4

Most Helpful Reviews for Fisheye

1 Review

Inayat

Consumer Electronics, 1,001-5,000 employees

Used monthly for more than 2 years

Review Source: Capterra
This review was submitted organically. No incentive was offered

OVERALL RATING:

4

EASE OF USE

4

VALUE FOR MONEY

4

CUSTOMER SUPPORT

4

FUNCTIONALITY

4

Reviewed August 2023

Great for teams with multiple source control apps

Overall, it integrated well since we were using the full Atlassian stack with Crucible and Jira. We did some fine tuning on the admin side to help with a slow indexing.

PROS

Atlassian Fisheye is packaged with Crucible on a separate license. At the time, our development was using multiple SCMs including Git, Subversion, and Perforce. It was fairly easy to add repositories from all these sources into Fisheye, and then show referenced commits in Jira.

CONS

Sometimes the indexing was slow, depending on the size of the repository. Users on the Jira side notice commits took a while to appear or were missing. Incremental indexes was more stable, but when adding a new large repo, the full indexing would sometimes take many hours.